Ports and Shipping

International shipping is an essential part of trade. Countries must have port infrastructure and capacity to allow companies to ship their products to consumers worldwide. Countries with good port infrastructure will attract foreign investment and enable local companies to produce and ship to international markets more efficiently. Read this overview of a study of 91 countries with seaports that examined seaborne trade's economic effects, and how port infrastructure quality and logistics capacity affected trade efficiency.

Abstract

Considering 91 countries with seaports, this study conducted an empirical inquiry into the broader economic contribution of seaborne trade, from a port infrastructure quality and logistics performance perspective. Investment in quality improvement of port infrastructure and its contribution to the economy are often questioned by politicians, investors, and the general public. A structural equation model (SEM) is used to provide empirical evidence of significant economic impacts of port infrastructure quality and logistics performance. Furthermore, analysis of a multi-group SEM is performed by dividing countries into developed and developing economy groups. The results reveal that it is vital for developing countries to continuously improve the quality of port infrastructure as it contributes to better logistics performance, leading to higher seaborne trade, yielding higher economic growth. However, this association weakens as the developing countries become richer.



Source: Ziaul Haque Munim and Hans-Joachim Schramm, https://jshippingandtrade.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s41072-018-0027-0
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