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BMARIA27: Aplicaes

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Title: BMARIA27: Aplicaes


1
B-MARIA-27 Aplicações
  • Prof. Dr. Eduardo A. Haddad
  • Departamento de Economia, FEA/USP e FIPE

2
Aplicações
  • Duplicação da BR-381
  • Reaching the planner
  • Abertura comercial e pobreza
  • Integração micro-macro
  • Eficiência portuária
  • Links e nós

3
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4
Relembrando...
5
Transportation Costs
  • Prices paid for commodity i from region s in
    region q by each user equate to the sum of its
    basic value and the costs of the relevant taxes
    and margin-commodities
  • Margins (transportation services) facilitate
    flows of goods from points of production or
    points of entry to either domestic users or ports
    of exit

6
Flowchart with Regional Production Technology in
B-MARIA-27Highlighting the Transportation
Sector
7
Average Labor Income, by Sector
8
The Role of Transportation Services in
B-MARIA-27 Illustrative Flowchart in a
Two-Region Integrated Framework
9
Estimated Logistic Road Transport Cost Function
(Castro et al., 1999)
Used to disaggregate national margins by product
by user
10
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11
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12
Calibration
  • The calibration strategy adopted takes into
    account explicitly, for each origin-destination
    pair, key elements of the Brazilian integrated
    interstate economic system, namely
  • Type of trade involved (margins vary according to
    specific commodity flows)
  • Transportation network (distance matters!)
  • Distance effects in transportation, in the form
    of long-haul economies
  • Increasing returns to transportation

13
Simulation
  • Integration in the simulation phase
  • Changes in the existing physical transportation
    network and implications on costs
  • Road improvement, toll, ...
  • How to translate such policies into changes in
    the matrix of minimum time distances, mimicking
    potential reductions/increases in the distance
    between two or more points in space?
  • Linkage variable amarg_i(s,q,r)

14
Simulation
  • Model-consistent transfer rate
  • In percentage change ( )

15
Mecanismo de Funcionamento Relações Causais na
Simulação
16
Duplicação da BR-381
  • Eduardo Haddad

17
Motivação
  • Duplicação da rodovia BR-381/MG/SP Fernão Dias
    no trecho entre Belo Horizonte e São Paulo
  • Os impactos da etapa de implantação do projeto
    não serão contemplados neste exercício
    ilustrativo
  • O objetivo é explorar as características do
    modelo integrado na fase de simulação e não fazer
    uma avaliação sistemática do projeto
  • Impactos sobre o crescimento econômico associado
    a ganhos de produtividade regional e nacional,
    além de considerações sobre bem-estar

18
Motivação
  • 1a fase duplicação de 217 km da pista iniciados
    em Belo Horizonte chegando a Lavras, e os 53 km
    iniciais a partir da capital paulista
  • 2a fase 293 km restantes
  • Os custos totais da 1a e 2a fases do programa
    foram estimados em US 534 milhões e US 446
    milhões, respectivamente
  • Parâmetros definidos para a 2a fase da obra de
    duplicação da BR-381 para efetuarmos nosso
    exercício de simulação

19
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20
Simulação
  • O cálculo da matriz de tempos mínimos de viagem
    entre as capitais brasileiras, considerando as
    obras de duplicação da Fernão Dias, é feito
    através de simulações em que se atribui
    velocidade máxima em toda a extensão da rodovia a
    ser duplicada igual à velocidade máxima de uma
    rodovia de pista duplicada, a saber, 110 km/h
  • Simula-se, então, o tempo de viagem gasto
    partindo-se de cada capital estadual com destino
    às demais capitais, o que é exposto em uma matriz
    quadrada de ordem n 27

21
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22
Resultados
  • O modelo B-MARIA-27 foi utilizado para estimar os
    impactos de curto prazo e longo prazo da 2a fase
    da obra de duplicação da BR-318, durante seu
    período de operação
  • Em termos agregados, os investimentos em questão,
    em sua fase de operação, possuem um impacto
    potencial sobre o crescimento nacional variação
    de 0.0046 do PIB real nacional (equivalente a R
    38.4 milhões) no curto prazo, e 0.0261 (R 215.9
    milhões), no longo prazo

23
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24
Resultados
  • Podemos utilizar os resultados de estática
    comparativa para projetar o fluxo marginal de
    riquezas na economia. Para tanto, necessitamos de
    informações adicionais sobra a vida útil do
    projeto (20 anos)
  • Utilizando este parâmetro, calculamos o valor
    presente (VP) de um fluxo marginal do PIB,
    contínuo e constante ao longo do período (Figura
    4.20), sob taxas de desconto de 3, 5 e 8
  • Os valores utilizados referem-se aos efeitos das
    simulações de curto prazo e longo prazo, em R
    milhões de 1996

25
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26
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27
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28
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29
Trade Liberalization and Regional Inequality Do
Transportation Costs Impose a Spatial Poverty
Trap?
  • Eduardo Haddad
  • Fernando Perobelli

30
Motivation
  • It has been argued that there are still areas
    where further structural reforms are needed in
    Latin America, including scaling back remaining
    high tariffs (World Economic Outlook, April 2003)
  • Changes in relative prices might have strong
    implications to the allocation of resources
  • Spatial effects
  • How does the allocation of resources change
    throughout the adjustment process?
  • Winners and losers
  • Strong appeal to policymakers

31
Motivation
  • Moreover, we are concerned with the spatial
    impediments for the internal transmission of the
    potential benefits of trade liberalization, in
    the form of high transportation costs that the
    more remote regions face

32
Motivation
  • Cross-country studies


Trade liberalization
Economic growth
-
Poverty
33
Motivation
  • Economic geography models
  • Mansouri (JRS, 2003)
  • Trade liberalization may cause the population of
    a country to become more concentrated into a
    single metropolis (congestion costs)
  • Redding and Venables (JIE, 2004)
  • Hint on the role of market access
  • Trade liberalization may lead to welfare loss of
    developing (more remote) countries

34
Motivation
  • Can we be more specific about the role
    transportation infrastructure plays in the
    transmission mechanisms of an increase in foreign
    trade?
  • Integration of spatial CGE model with geo-coded
    transportation network model
  • Comparative advantage
  • Geographical advantage

35
Simulation
  • Basic simulation uniform 25 decrease in all
    tariff rates
  • First-round (short run) spatial effects
  • Counterfactual simulation implicit
    transportation costs associated with hypothetical
    import corridors
  • Information on ports of entry of state imports
  • Effective cost (transborder cost and the cost of
    shipping the goods from the ports of entry to the
    place of consumption) versus transborder costs

36
Distribution of Brazilian Exports and Imports by
Transport Modes
37
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38
Transborder and Import Corridor Costs By
State(In of Total Value of Basic Flows of
Imported Goods)
39
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40
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41
Spatial Results
  • Decomposition of the net effects associated with
    the import corridors costs
  • Identify the sources of market imperfections that
    affect state performance related to trade
    liberalization

42
Decomposition of Net Effects of Transportation
Costs on the Impacts of Tariff Reductions on
Regional Growth (Real GSP) By Import Corridors
43
Decomposition of Net Effects of Transportation
Costs on the Impacts of Tariff Reductions on
Regional HH Disposable Income By Import
Corridors
44
Epilogue Poverty Effects
  • Poverty effects of trade reforms are estimated
    using a top-down approach (non-behavioral
    micro-simulation)
  • Based on Bussolo (2004)
  • No feedback from the micro module to the macro
    model is explicitly accounted for at this stage
  • Information from ICGE model, by state
  • Sectoral capital income, labor income, government
    transfers, sectoral employment, CPI
  • Household survey PNAD 1996
  • State poverty lines Rocha (2003)

45
Link Between B-MARIA-27 and Household Survey
Update state poverty lines
Changes in employment
46
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47
Final Remarks
  • Attempt to elucidate one of the mechanisms that
    link own trade liberalization and subsequent
    growth and regional inequality
  • Only one side of the token
  • Constraints towards export expansion can also be
    perceived as a further barrier to link trade
    liberalization and growth
  • Investments in transportation appear to have been
    oriented towards supporting increased exports
  • Role of export corridors must be considered in
    order to grasp the holistic picture

48
Decomposition of Net Effects of Transportation
Costs on the Impacts of Tariff Reductions on
Regional Growth (Real GSP) By Import/Export
Corridors
49
Final Remarks
  • CGE results mapped to the detailed information
    available in the household survey
  • More complex and useful analysis of the poverty
    impact provided
  • Better assessment of the role of transportation
    policies as (compensatory) structural regional
    policies
  • How to deal with spatial factor mobility in MS?

50
Port Efficiency and Regional Development
  • Eduardo Haddad
  • Geoffrey Hewings
  • Raul Antonio dos Santos

51
Motivation
52
Integration of CGE models and transportation
networks
  • Modest but expanding literature
  • Initial focus on spatial CGE models (e.g. Roson)
  • Kim et al Korea
  • Multi-regional CGE model
  • Examined optimal link construction strategies for
    major network expansion in highway network
    infrastructure
  • Considered link and system-wide (synergetic)
    interactions

53
Integration of CGE models and transportation
networks
  • Kim et al. US
  • Integration of interregional commodity flow model
    and highway/rail transportation network to
    consider impacts of earthquake disruption
  • Haddad and Hewings Brazil
  • Explored role of market imperfections
  • Focused on role of scale economies and
    transportation costs
  • Latter much more important in terms of welfare
    impacts

54
Unresolved issues
  • Integration focused on network structure
  • Modal choice
  • Congestion functions on links
  • Route choice and path identification (e.g. Lee,
    2005)
  • No consideration of nodal congestion
  • e.g. US railroads and Chicago (48 hours
    LA-Chicago, 18 hours Chicago-NY but 36-130 hours
    within Chicago)
  • Unlike highway link, congestion at port may have
    severe impacts spread over space and time whereas
    highway link congestion may be resolved within
    several hours

55
Unresolved issues
  • Modeling issues
  • How to include a nodal congestion function
  • Consideration of regulation and spatial
    competition (competing destinations/origins/transf
    er)
  • Shipper/carrier/transfer agent issue
  • Shipper minimize O-D transportation costs
  • Carrier allocate shippers goods to different
    modes or combination of modes
  • Transfer agent (port) attracting different
    modes to use specific ports

56
Unresolved issues
  • For port
  • How much investment to reduce transfer costs?
  • Specialize (e.g. in containers or handling
    particular cargoes)?
  • Dependency on links with the hinterland
  • Clark et al. (2004) found that in Latin American
    shipments to the US, moving from 25th to 75th
    percentile in port efficiency reduced total
    shipping costs by 12

57
First steps
  • Assume transportation costs for export/import
    include two components
  • Link costs (internally and externally)
  • Transfer costs at the port (function of volume
    and capacity)

58
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59
First steps
  • Assume standard network with nodes and links
  • At port, introduce a self-link to capture the
    transfer costs

60
First steps
  • Adopt functional form similar to ones used for
    congestion function on links
  • Assume there is a self link at port in which
    transfer costs are constant per unit up to a
    certain level and then rise exponentially until
    capacity is reached

61
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62
First steps
  • Need to formulate a model of imperfect
    competition among the ports
  • Different capacities
  • Different hinterland connectivities restrict the
    degree to which one port can serve as substitute
    for another i.e., trade areas imperfectly
    overlap
  • Since port is part of the transportation network,
    any congestion/disruptions likely to ripple
    throughout the hinterland

63
Port efficiency
  • Port costs may be seen as an additional barrier
    to trade
  • Determinants of port efficiency
  • Activities that depend on port infrastructure
    (e.g. pilotage, cargo handling, among others)
  • Activities related to customs requirements (e.g.
    legal restrictions, port management, etc.)
  • Port efficiency varies widely from country to
    country

64
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65
The Brazilian Case
66
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67
  • Minas Gerais 78.66 of total imports by
    navigation mode,
  • from which 35.4 enter from ports in ES, 34.1
    from RJ,
  • 28.7 from SP, 1.4 from PR, 0.4 from SC and
    0.1 from PE
  • Rio Grande do Sul 78.37 of total imports by
    navigation mode,
  • from which 94.9 enter from ports within the
    state, 4.1 from SP,
  • 0.5 from SC, 0.3 from PR, and 0.1 from RJ

68
Transborder and Import Corridor Costs By
State(In of Total Value of Basic Flows of
Imported Goods)
69
Internal Transfer Costs as a Barrier to Trade
Costs that accrue to import flows (port plus
inland costs)
70
Simulations
71
Simulations
  • Basic simulation uniform 25 decrease in all
    transborder rates (efficiency gains)
  • First-round (short run) spatial effects
  • Benchmark simulation trade liberalization
    considering implicit transportation costs
    associated with hypothetical import/export
    corridors
  • Information on ports of entry (exit) of state
    imports (exports)
  • Effective cost (transborder cost and the cost of
    shipping the goods from the ports of entry to the
    place of consumption) versus transborder costs

72
Benchmark simulation
  • Haddad and Perobelli (2005)
  • It has been argued that there are still areas
    where further structural reforms are needed in
    Latin America, including scaling back remaining
    high tariffs (World Economic Outlook, April 2003)
  • Changes in relative prices might have strong
    implications to the spatial allocation of
    resources
  • How does the allocation of resources change
    throughout the adjustment process?
  • Winners and losers
  • Strong appeal to policymakers

73
Benchmark simulation
  • Haddad and Perobelli were concerned with the
    spatial impediments for the internal transmission
    of the potential benefits of trade
    liberalization, in the form of high
    transportation costs that the more remote regions
    face (INLAND COSTS LINKS)
  • Explicit modeling of space
  • How about port efficiency issues (NODES)?
  • Put them into perspective

74
Benchmark simulation
  • Main results
  • Regarding regional performance in terms of real
    GSP growth, note the negative impact high
    transportation costs impose to the (more remote)
    regions.
  • Overall, states more remotely located both in
    terms of distance from the central position or
    access to ports are more adversely affected.
  • Two spatial regimes coastal and hinterland

75
Decomposition of Net Effects of Transportation
Costs on the Impacts of Tariff Reductions on
Regional Growth (Real GSP) By Import/Export
Corridors (Haddad and Perobelli, 2005)
76
Basic simulation
  • Increase port efficiency (25)
  • Design of the shocks (import flows)
  • Shock amarg_i("foreign","state","OTS")
  • f (share of state imports by navigation,
  • distribution of imports by ports of entry,
  • exisiting relative efficiency among
    ports)

77
Relative Port Efficiency
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79
Effects on Real Gross Regional Product
80
Spatial Results GSP Ports of Entry
81
Final Remarks
82
Final remarks
  • Attempt to elucidate one of the mechanisms that
    link trade barriers (port efficiency) and
    subsequent growth and regional inequality
  • Only one side of the coin
  • AGAIN!

83
Spatial Results GSP Ports of Exit
84
Spatial Results GSP The Whole Picture
85
Spatial Results GSP The Whole Picture
Primary exporters
Intermediate space
Global players
86
Spatial regimes
  • Primary exporters
  • Localized links/nodes
  • Specific/scattered economic space(s)
  • Intermediate space
  • Transition
  • Role played domestic markets
  • Global players
  • Port efficiency affects overall competitiveness
  • Dense economic space

87
Policy implications
  • Enhance coastal (C-S) effect concentration!
  • The role of transportation policies as
    compensatory regional policies
  • Investment in improving capacity of links needs
    to be complemented by improvements in nodal
    efficiency (break-even point in center-west is
    12 higher than on southern farms because of
    higher transportation costs)
  • Nodal bottlenecks present more important
    challenge because of the scale of the investment
    required
  • Need to capture two-way impacts of improvement in
    port efficiency
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