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Workshop on the linkages between Trade, Transport and the Environment World Trade Organization, 9 Nov. 2010 Centre William Rappard Dr. Andreas Kopp Lead Economist World Bank akopp@worldbank.org. Outline. Transport costs as trade impediments
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Workshop on the linkages between Trade, Transport and the Environment World Trade Organization, 9 Nov. 2010 Centre William Rappard Dr. Andreas Kopp Lead Economist World Bank akopp@worldbank.org
Outline • Transport costs as trade impediments • Threats to trade costs from global environmental developments • Options to keep trade costs low
Importance of trade policy barriers for international trade • Trade policy barriers are compared transport and retail costs • Hong Kong and Switzerland have removed all tariffs • US tariffs are 1.9 per cent as a simple average • Industrialized countries have a simple average of 5 per cent. • Average tariff levels are above 10 per cent for many developing countries
Importance of trade policy barriers for international trade • Trade policy barriers are low by comparison • Non-tariff barriers are concentrated in a small number of sectors • NTB’s are more restrictive than tariffs, in particular barriers to agricultural trade in rich countries
Importance of trade costs for international trade • Trade costs amount to a tax-equivalent of 170 per cent on production value for rich countries (US) • 55 per cent wholesale and resale distribution costs • 44 per cent border crossing costs • 21 per cent transport costs • 12 per cent monetary transport costs • 2 per cent time costs
Importance of transport costs for international trade • High responsiveness of trade to transport costs: a 10 per cent increase in transport costs leads to a 20 per cent reduction in trade volumes on average • High transport costs reduces competitiveness in two ways: • Net domestic export prices are reduced • Gross imported input prices are higher
High transport costs and thick borders create small eco-geographic entities in the developing world
Climate change • GHG emissions reduces reflection of sun radiation back into the atmosphere • Leads to increase of average temperatures with extreme weather events, drastic consequences with melting of glaciers and pole caps • Transport is a main contributor and a main victim of climate change • Policy tries to implement measures to cap the temperature increase, e.g. 2° C
Threats to trade costs from global environmental developments (?) Business as usual: Transport will become a main emitter
Pessimistic view: Technical change will not be forthcoming • Even with the implementation of a carbon tax that achieves a stabilization level of 450 ppm or 2° C the transport emissions will increase by 45 percent by 2050 • Transport costs would increase due to the increase in the price of fossil fuels and due to a carbon price if agreed internationally
Consequences for international trade • Prima facie the price increase in transport will increase trade costs. • Core transport costs account for 20 percent of total trade costs (which are however high as a percentage of production costs). But
The demand for speed leads to a reduction of trade distances reducing the threat of increasing transport costs
The value-weight ratio has fallen dramatically reducing the threat of increasing transport costs • Trade friction of transport has fallen globally despite persistence of monetary costs • Reduced trade friction is due to changed character in trade • Overall increase in value-weight ratio of international trade • Decrease of the ratio for air, increase for maritime sector
Among the external costs of transport GHG emissions are not the most important
Imperativesto keep international transport costs low • Multimodality in international transport has to be improved • International transport has to adapt to changing climate to avoid disruptions
Multimodality in international transport has to be improved • Modal shift road to rail • International harmonization of technical standards • Competition issues because of dominant incumbent rail firms, often SOEs • Modal shift aviation to rail • Depends on spread of high speed rail • Challenge of coordinating passenger and freight services
Multimodality in international transport has to be improved • Modal shift road to maritime • Better and more intermodal infrastructure facilities to reduce switching costs • Avoid discrimination against maritime sector in pricing carbon
Conclusions • Climate change is real and requires urgent global action • Transport costs are of high importance for international trade • Technical change might not do the trick • Trends in trade reduce the effect of mitigation measures on transport • Carbon prices would not have a dramatic effect on trade costs • Improvements in multimodal transport become cost effective with