Korea has experienced remarkable economic growth during the last four decades due to its
trade-oriented development policy. Since the international trade of Korea is carried
predominantly by sea transport, its ports play a pivotal role in national economic
development. This impressive development in a short period of time has resulted in rapidly
increasing seaborne cargoes. All the parties involved in port activities have made a
significant effort to keep pace with the ever-growing export and import cargoes. Korean
ports, however, still have a number of problems including insufficient port and terminal
capacity, inefficient management and operation, and bureaucratic administration, all of
which weaken the competitiveness of the country's products by adding heavy logistics
costs.
Th deal appropriately with these problems, the newly established public port authority, the
Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, has launched a new port and terminal
development plan to attract private capital into both existing and new facilities. As a
consequence, this scheme has introduced new competition into the Korean port industry
combined with some degree of privatisation.
The motives for privatisation are complex and varied, but one key claim made is that the
transformation of ownership from public to private improves economic efficiency.
Economic theories and existing empirical studies, however, fail to establish clear-cut
evidence supporting this claim. This phenomenon may reflect, to some extent, a paucity of
performance indicators systematically applicable across enterprises and industries. It is
essential, therefore, to have a systematic and pragmatic analytical framework to assess the
process of privatisation and its results.
With this context in mind, this thesis aims to critically review the characteristics of
international port privatisation together with the economic theory of privatisation, to apply
a new econometric technique for efficiency measurement to a port: the frontier model, and
to assess the policy implications for the Korean government and port authority, paying
particular reference to the privatisation strategy and its implementation within the nation's
seaports and terminals.
This research makes an original contribution to knowledge in three respects: firstly, port
privatisation, in particular the Korean case has, for the first time, been scientifically
investigated on the basis of the economic theory of privatisation; secondly, the industry
was analysed through the application of a recently developed econometric efficiency
measurement method based on the estimation of two frontier models (i.e. cross-sectional
and panel models); and finally, the results of the research undoubtedly provide
government, port authority and other interested parties with information and guidelines for
implementing the policy of port privatisation.
Date of Award | 1999 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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- Commerce
- Privatisation
- Korea
- Ports
- Internal and EU commerce & consumer affairs
Productive efficiency and privatisation : an evaluation of Korean ports policy
Song, D. (Author). 1999
Student thesis: PhD