Why Does Cargo Spend Weeks in Sub-Saharan African Ports-- Lessons from Six Countries (Directions in Development)
Year: 2012 Language: english Author: Gael Raballand, Salim Refas, Monica Beuran, and Gozde Isik Genre: Reference book Format: PDF Quality: Scanned pages Pages count: 164 Description: This book graphically illustrates the problem in the case of Africa's ports. With the exception of Durban, cargo dwell times, the amount of time cargo spends in the port average about 20 days in African ports, compared with 3/4 days in most other international ports. None of the past attempts to solve this problem have worked. The reason and this is the major contribution of this volume is that long dwell times are in the interest of certain public and private actors in the system. Importers use the ports to store their goods. Customs brokers have little incentive to move the goods because they can pass on the costs of delay to the importers. And when the domestic market is a monopoly, the downstream producer has an incentive to keep the cargo dwell times long as a way of deterring entry of other producers. The net result is inordinately long dwell times, ineffective interventions, and globally uncompetitive industries in African countries. The solution to decrease dwell time in these ports relies mainly on the challenging task of breaking the private sector's collusion and equilibrium between public authorities, logistics operators, and some shippers and not on investing massively in infrastructure. Addressing the challenge will also require that there be political support from the general public for reforms that will promote their interests. And before they offer their political support, the public needs to be informed. This book is a step in that direction.
Contents
Screenshots
5
Why Does Cargo Spend Weeks in Sub-Saharan African Ports-- Lessons from Six Countries (Directions in Development).pdf
Вы не можете начинать темы Вы не можете отвечать на сообщения Вы не можете редактировать свои сообщения Вы не можете удалять свои сообщения Вы не можете голосовать в опросах Вы не можете прикреплять файлы к сообщениям Вы не можете скачивать файлы
Why Does Cargo Spend Weeks in Sub-Saharan African Ports-- Lessons from Six Countries (Directions in Development)
Year: 2012
Language: english
Author: Gael Raballand, Salim Refas, Monica Beuran, and Gozde Isik
Genre: Reference book
Format: PDF
Quality: Scanned pages
Pages count: 164
Description: This book graphically illustrates the problem in the case of Africa's ports. With the exception of Durban, cargo dwell times, the amount of time cargo spends in the port average about 20 days in African ports, compared with 3/4 days in most other international ports. None of the past attempts to solve this problem have worked. The reason and this is the major contribution of this volume is that long dwell times are in the interest of certain public and private actors in the system.
Importers use the ports to store their goods. Customs brokers have little incentive to move the goods because they can pass on the costs of delay to the importers. And when the domestic market is a monopoly, the downstream producer has an incentive to keep the cargo dwell times long as a way of deterring entry of other producers. The net result is inordinately long dwell times, ineffective interventions, and globally uncompetitive industries in African countries. The solution to decrease dwell time in these ports relies mainly on the challenging task of breaking the private sector's collusion and equilibrium between public authorities, logistics operators, and some shippers and not on investing massively in infrastructure. Addressing the challenge will also require that there be political support from the general public for reforms that will promote their interests. And before they offer their political support, the public needs to be informed. This book is a step in that direction.
Contents
Screenshots
Why Does Cargo Spend Weeks in Sub-Saharan African Ports-- Lessons from Six Countries (Directions in Development).pdf
Скачать [14 KB]
Поделиться