Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative

This paper examines how cities and regions within countries are likely to adjust to trade openness and improved connectivity driven by large transport investments from China's Belt and Road Initiative. The paper presents a quantitative economic geography model alongside spatially detailed information on the location of people, economic activity, and transport costs to international gateways in Central Asia to identify which places are likely to gain and which places are likely to lose. The findings are that urban hubs near border crossings will disproportionately gain while farther out regions with little comparative advantage will be relative losers. Complementary investments in domestic transport networks and trade facilitation are complementary policies and can help in spatially spreading the benefits. However, barriers to domestic labor mobility exacerbate spatial inequalities whilst dampening overall welfare.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lebrand, Mathilde, Lall, Somik V.
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019-04
Subjects:TRANSPORT CORRIDORS, TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT, LABOR MOBILITY, BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE, CONNECTIVITY, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, URBAN HUBS, GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/292161554727963020/Who-Wins-Who-Loses-Understanding-the-Spatially-Differentiated-Effects-of-the-Belt-and-Road-Initiative
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31535
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spelling dig-okr-10986315352024-08-09T07:03:54Z Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative Lebrand, Mathilde Lall, Somik V. TRANSPORT CORRIDORS TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT LABOR MOBILITY BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE CONNECTIVITY TRADE LIBERALIZATION ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY URBAN HUBS GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS This paper examines how cities and regions within countries are likely to adjust to trade openness and improved connectivity driven by large transport investments from China's Belt and Road Initiative. The paper presents a quantitative economic geography model alongside spatially detailed information on the location of people, economic activity, and transport costs to international gateways in Central Asia to identify which places are likely to gain and which places are likely to lose. The findings are that urban hubs near border crossings will disproportionately gain while farther out regions with little comparative advantage will be relative losers. Complementary investments in domestic transport networks and trade facilitation are complementary policies and can help in spatially spreading the benefits. However, barriers to domestic labor mobility exacerbate spatial inequalities whilst dampening overall welfare. 2019-04-11T20:37:57Z 2019-04-11T20:37:57Z 2019-04 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/292161554727963020/Who-Wins-Who-Loses-Understanding-the-Spatially-Differentiated-Effects-of-the-Belt-and-Road-Initiative https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31535 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8806 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic TRANSPORT CORRIDORS
TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MOBILITY
BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE
CONNECTIVITY
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
URBAN HUBS
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
TRANSPORT CORRIDORS
TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MOBILITY
BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE
CONNECTIVITY
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
URBAN HUBS
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
spellingShingle TRANSPORT CORRIDORS
TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MOBILITY
BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE
CONNECTIVITY
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
URBAN HUBS
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
TRANSPORT CORRIDORS
TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MOBILITY
BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE
CONNECTIVITY
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
URBAN HUBS
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
Lebrand, Mathilde
Lall, Somik V.
Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative
description This paper examines how cities and regions within countries are likely to adjust to trade openness and improved connectivity driven by large transport investments from China's Belt and Road Initiative. The paper presents a quantitative economic geography model alongside spatially detailed information on the location of people, economic activity, and transport costs to international gateways in Central Asia to identify which places are likely to gain and which places are likely to lose. The findings are that urban hubs near border crossings will disproportionately gain while farther out regions with little comparative advantage will be relative losers. Complementary investments in domestic transport networks and trade facilitation are complementary policies and can help in spatially spreading the benefits. However, barriers to domestic labor mobility exacerbate spatial inequalities whilst dampening overall welfare.
format Working Paper
topic_facet TRANSPORT CORRIDORS
TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT
LABOR MOBILITY
BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE
CONNECTIVITY
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
URBAN HUBS
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
author Lebrand, Mathilde
Lall, Somik V.
author_facet Lebrand, Mathilde
Lall, Somik V.
author_sort Lebrand, Mathilde
title Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative
title_short Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative
title_full Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative
title_fullStr Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative
title_full_unstemmed Who Wins, Who Loses? Understanding the Spatially Differentiated Effects of the Belt and Road Initiative
title_sort who wins, who loses? understanding the spatially differentiated effects of the belt and road initiative
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019-04
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/292161554727963020/Who-Wins-Who-Loses-Understanding-the-Spatially-Differentiated-Effects-of-the-Belt-and-Road-Initiative
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31535
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