Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived

Many countries in Africa and Asia have coastlines that present opportunities for them to become gateways for trade between the hinterlands and global trading routes. However, policy makers struggle to translate this potential into engines of economic development and social transformation. In the pas...

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Main Authors: Aritua, Bernard, Chiu, Hei, Cheng, Lu, Farrell, Sheila, de Langen, Peter
Format: Book
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099355105182214741/idu0252045cf029fb04b3c0a3b8015c08103310d
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37445
id okr-10986-37445
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-374452022-07-06T20:37:41Z Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived Aritua, Bernard Chiu, Hei Cheng, Lu Farrell, Sheila de Langen, Peter TRADE AND INDUSTRY GLOBAL TRADE GLOBAL TRADING ROUTES PORT MANAGEMENT MARITIME TRANSPORT Many countries in Africa and Asia have coastlines that present opportunities for them to become gateways for trade between the hinterlands and global trading routes. However, policy makers struggle to translate this potential into engines of economic development and social transformation. In the past 40 years, China has taken advantage of its strategic geographical location and its status as one of the world’s top manufacturing regions. From a very low position on almost all metrics, today China has become home to more than half of the world’s top 50 ports. The rapid development of China’s ports was critical for the country’s remarkable economic growth. What China achieved can be informative; how and why China revived and modernized its port sector is especially relevant and provides valuable lessons for other countries. This book explores the transformation of China’s port sector through four topics and four periods, beginning with China’s major economic reforms that started in 1978. The first topic addresses the links between China’s macroeconomic and regional development strategies and development of the port sector. During this period—through about 1991—China began decentralizing port management to facilitate development of special economic zones. The second topic—during the period 1992 through about 2001—is more specific about the ports and analyzes changes in port governance, including the way in which essential investments were determined and financed. The third topic examines the relationship of ports to the cities where they are located and to the hinterlands on which they depend—coinciding with the period 2002–11. Domestic and international investment resulted in many new export-oriented processing factories during this period. The accompanying boost in trade required further expansion of port capacity. The fourth topic addresses how—from 2011 onward—human resource and innovation policies in the port sector have responded to changing demands as the country looks to become a less resource-dependent and more regionally balanced economy. 2022-05-17T16:21:09Z 2022-05-17T16:21:09Z 2022-05-17 Book https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099355105182214741/idu0252045cf029fb04b3c0a3b8015c08103310d 978-1-4648-1849-3 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37445 International Development in Focus; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank East Asia and Pacific East Asia China
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
topic TRADE AND INDUSTRY
GLOBAL TRADE
GLOBAL TRADING ROUTES
PORT MANAGEMENT
MARITIME TRANSPORT
spellingShingle TRADE AND INDUSTRY
GLOBAL TRADE
GLOBAL TRADING ROUTES
PORT MANAGEMENT
MARITIME TRANSPORT
Aritua, Bernard
Chiu, Hei
Cheng, Lu
Farrell, Sheila
de Langen, Peter
Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
East Asia
China
relation International Development in Focus;
description Many countries in Africa and Asia have coastlines that present opportunities for them to become gateways for trade between the hinterlands and global trading routes. However, policy makers struggle to translate this potential into engines of economic development and social transformation. In the past 40 years, China has taken advantage of its strategic geographical location and its status as one of the world’s top manufacturing regions. From a very low position on almost all metrics, today China has become home to more than half of the world’s top 50 ports. The rapid development of China’s ports was critical for the country’s remarkable economic growth. What China achieved can be informative; how and why China revived and modernized its port sector is especially relevant and provides valuable lessons for other countries. This book explores the transformation of China’s port sector through four topics and four periods, beginning with China’s major economic reforms that started in 1978. The first topic addresses the links between China’s macroeconomic and regional development strategies and development of the port sector. During this period—through about 1991—China began decentralizing port management to facilitate development of special economic zones. The second topic—during the period 1992 through about 2001—is more specific about the ports and analyzes changes in port governance, including the way in which essential investments were determined and financed. The third topic examines the relationship of ports to the cities where they are located and to the hinterlands on which they depend—coinciding with the period 2002–11. Domestic and international investment resulted in many new export-oriented processing factories during this period. The accompanying boost in trade required further expansion of port capacity. The fourth topic addresses how—from 2011 onward—human resource and innovation policies in the port sector have responded to changing demands as the country looks to become a less resource-dependent and more regionally balanced economy.
format Book
author Aritua, Bernard
Chiu, Hei
Cheng, Lu
Farrell, Sheila
de Langen, Peter
author_facet Aritua, Bernard
Chiu, Hei
Cheng, Lu
Farrell, Sheila
de Langen, Peter
author_sort Aritua, Bernard
title Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived
title_short Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived
title_full Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived
title_fullStr Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived
title_full_unstemmed Developing China’s Ports : How the Gateways to Economic Prosperity Were Revived
title_sort developing china’s ports : how the gateways to economic prosperity were revived
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022
url https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099355105182214741/idu0252045cf029fb04b3c0a3b8015c08103310d
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37445
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