On the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World

Do differences in port performance explain differences in maritime transport costs? How much would improvements in port performance reduce maritime transport costs in developing countries? To answer this question, we use a widely used transport cost model, but we provide a new measure of port efficiency, estimated through a non-parametric approach. Relying on data from the early 2000s, this paper shows that for a sample of 115 container ports in 39 developing countries, becoming as efficient as the country with the most efficient port sector would reduce average maritime transport costs by 5 percent. For the most inefficient country, the reduction in transport costs could reach 15 percent. These findings point out the potential gains that can be achieved from the combination of betterquality investment and more efficient service provision in the port sector. The estimates in this paper cannot be updated because the databases were discontinued and it therefore highlights the need to generate data to evaluate the effectiveness of public policies that are key to competitiveness.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inter-American Development Bank
Other Authors: Matías Herrera Dappe
Language:English
Published: Inter-American Development Bank
Subjects:Freight Logistic, Port and Waterway, Emerging Market, Mode of Transport, Transport Cost, O18 - Urban Rural Regional and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure, L92 - Railroads and Other Surface Transportation, L91 - Transportation: General, L51 - Economics of Regulation, Trade;ports;Transport costs;Port efficiency;Developing World,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003326
https://publications.iadb.org/en/historical-relationship-between-port-inefficiency-and-transport-costs-developing-world
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spelling dig-bid-node-303502021-06-11T15:47:26ZOn the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World 2021-06-10T00:00:00+0000 http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003326 https://publications.iadb.org/en/historical-relationship-between-port-inefficiency-and-transport-costs-developing-world Inter-American Development Bank Freight Logistic Port and Waterway Emerging Market Mode of Transport Transport Cost O18 - Urban Rural Regional and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure L92 - Railroads and Other Surface Transportation L91 - Transportation: General L51 - Economics of Regulation Trade;ports;Transport costs;Port efficiency;Developing World Do differences in port performance explain differences in maritime transport costs? How much would improvements in port performance reduce maritime transport costs in developing countries? To answer this question, we use a widely used transport cost model, but we provide a new measure of port efficiency, estimated through a non-parametric approach. Relying on data from the early 2000s, this paper shows that for a sample of 115 container ports in 39 developing countries, becoming as efficient as the country with the most efficient port sector would reduce average maritime transport costs by 5 percent. For the most inefficient country, the reduction in transport costs could reach 15 percent. These findings point out the potential gains that can be achieved from the combination of betterquality investment and more efficient service provision in the port sector. The estimates in this paper cannot be updated because the databases were discontinued and it therefore highlights the need to generate data to evaluate the effectiveness of public policies that are key to competitiveness. Inter-American Development Bank Matías Herrera Dappe Tomás Serebrisky Ancor Suárez-Alemán application/pdf IDB Publications en
institution BID
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-bid
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca Felipe Herrera del BID
language English
topic Freight Logistic
Port and Waterway
Emerging Market
Mode of Transport
Transport Cost
O18 - Urban Rural Regional and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure
L92 - Railroads and Other Surface Transportation
L91 - Transportation: General
L51 - Economics of Regulation
Trade;ports;Transport costs;Port efficiency;Developing World
Freight Logistic
Port and Waterway
Emerging Market
Mode of Transport
Transport Cost
O18 - Urban Rural Regional and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure
L92 - Railroads and Other Surface Transportation
L91 - Transportation: General
L51 - Economics of Regulation
Trade;ports;Transport costs;Port efficiency;Developing World
spellingShingle Freight Logistic
Port and Waterway
Emerging Market
Mode of Transport
Transport Cost
O18 - Urban Rural Regional and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure
L92 - Railroads and Other Surface Transportation
L91 - Transportation: General
L51 - Economics of Regulation
Trade;ports;Transport costs;Port efficiency;Developing World
Freight Logistic
Port and Waterway
Emerging Market
Mode of Transport
Transport Cost
O18 - Urban Rural Regional and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure
L92 - Railroads and Other Surface Transportation
L91 - Transportation: General
L51 - Economics of Regulation
Trade;ports;Transport costs;Port efficiency;Developing World
Inter-American Development Bank
On the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World
description Do differences in port performance explain differences in maritime transport costs? How much would improvements in port performance reduce maritime transport costs in developing countries? To answer this question, we use a widely used transport cost model, but we provide a new measure of port efficiency, estimated through a non-parametric approach. Relying on data from the early 2000s, this paper shows that for a sample of 115 container ports in 39 developing countries, becoming as efficient as the country with the most efficient port sector would reduce average maritime transport costs by 5 percent. For the most inefficient country, the reduction in transport costs could reach 15 percent. These findings point out the potential gains that can be achieved from the combination of betterquality investment and more efficient service provision in the port sector. The estimates in this paper cannot be updated because the databases were discontinued and it therefore highlights the need to generate data to evaluate the effectiveness of public policies that are key to competitiveness.
author2 Matías Herrera Dappe
author_facet Matías Herrera Dappe
Inter-American Development Bank
topic_facet Freight Logistic
Port and Waterway
Emerging Market
Mode of Transport
Transport Cost
O18 - Urban Rural Regional and Transportation Analysis • Housing • Infrastructure
L92 - Railroads and Other Surface Transportation
L91 - Transportation: General
L51 - Economics of Regulation
Trade;ports;Transport costs;Port efficiency;Developing World
author Inter-American Development Bank
author_sort Inter-American Development Bank
title On the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World
title_short On the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World
title_full On the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World
title_fullStr On the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World
title_full_unstemmed On the Historical Relationship between Port (In)Efficiency and Transport Costs in the Developing World
title_sort on the historical relationship between port (in)efficiency and transport costs in the developing world
publisher Inter-American Development Bank
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003326
https://publications.iadb.org/en/historical-relationship-between-port-inefficiency-and-transport-costs-developing-world
work_keys_str_mv AT interamericandevelopmentbank onthehistoricalrelationshipbetweenportinefficiencyandtransportcostsinthedevelopingworld
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