03.26.08
Day 2 - Oceania Cruise - The Yellow Sea as a Highway
Today is an at-sea day for the cruise. What struck me was the huge volume of inter-coastal freighters going from Japan and Korea to Tianjin. I presume this reflects the flow of semi-manufactures to China for final assembly.
Over the past five years, the economies of East Asia have prospered as interregional trade has increased. Given the geography of the area, goods flow by these small freighters using the Yellow Sea. The more apparent route from Korea to China by land is blacked by North Korea. In addition, the Chinese rail system is largely focused on the movement of people, not goods. Thus the solution is that goods are shipped by container on these small coastal freighters. This trend will likely intensify as manufacture and investment flows become more intertwined over time.
China has financed an incredible expansion in its highway system by using toll roads, at fairly steep prices for a developing economy. In California, the current debate is on expanding the roads leading out of the ports. The state passed a multi-billion dollar bond package to relieve port congestion. Maybe we should be investing more in toll roads? After all, we’re just at the other end of the Yellow Sea Asian Highway.
Sphere: Related Content