2001
DOI: 10.1057/palgrave.ijme.9100025
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Ocean Shipping Alliances: The Wave of the Future?

Abstract: Over the last decade, carriers have entered into operational relationships known as alliances to increase their product offerings and to reduce their costs. Carriers have been able to do so because alliances enable partners to rely on and to combine other carriers' operations in addition to their own. Although alliances have drastically improved operational efficiency, larger carriers will not take the logical next step and merge for a variety of reasons. Ironically, regulation through the Federal Maritime Com… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…However, all lines are engaged in various degrees of slot sharing and chartering arrangements. The objectives that motivate concentration within the liner shipping industry have been summarized as follows (Gardiner, 1997;Midoro and Pitto, 2000;Sheppad and Siedman, 2001):…”
Section: Concentration Within the Liner Shipping Industrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, all lines are engaged in various degrees of slot sharing and chartering arrangements. The objectives that motivate concentration within the liner shipping industry have been summarized as follows (Gardiner, 1997;Midoro and Pitto, 2000;Sheppad and Siedman, 2001):…”
Section: Concentration Within the Liner Shipping Industrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A conference is an alliance of multiple shipping companies that offer their services on a specific transport line against collective tariffs and identical service levels ( van Eekhout, 2001). The advantages of these conferences are economies of scale as a result of larger volumes shipped and improved customer service (Shepperd and Seidman, 2001). Moreover, conferences prevent price wars by offering rate stability.…”
Section: Horizontal Cooperationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…characterised the global market, allowing the participating firms to reap benefits of scale, competitive advantages [12,31,32] and a sufficient size to cope with the high investments in physical and ICT infrastructure to operate efficiently [6]. In fact, in these sub-industries the rate of fixed costs over the total is particularly high.…”
Section: Integration Strategies By Investment Industriesmentioning
confidence: 97%