Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 24 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

?After End-2008 Structural Changes in Containership Market? and Their Impact on Industry?s Policy

Alexandros M. Goulielmos    

Resumen

The inability of carriers to forecast ?demand for containerships? led them to order larger ships. Maritime economists were also unable to forecast it. The new-buildings cut cost per TEU, but ?estimated economies of scale? are exhausted with ships beyond 21,000 TEUs, higher than the present. As average cost-AC was not at minimum, carriers did not produce at minimum efficient scale (MES). As larger ships are more competitive, smaller ships led to laid-up, and eventually scrapped. This strategy, however, did not bring the desirable balance between demand and supply. Due to falling demand, following the meltdown at the end of 2008, carriers priced their services at marginal cost-MC, and thus they accumulated losses. As a result, carriers resorted to frequent GRIs (freight rate increases). Supply exceeded demand and average distances fell after 2008. Containership market will remain depressed if economies of scale lead carriers to shipyards. Scrapping?the last hope?removed only 1/7 of the oversupply. Revenue, operating profits, and net profits, due to increased financial expenses, were lower than in the past. Aggressive ship-building programs could not be carried-out, because the depression meant that there are available only limited funds. The estimated funds required for new buildings were as high as $4 billion per carrier. So, the sector is in a vicious circle. The only helpful sign was the reduction in fuel prices after 2011 from $800/ton to $278 (2015). We also showed that ports and canals, through their traditional charging policy on size, penalized containerships for their efficiency?if volume discounts are not provided. Port dues and container handling and canal dues account for as much as 40% of the annualized containership cost. Finally, to study the relationship between concentration (market share) and revenue, operating profit and net profit, we ran three regressions; but only one gave a high correlation coefficient (0.97). This suggests that the containership market is purely competitive. We also showed that the Herfindahl index was 683 units (i.e., <1000) and Lerner?s index was 0.55?both indicating oligopolistic trends. Our model shows that containership market is either oligopolistic or purely competitive. This finding shows the double face of containership markets, which so much confused maritime economists.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Vladimir Micic     Pág. 097 - 112
The fourth industrial revolution is about the development of Industry 4.0, the changing of the production paradigm and economic digitalization. The research subject are the development conditions of Industry 4.0 in the Republic of Serbia. The main resear... ver más

 
D. Arpana,H.R. Swapna     Pág. 145 - 149
Indian economy has seen various auxiliary and key changes in financial markets. While Indian economy is on development direction, there is an extensive spread realization among all in the financial range that for such development to be practical, a corre... ver más

 
Haytem Ahmed Troug,Matt Murray     Pág. 282 - 296
This paper examines the presence of asymmetry in the response of the Libyan economy to fluctuations in oil prices, subsequent to discovery of oil in the country. Three Vector Autoregressive (VAR) models are illustrated and estimated along with a multivar... ver más

 
Lesi Hertati,Marlina Widiyanti,Desfitrina Desfitrina,Afriapollo Syafarudin,Otniel Safkaur     Pág. 236 - 244
A crisis is a period associated with events that occur unexpectedly that have a negative impact on the organization. The economic crisis is caused by an unforeseen world situation so it must provide a fast, precise and accurate decision so as not to affe... ver más

 
Jelena Stanojevic,Bojan Krstic     Pág. 197 - 213
The high level of interconnection between economic sectors, respectively agriculture, manufacturing and the service sector, imposes the need to understand intersectoral structural changes and transfer of resources between sectors in order to perceive the... ver más