Transport Prices and Costs in Africa


Book Description

Transport prices for most African landlocked countries range from 15 to 20 percent of import costs. This is approximately two to three times more than in most developed countries. It is well known that weak infrastructure can account for low trade performance. Thus, it becomes necessary to understand what types of regional transport services operate in landlocked African nations and it is critical to identify the regulation disparities and provision anomalies that hurt infrastructure efficiency, even when the physical infrastructure, such as a road transport corridor, exists. Transport Prices and Costs in Africa analyzes the various reasons for poor transport performance seen widely throughout Africa and provides a compelling case for a number of national and regional reforms that are vital to the effort to address the underlying causes of high transport prices and costs and service unpredictability seen in Africa. The book will greatly help supervisory authorities throughout the region develop and implement a comprehensive transport policy that will facilitate long-term growth.




Road Network Upgrading and Overland Trade Expansion in Sub-Saharan Africa


Book Description

Recent research suggests that isolation from regional and international markets has contributed significantly to poverty in many Sub-Saharan African countries. Numerous empirical studies identify poor transport infrastructure and border restrictions as significant deterrents to trade expansion. In response, the African Development Bank has proposed an integrated network of functional roads for the subcontinent. Drawing on new econometric results, the authors quantify the trade-expansion potential and costs of such a network. They use spatial network analysis techniques to identify a network of primary roads connecting all Sub-Saharan capitals and other cities with populations over 500,000. The authors estimate current overland trade flows in the network using econometrically-estimated gravity model parameters, road transport quality indicators, actual road distances, and estimates of economic scale for cities in the network. Then they simulate the effect of feasible continental upgrading by setting network transport quality at a level that is functional, but less highly developed than existing roads in countries like South Africa and Botswana. The authors assess the costs of upgrading with econometric evidence from a large World Bank database of road project costs in Africa. Using a standard approach to forecast error estimation, they derive a range of potential benefits and costs. Their baseline results indicate that continental network upgrading would expand overland trade by about $250 billion over 15 years, with major direct and indirect benefits for the rural poor. Financing the program would require about $20 billion for initial upgrading and $1 billion annually for maintenance. The authors conclude with a discussion of supporting institutional arrangements and the potential cost of implementing them.




Road Transport in Nigeria


Book Description




Black Urban Public Road Transport


Book Description




Road Transport in Africa


Book Description

Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 43. Chapters: Africa road stubs, Trans-African Highway network, Motorway, Cape to Cairo Road, Trans-West African Coastal Highway, Trans-Sahelian Highway, Trans-Sahara Highway, Bridge of the Horns, Tripoli - Cape Town Highway, Lagos-Mombasa Highway, Cairo - Cape Town Highway, Boda-boda, Beira-Lobito Highway, Casablanca-Rabat expressway, Mbarara-Kikagati Road, Trans-Caprivi Highway, Casablanca-Marrakesh expressway, Cairo-Dakar Highway, Roads in Senegal, Gayaza-Ziroobwe Road, Ndjamena-Djibouti Highway, Brazzaville-Kinshasa Bridge, Matugga-Kapeeka Road, Trans-Gambia Highway, A109 road, Cairo Ring Road, Roads in Kenya, Great North Road, Zambia, Strait of Sicily Tunnel, Route nationale 1, Bamboo Bike Project, Ahmed Hamdi Tunnel, A23 road, Avenida Marginal, Roads in Namibia, Jomo Kenyatta Avenue, Moi Avenue, Platinum Highway, A2 highway, Boulevard du 30 Juin, Lusaka-Livingstone road, N1 road, Makupa Circus, B8 road, A1 road, National Route 8, National Route 1, Independence Avenue, A19 road, National Route 6, Ashmond Street, A1 motorway, Cairo-Alexandria desert road, A4 motorway, National Highway 5, Koinange Street, International Coastal Road, A342 highway, A7 highway, National Highway 1, A1 highway, A3 motorway, A123 highway, RNIE 3, A232 highway, A122 highway, National Highway 2, A3 highway, RNIE 2, A345 highway, A121 highway, A344 highway, A343 highway, A126 highway, N2 road, National Highway 3, A236 highway, A231 highway, A234 highway, A235 highway, A233 highway, A125 highway, N6 road, A8 highway, Sam Nujoma Street, A237 highway, RNIE 6, A124 highway, N3 road, A9 highway, A4 highway, National Highway 4, A13 highway, N4 road, A5 highway, A4 road, A6 road, A2 road, RNIE 4, N5 road, RNIE 1, RNIE 5, RNIE 7. Excerpt: A motorway is a dual-carriageway limited access highway with grade separated junctions designed...




Road Network Upgrading and Overland Trade Expansion in Sub-Saharan Africa


Book Description

Recent research suggests that isolation from regional and international markets has contributed significantly to poverty in many Sub-Saharan African countries. Numerous empirical studies identify poor transport infrastructure and border restrictions as significant deterrents to trade expansion. In response, the African Development Bank has proposed an integrated network of functional roads for the subcontinent. Drawing on new econometric results, the authors quantify the trade-expansion potential and costs of such a network. They use spatial network analysis techniques to identify a network of primary roads connecting all Sub-Saharan capitals and other cities with populations over 500,000. The authors estimate current overland trade flows in the network using econometrically-estimated gravity model parameters, road transport quality indicators, actual road distances, and estimates of economic scale for cities in the network. Then they simulate the effect of feasible continental upgrading by setting network transport quality at a level that is functional, but less highly developed than existing roads in countries like South Africa and Botswana. The authors assess the costs of upgrading with econometric evidence from a large World Bank database of road project costs in Africa. Using a standard approach to forecast error estimation, they derive a range of potential benefits and costs. Their baseline results indicate that continental network upgrading would expand overland trade by about $250 billion over 15 years, with major direct and indirect benefits for the rural poor. Financing the program would require about $20 billion for initial upgrading and $1 billion annually for maintenance. The authors conclude with a discussion of supporting institutional arrangements and the potential cost of implementing them.










Ghana on the Go


Book Description

As early as the 1910s, African drivers in colonial Ghana understood the possibilities that using imported motor transport could further the social and economic agendas of a diverse array of local agents, including chiefs, farmers, traders, fishermen, and urban workers. Jennifer Hart's powerful narrative of auto-mobility shows how drivers built on old trade routes to increase the speed and scale of motorized travel. Hart reveals that new forms of labor migration, economic enterprise, cultural production, and social practice were defined by autonomy and mobility and thus shaped the practices and values that formed the foundations of Ghanaian society today. Focusing on the everyday lives of individuals who participated in this century of social, cultural, and technological change, Hart comes to a more sensitive understanding of the ways in which these individuals made new technology meaningful to their local communities and associated it with their future aspirations.




Africa's Transport Infrastructure


Book Description

This book will be of interest to governments in the region and to multilateral and bilateral aid and lending agencies, as well as to graduate students, faculty, and researchers in African studies and transport studies. --Book Jacket.