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June 2003, Volume 5, Number 2, Pages 199-218
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Port Efficiency and International Trade: Port Efficiency as a Determinant of Maritime Transport Costs
Ricardo J Sánchez1, Jan Hoffmann2, Alejandro Micco3, Georgina V Pizzolitto1, Martín Sgut1 and Gordon Wilmsmeier2

1Austral University, Argentina

2Economic Commission for Latin American and the Caribbean, Santiago, Chile

3Inter-American Development Bank, Washington, USA. E-mail: ricardo.sanchez@lycos.com

Abstract

This paper examines the determinants of waterborne transport costs, with particular emphasis on the efficiency at port level. Its main contribution is (1) to generate statistically quantifiable measures of port efficiency from a survey of Latin American common user ports, and (2) to estimate a model of waterborne transport costs, including the previously generated port efficiency measures as explanatory variables. In order to incorporate different port efficiency measures from the survey, we use principal component analysis (PCA). Our estimations show that the specified variables in the model explain a great proportion of the change in waterborne transport costs. With regard to port efficiency, the result is especially important for one of the port efficiency measures obtained through PCA with an estimated elasticity equivalent to that of distance. Other explanatory variables which show to be statistically significant are the monthly liner service availability, distance, and the goods' value per ton. The conclusions are relevant for policy makers as they show and quantify that port efficiency is a relevant determinant of a country's competitiveness - and in this respect, there still exist big differences among Latin American countries. Unlike most other relevant variables, port efficiency can be influenced by public policies.

Maritime Economics & Logistics (2003) 5, 199-218. doi:10.1057/palgrave.mel.9100073

Keywords

Port efficiency; multivariate analysis; freight costs; Latin America

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