1 / 21

trade facilitation, transport costs and Maritime imports in latin america

INMACULADA MARTÍNEZ ZARZOSO Universitat Jaume I and Georg-August Universitaet LAURA MARQUEZ-RAMOS Universitat Jaume I Gordon Wilmsmeier UN-ECLAC. trade facilitation, transport costs and Maritime imports in latin america. Arnold Shain Seminar 26 June 2013, Antwerp. The context.

gaetan
Télécharger la présentation

trade facilitation, transport costs and Maritime imports in latin america

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INMACULADA MARTÍNEZ ZARZOSO UniversitatJaume I and Georg-August Universitaet LAURA MARQUEZ-RAMOS UniversitatJaume I Gordon Wilmsmeier UN-ECLAC trade facilitation, transport costs and Maritime imports in latinamerica Arnold Shain Seminar 26 June 2013, Antwerp

  2. The context • Latin American containerised trade • Continued economic expansion and trade • Challenges in trade facilitation • Excessive time delays • Bureaucratic requirements for varying goods traded • Role of institutional trade barriers

  3. Research question What are repercussions from maritime transport infrastructure development and trade facilitation in the structure of maritime transport costs, and hence, on bilateral trade?

  4. Trade facilitation • WTO definition: “the simplification and harmonization of international trade procedures”” • Wilson, Mann and Otsuki (2003, 2005) define four measures • Port efficiency • Customs environment • Regulatory environment • E-business usage

  5. Modelling approaches • Gravity model of trade • Mann and Otsuki (2003, 2005) for the Asia-Pacific region • Soloaga, Wilson and Mejía (2006) on Mexican competitiveness • Djankov, Freund and Pham (2006) used the World Bank’s Doing Business Database focusing only on effects of time delays in the exporting country • Nordas, Pinali and Grosso (2006) discuss how time delays affect the probability to export and the export volumes for imports from Japan, Australia and the United Kingdom. • Persson (2007) studied effect of time delays and transaction costs on trade flows using a sample selection approach and focussing on the specific effects for each of the six groups of ACP countries negotiating Economic Partnership agreements with the EU.

  6. Modelling approaches • Computable general equilibrium model to estimate the effect of a composite index of trade facilitation on trade flows • UNCTAD, 2001 • OECD, 2003 • Dennis, 2006 • Decreux and Fontagne, 2006

  7. Trade facilitation and tariffs Márquez-Ramos, Martínez-Zarzoso and Suárez-Burguet (2011) compare different types of trade barriers in both developed and developing countries, Trade facilitation variables and policy trade barriers, as tariff peaks and tariff escalation remain important issues for developing countries, and a “tariff bias” exists against developing countries (Márquez-Ramos et al, 2011). They show that trade facilitation variables are, in relative terms, more important than tariffs.  increasing trade facilitation would lead to an increase in world trade, although this increase would not be the same in all countries as, by running simulations The present paper mainly differs from existing trade-facilitation literature in that it focus on imports and analyses the effect of trade facilitation on both transport costs and bilateral trade with Latin America.

  8. Data Data for disaggregated maritime exports from 181 countries to 9 Latin American countries Time period 2000-2006 LA countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Paraguay and Uruguay. Each observation corresponds to a given product, k (SITC code 5 digit).

  9. Trade Facilitation variables

  10. Data: Transport cost model • The dependent variable in the transport cost model is the ad-valorem freight rate between the country of origin and the country of destination. • Product value (USD/Kg): • Volume exported: • Total weight in tonnes of the trade flows shipped to each specific country of destination. • Port container throughput: Iportv • Distance: Dist • Number of days (documents) to import and export: ET • from the World Bank’s Doing Business (2006) database

  11. Data: Gravity model • Dependent variable in the gravity model is imports between the country of origin and the country of destination. • amount in current dollars that importers have to pay for the products at free on board (fob) prices. • Gross domestic product (GDP) of the importer and exporter countries • Gross domestic product per capita in both countries • Transport costs • Distance. • Dummies: • Common language • Common border

  12. Model specification where: ln indicate natural logarithms, uvijkt denotes the value per weight ratio (USD/ton) of product k in year t, qijkt is the volume of transaction between countries i (exporter) and j (importer) of product k in year t, iportvjt and eportvit denote total port throughput or maritime transport infrastructure in the importing and exporting countries in year t, distij denotes the maritime distance between main ports in country i and j, Tjtand Tit the average number of days (documents) needed in the importer and the exporter country to trade a product. δkt=sectoral*time dummies at one digit SITC classification, SITC2-SITC8

  13. Linking trade costs to a simple gravity equation where lnMijkt is the log of the value of imports of product k into country j from country i in period t. GDPjt is the value of gross domestic product for importer j in period t and GDPit that of exporter i in the same period, distij is the distance between each pair of trading partners and T denote trade facilitation variables. εijkt is a composite error term of unobservable effects. A similar set of country-pair, time and sectoral dummies as in equation (1) is added.

  14. Methodology Estimation of a transport costs model and a gravity equation of trade Using panel data techniques that allow controlling for country, sectoral and time unobserved heterogeneity.

  15. Main results transport costs

  16. Main resultsbilateral aggregated trade data

  17. Conclusions Trade facilitation (time and documents required to trade) is considered as determinants of transport costs Recent institutional trade conflicts among Latin American partners point in evidence the need of empirical research to provide light on the role of institutional trade barriers, or trade facilitation procedures, when trading with Latin America

  18. Conclusions (cont’d) Results show that time delays are a more important trade barrier to trade with Latin American countries than bureaucratic procedures Natural trade barriers (transport costs) are of higher importance than institutional trade barriers established by Latin American countries (trade facilitation procedures) when trading with this developing region Further research needed with disaggregated data for a better understanding of the role of trade facilitation procedures

  19. Questions? INMACULADA MARTÍNEZ ZARZOSO Universitat Jaume I and Georg-August Universitaet LAURA MARQUEZ-RAMOS Universitat Jaume I Gordon Wilmsmeier UN-ECLAC

  20. Transport costs disaggregate versus aggregated results

  21. Gravity model for aggregate exports

More Related