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wskinner | 1 year ago

> the benefits of the automation goes solely to investors and owners

Totally false. The benefits go to anyone who buys or sells goods that pass through the ports.

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jjav|1 year ago

> Totally false. The benefits go to anyone who buys or sells goods that pass through the ports.

Mostly true. Only if there is huge competitive pressure will the prices be forced to go down. Otherwise, those owners simply make more profit now and keep prices the same.

With ports, you don't have much competitive pressure because a competitor can't just another mega-port next to the existing one, there is no such space available.

wskinner|1 year ago

If that is true, then what stops port operators from raising prices from their present level and pocketing the free money? In reality, demand curves slope down and the surplus from efficiency improvements is split between buyers and sellers. And with the lower costs that result from efficiency improvements, ports will be able to move more goods per unit of time. Even with the unrealistic assumption that the surplus is entirely captured by the port operators, buyers and sellers of goods will benefit from the increased volume.

viraptor|1 year ago

Only if the automation is cheaper and more efficient and that improvement/saving gets passed on to the (un)loading fees and then to the companies doing the transport and then to the marketplace middlemen and then then to the buyers/sellers.

seymore_12|1 year ago

In my opinion, port costs never go down with automation. If anything, they go up when automation is deployed (this essentially means unmanned reach stackers, more cranes and eventually new TOS (Terminal Operating System) to compensate investment. This is interesting document (PDF) with port performance index for 2023. Page 11. https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/0990603241145396...

wskinner|1 year ago

It is, and it does. US ports are far less efficient than the more automated ports in Asia and Europe.

thrance|1 year ago

Only if the dock owners reduce the price of unloading goods, but why would they when they could just pocket the savings from firing everyone? It's not like there is much competition.

andrewjl|1 year ago

It'd be nice right? Too bad the maritime shipping industry is an oligopoly.

consteval|1 year ago

You're operating under the assumption the cost savings are passed onto consumers. I see no reason why this would be the case - the cost savings would do much better as expansion of capital, and consumers are already happy with the current price.

johnnyanmac|1 year ago

>anyone who buys or sells goods

so, not the workers or the larger populace. Just more business that is continuing to make life more expensive.

These are all subjective, so this is neither true nor false.

wskinner|1 year ago

Everyone buys stuff.

soco|1 year ago

Is this the trickle down argument again? Are there still people around honestly believing it? Even Wikipedia says there's zero proof, but nice to peek at the last century fads once in a while.

roenxi|1 year ago

Unlikely because the "trickle down" argument doesn't exist as a positive policy. It is where the opponents of a policy argue that it won't work because the value will accrue to the wealthy.

In this case the original argument was that capital investments at the port will create value to the port users. It is likely correct - if the port invests in robots then it is extremely reasonable to expect that users of the port will get cheaper and better service. The port owners might make more money or they might get squeezed by economics, that part is much harder to work out.