HONG KONG SAR - Media OutReach - 13 January 2022 - The Belt and Road Initiative,
announced in 2013, represents China's most ambitious effort yet to strengthen
its physical connectivity to the world. As a programme of vast infrastructure
building throughout the country's neighbours, it comprises of two major
components: A land trade route known as the Silk Road Economic Belt that links
China to Europe via Central Asia and Russia as well as to other Asian
countries, and a sea route known as the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road running
from the East coast of China to Europe through the Indian and South Pacific
Oceans.
(Source: iStock)
While few would doubt its development is of immense value to
China's future economic wellbeing, studies and discussion on the topic has
tended to presuppose that two components operate independently, when in reality
the development of one component can drastically affect the other.
This is the premise of the study How
"Belt" and "Road" are Related Economically: Modelling and Policy Implications,
which sought to examine how the two modes of transport affected one another as
well as how they benefited companies making use of it to transport goods to
faraway markets.
The study was conducted by Andrew
Yuen Chi-lok and Cheung
Waiman, Senior Lecturer and Professor, respectively, at The
Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Business School's Department of Decision
Sciences and Managerial Economics, in collaboration with Prof. Laingo
Randrianarisoa at the Kedge Business School, Prof. Zhang Anming at the
University of British Columbia and Prof. Yang Hangjun at the University of
International Business and Economics.
"In the past, people have tended to think of the land and
sea routes under Belt and Road as being separate and independent economically,
whereas in realty they are pretty much anything but," says Dr. Yuen, adding
that, for example, improvements to the main rail line connecting China to a
number of Eurasia countries, known as the New Eurasian Land Bridge, has hit the
bottom lines of shipping companies such as China's COSCO in recent years.
"As China continues the rapid development of its high-speed
rail network, there's every possibility that companies will increasingly look
to moving their goods by land, rather than by air or across the seas," he adds.
In turn, this prompted the researchers to closely examine the short and
medium-term impact of the development of rail links under Belt and Road on the
maritime market.
Rail
Subsidies
To do so, they developed an analytical model to capture how
the two components of Belt and Road interacted with each other. They first
turned their attention to the thorny issue of subsidies granted by the Chinese
government to encourage the use of rail links.
Despite the rapid improvement in rail links brought about by
infrastructure spending under Belt and Road, the sea remains the predominant
way that Chinese companies transport their goods across countries within the
initiative.
To stimulate demand, the Chinese government typically
provides significant subsidies to encourage the use of rail links. Back in
2018, China's Ministry of Finance subsidised as much as up to 50 percent of the
cost of shipping rail freight between China and Europe, although this has
gradually been cut back in recent years and is expected to be completely
abolished in 2022.
Using the model they developed, the researchers demonstrated
that the high level of subsidy that the Chinese government has been offering to
rail operators in the early years of Belt and Road may at least be partially
explained by the slump in the shipping sector (caused by successive global
economic crises as well as structural overcapacity within the maritime
industry) depressing freight rates, which amounted to just around US$3,000 per
FEU (forty-foot equivalent unit, the size of a standard shipping container) in
the pre-pandemic era, but has since risen dramatically as supply chains around
the world restarted as COVID lockdowns eased.
Specifically, it found that subsidies paid by governments to
stimulate rail usage often depends on demand for the transportation of goods in
the shipping sector as well as the shipping freight rate. It also depends on
the costs that the rail operator incurs as the volume of goods being
transported rises, regional road tolls to and from the rail station, as well as
the degree to which companies having their goods transported are sensitive to
price and speed of delivery.
Fully
Competitive Market
On the other hand, the researchers also looked at what would
happen if rail subsidies were abolished altogether and the two modes of freight
were to compete on an equal footing.
The study showed that firms which make use of the
infrastructure links under Belt and Road are only likely to continue to favour
transporting goods by sea (which is typically the cheaper option) if shipping
prices at ports remain low. However, demand for rail (which is faster) will
depend on the nature of goods that are to be transported, with companies
favouring rail for high-value and time-sensitive products such as laptop
computers, mobile phones, auto parts, household electronic appliances, and some
perishable goods.
Companies are also more likely to choose to use rail to
transport these products because in China they are typically manufactured in
inland cities like Chongqing and Chengdu. Not only is it cheaper for companies
to set up shop in these regions, but by making use of comparatively faster rail
transport links, companies can maintain a lower inventory. This allows them to
offset the higher rail freight charges.
For the region hosting the Belt and Road infrastructure, the
study found that when rail links are added or improved, they provide benefits
by improving the quality of rail services, reduce the costs associated with
delayed freight, and reduce the cost of ground transportation to and from
factories as result of competition.
The extent of this benefit largely depends on the size of
investment that has been made into improving rail or port links, as well as the
relative proportion of freight users that ship time-sensitive goods, the study
found.
"In the long term, we find that if the rail operator in a
given region is able to compete with their maritime counterparts on a level
playing field, this system would generate positive benefits for a given region
where this infrastructure is set up," says Prof. Cheung. "This is especially so
for companies using these shipping services, since competition would lower the
price of freight, and the introduction of new rail infrastructure also would
help to lower ground transportation costs for companies situated close to the
rail station."
Facility
Management
Lastly, the study looked at the effect of whether the rail
and port facilities were managed by the same or separate entities. When the two
types of facilities are managed separately, the study found that the facility
fees charged tended to be lower because the rail and port authorities would
behave as competitors, shifting the demand to faster rail services. On the
other hand, when they are managed by the same entity, it would yield a greater
benefit for companies shipping goods overall, provided that there is a
sufficient proportion of them which produce time-sensitive goods.
The researchers say the findings hold deep implications for
policymakers in managing subsidies and infrastructure financing. If external
economic conditions are poor, the government should set rail subsidies at a
minimum level until conditions in both the rail and maritime markets improve.
Because a high level of subsidy is unsustainable over the long term, government
should also stimulate competition between the terminal operators of the two
modes of transport to generate a positive benefit from the Belt and Road
Initiative.
Given that rail subsidies are linked to the external
economic environment, the Central or local government may also look to
improving the market conditions in other sectors of the economy to reduce rail
companies' dependence on financial aid. It is also important for policy makers
to identify the share of freight users who are time or price sensitive and to
plan accordingly when developing rail or port links to avoid overcapacity or
excessive subsidies in one or the other form of freight.
Finally, because the joint management of rail and port
facilities tend to yield higher benefits for freight users, the researchers
recommend that local and central government authorities cooperate more closely
to ensure that the two modes of transport operate in a way that is
complementary to each other.
Reference:
Randrianarisoa, Laingo M., Zhang,
Anming, Yang, Hangju, Yuen, Andrew Yuen and Cheung, Waiman, How 'Belt' and
'Road' are related economically: modelling and policy implications (July 21, 2020).
https://doi.org/10.1080/03088839.2020.1791993
This
article was first published in the China Business Knowledge (CBK) website by
CUHK Business School: https://bit.ly/3356AQa
The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.