Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence

The relevance of transport costs has increased as liberalization continues to reduce artificial barriers to trade. Countries need to adopt policies to get closer to global markets. Can improvements in infrastructure and regulation reduce transport...

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Main Authors: Micco, Alejandro, Serebrisky, Tomás
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/07/4984006/infrastructure-competition-regimes-air-transport-costs-cross-country-evidence
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14179
id okr-10986-14179
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-141792021-04-23T14:03:21Z Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence Micco, Alejandro Serebrisky, Tomás INFRASTRUCTURE AIR TRANSPORT TRANSPORT COSTS LIBERALIZATION REGULATORY FRAMEWORK GLOBAL MARKETS IMPORTS REGULATIONS COMPETITION TRANSPORT INDUSTRY AIM AIR CARGO AIR CARRIERS AIR CONTROL AIR TRAFFIC AIR TRANSPORT AIR TRANSPORT LIBERALIZATION AIR TRANSPORT MARKET AIR TRANSPORTATION AIRCRAFT AIRCRAFT PARKING AIRCRAFTS AIRFARES AIRLINE AIRLINES AIRPORT INFRASTRUCTURE AIRPORTS AVIATION BENCHMARK BILATERAL TRADE CAPITAL MARKETS CARGO RATES CARGO SERVICES CARGO SPACE CARTEL COUNTRY OF ORIGIN CUSTOMS ECONOMIES OF SCALE ELASTICITY EXPORT EXPORTS FLIGHT FLIGHT ATTENDANTS FOREIGN AIRPORTS FREIGHT FREIGHT RATES FUEL FUEL COST GDP GOVERNMENT REGULATION HANDLING MARGINAL COST PASSENGER PASSENGERS RANGE ROUTE ROUTES RUNWAY RUNWAYS SHIPMENTS SHIPPERS SHIPPING SHIPPING COMPANIES SHIPPING COSTS SQUARE TIME SERIES TOTAL AIR TOTAL REVENUE TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INDUSTRY TRANSPORT MODE VALUE ADDED The relevance of transport costs has increased as liberalization continues to reduce artificial barriers to trade. Countries need to adopt policies to get closer to global markets. Can improvements in infrastructure and regulation reduce transport costs? Is it worthwhile to implement policies designed to increase competition in transport markets? Focusing on air transport, which has increased its share in US imports from 24 percent in 1990 to 35 percent in 2000, this paper quantifies the effects of infrastructure, regulatory quality and liberalization of air cargo markets on transport costs. During the 1990s, the United States implemented a series of Open Skies Agreements, providing a unique opportunity to assess the effect that a change in the competition regime has on prices. We find that infrastructure, quality of regulation and competition matter. In our sample, an improvement in airport infrastructure from the 25th to 75th percentiles reduces air transport costs by 15 percent. A similar improvement in the quality of regulation reduces air transport costs by 14 percent. Open Skies Agreements further reduce air transport costs by 8 percent. 2013-06-25T18:09:17Z 2013-06-25T18:09:17Z 2004-07 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/07/4984006/infrastructure-competition-regimes-air-transport-costs-cross-country-evidence http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14179 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No.3355 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, D.C. Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic INFRASTRUCTURE
AIR TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT COSTS
LIBERALIZATION
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
GLOBAL MARKETS
IMPORTS
REGULATIONS
COMPETITION
TRANSPORT INDUSTRY AIM
AIR CARGO
AIR CARRIERS
AIR CONTROL
AIR TRAFFIC
AIR TRANSPORT
AIR TRANSPORT LIBERALIZATION
AIR TRANSPORT MARKET
AIR TRANSPORTATION
AIRCRAFT
AIRCRAFT PARKING
AIRCRAFTS
AIRFARES
AIRLINE
AIRLINES
AIRPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
AIRPORTS
AVIATION
BENCHMARK
BILATERAL TRADE
CAPITAL MARKETS
CARGO RATES
CARGO SERVICES
CARGO SPACE
CARTEL
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
CUSTOMS
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELASTICITY
EXPORT
EXPORTS
FLIGHT
FLIGHT ATTENDANTS
FOREIGN AIRPORTS
FREIGHT
FREIGHT RATES
FUEL
FUEL COST
GDP
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
HANDLING
MARGINAL COST
PASSENGER
PASSENGERS
RANGE
ROUTE
ROUTES
RUNWAY
RUNWAYS
SHIPMENTS
SHIPPERS
SHIPPING
SHIPPING COMPANIES
SHIPPING COSTS
SQUARE
TIME SERIES
TOTAL AIR
TOTAL REVENUE
TRANSPORT COSTS
TRANSPORT INDUSTRY
TRANSPORT MODE
VALUE ADDED
spellingShingle INFRASTRUCTURE
AIR TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT COSTS
LIBERALIZATION
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
GLOBAL MARKETS
IMPORTS
REGULATIONS
COMPETITION
TRANSPORT INDUSTRY AIM
AIR CARGO
AIR CARRIERS
AIR CONTROL
AIR TRAFFIC
AIR TRANSPORT
AIR TRANSPORT LIBERALIZATION
AIR TRANSPORT MARKET
AIR TRANSPORTATION
AIRCRAFT
AIRCRAFT PARKING
AIRCRAFTS
AIRFARES
AIRLINE
AIRLINES
AIRPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
AIRPORTS
AVIATION
BENCHMARK
BILATERAL TRADE
CAPITAL MARKETS
CARGO RATES
CARGO SERVICES
CARGO SPACE
CARTEL
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
CUSTOMS
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELASTICITY
EXPORT
EXPORTS
FLIGHT
FLIGHT ATTENDANTS
FOREIGN AIRPORTS
FREIGHT
FREIGHT RATES
FUEL
FUEL COST
GDP
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
HANDLING
MARGINAL COST
PASSENGER
PASSENGERS
RANGE
ROUTE
ROUTES
RUNWAY
RUNWAYS
SHIPMENTS
SHIPPERS
SHIPPING
SHIPPING COMPANIES
SHIPPING COSTS
SQUARE
TIME SERIES
TOTAL AIR
TOTAL REVENUE
TRANSPORT COSTS
TRANSPORT INDUSTRY
TRANSPORT MODE
VALUE ADDED
Micco, Alejandro
Serebrisky, Tomás
Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No.3355
description The relevance of transport costs has increased as liberalization continues to reduce artificial barriers to trade. Countries need to adopt policies to get closer to global markets. Can improvements in infrastructure and regulation reduce transport costs? Is it worthwhile to implement policies designed to increase competition in transport markets? Focusing on air transport, which has increased its share in US imports from 24 percent in 1990 to 35 percent in 2000, this paper quantifies the effects of infrastructure, regulatory quality and liberalization of air cargo markets on transport costs. During the 1990s, the United States implemented a series of Open Skies Agreements, providing a unique opportunity to assess the effect that a change in the competition regime has on prices. We find that infrastructure, quality of regulation and competition matter. In our sample, an improvement in airport infrastructure from the 25th to 75th percentiles reduces air transport costs by 15 percent. A similar improvement in the quality of regulation reduces air transport costs by 14 percent. Open Skies Agreements further reduce air transport costs by 8 percent.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Micco, Alejandro
Serebrisky, Tomás
author_facet Micco, Alejandro
Serebrisky, Tomás
author_sort Micco, Alejandro
title Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence
title_short Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence
title_full Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence
title_fullStr Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence
title_full_unstemmed Infrastructure, Competition Regimes, and Air Transport Costs: Cross-Country Evidence
title_sort infrastructure, competition regimes, and air transport costs: cross-country evidence
publisher World Bank, Washington, D.C.
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/07/4984006/infrastructure-competition-regimes-air-transport-costs-cross-country-evidence
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14179
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