The Impact of Demand on Cargo Dwell Time in Ports in SSA

Long cargo dwell times in ports are a critical issue in Sub-Saharan African countries since they result in slow import processes and are bound to dramatically reduce trade. The main objective of this study is to analyze long dwell times' causes in ports in Sub-Saharan Africa from a shipper's perspective. The findings point to the crucial importance of private sector practices and incentives. The authors argue in the case of Sub-Saharan African countries that private operators, rather than being advocates of reforms in this area, might be responsible for the failures of many of these initiatives. It seems that in Sub-Saharan Africa importers' and freight forwarders' professionalism, cash constraints and operators' strategies are some of the factors that have a major impact on cargo dwell time. Low competency, cash constraints and low storage tariffs explain why most importers have little incentive to reduce cargo dwell time since in most cases, this would increase their input costs. However, monopolists/cartels may have a stronger incentive to reduce cargo dwell time but only in order to maximize their profit (and would not adjust prices downward).

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Beuran, Monica, Mahihenni, Mohamed Hadi, Raballand, Gael, Refas, Salim
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-03
Subjects:ACTUAL DEMAND, ADVERSE EFFECTS, ADVERSE IMPACT, ADVERTISING, ARBITRAGE, BERTRAND COMPETITION, BOXES, CARGO, CARGO DWELL TIME, CARS, COLLUSION, COMMODITIES, COMMODITY, COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE, COMPETITIVE EQUILIBRIUM, COMPETITIVE PRICE, CONGESTION, CONTAINER HANDLING, CONTAINER TERMINALS, CONTAINER YARD, CONTAINER YARDS, CONTAINERIZED CARGO, CONTAINERS, COST INCREASES, COSTS OF DELAYS, COURNOT COMPETITION, CUSTOMS, CUSTOMS BROKERS, CUSTOMS PROCEDURES, DELIVERIES, DELIVERY TIMES, DEMAND CURVE, DEMAND FUNCTION, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DISCOUNT RATE, DRIVERS, ECONOMIC ORDER, ECONOMIC RESEARCH, ECONOMIC THEORY, EXPECTED VALUES, EXPORTS, FORECASTS, FREIGHT, FREIGHT COSTS, FREIGHT FORWARDERS, FREIGHT FORWARDING, GAME THEORY, HARMONIZED SYSTEM, IMPORT QUOTAS, INELASTIC DEMAND, INLAND TRANSPORT, INSPECTION, INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL TERMS, INTERNATIONAL PORTS, INVENTORIES, INVENTORY, INVENTORY HOLDING COSTS, INVENTORY MANAGEMENT, KINKED DEMAND CURVE, LAND TRANSPORT, LANDLOCKED COUNTRIES, LEVEL OF SAFETY, LOADING, LOGISTICS CHAIN, LOGISTICS COSTS, MANUFACTURING, MARGINAL COST, MARGINAL COSTS, MARGINAL REVENUE, MARITIME TRANSPORT, MARKET CONDITIONS, MARKET DEMAND, MARKET INCENTIVES, MARKET POWER, MARKET PRICE, MARKET PRICES, MARKET RISKS, MARKET SEGMENTS, MARKET STRUCTURE, MONOPOLIES, MONOPOLY, NASH EQUILIBRIUM, OBSOLESCENCE, OLIGOPOLY, ORDERING, PACKAGING, PORTS, PRICE ADJUSTMENTS, PRICE CEILINGS, PRICE CHANGES, PRICE INCREASES, PRICE TAKERS, PRICE VARIATIONS, PRICE WAR, PRICING STRATEGIES, PRICING STRATEGY, PRODUCTION INPUTS, PRODUCTION PLANNING, PROFIT MAXIMIZATION, ROUTE, SAFETY, SAFETY STOCK, SALE, SHIPMENTS, SHIPPERS, SHIPPING, SHIPPING COSTS, STATISTICAL ANALYSIS, STOCKS, STORAGE FACILITIES, SUBSTITUTES, SUPPLIER, SUPPLY CHAIN, SUPPLY CHAINS, TAXATION, TOTAL SALES, TRADE LOGISTICS, TRANSIT, TRANSIT TIMES, TRANSPARENCY, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT MODES, TRANSPORT SYSTEM, TRANSPORTATION, TRANSSHIPMENT, WAREHOUSE, WAREHOUSES, WAREHOUSING, WHOLESALER,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/03/15975003/impact-demand-cargo-dwell-time-ports-ssa
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19867
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!