value of air cargo connectivityto represent, lead and serve the airline industry value of air cargo...
TRANSCRIPT
To represent, lead and serve the airline industry
Value of Air Cargo Connectivity10 February 2017, Geneva
George Anjaparidze, Senior Economistwww.iata.org/economics
2
In one year…
Source: ATAG, IATA.
18,429 Unique city pairs
3.8 billion Passengers
54 millionFreight tonnes
$5.5 trillionTrade carried
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics
3
Air Cargo a key part of world trade
Source: The Colography Group, IATA.
Less than 1% of
volumes
0.5%$15
billion per day
35%
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics
4
Efficient borders increasingly important
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics
5
Essential for integrating into Global Value Chains
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics
Source: Klaus Meinhardt, JETRO2012, ATAG, pinterest.com
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics 6
New Study: Value of Air Cargo: Air Transport and Global Value Chains
Countries with more developed aircargo connections and smarterborders are more integrated intoGlobal Value Chains reaping theassociated benefits.
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics 7
Air connectivity and trade
Air Connectivity Index (World Bank)
Value added trade data
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics 8
Measuring customs quality and smart borders
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics 9
Trade Competitiveness
MC 99Bali TFA
Rev Kyoto
Electronic processing
Risk mng controls
Coordinated procedures
"Single window"
Advance release
IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics 10
What’s on the horizon?
Source: Flügel © Till Bartels
11IATA Economics www.iata.org/economics
www.iata.org/economics
NEW
NEW