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Heightened security speeds trade

Tighter security since 9/11 has actually led to faster, more efficient trade, says the World Bank. Many ports around the world now operate more quickly than they did five years ago. Stephen Beard reports.

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MARK AUSTIN THOMAS: Tightened security since 9/11 has led to faster and more efficient trade. That word from the World Bank. In its latest survey, it says many ports around the world operate more quickly than five years ago. From London, Stephen Beard has more.


STEPHEN BEARD: Many feared after 9/11 that the US-led security crackdown would throw sand in the machinery of global trade, slowing port traffic down to a trickle.

In fact, according to the World Bank, the opposite has happened. It’s greased the wheels of commerce.

After 9/11 any country trading with the US was required to inspect its cargoes more closely.

And that, says Alan Beattie of the Financial Times, triggered a wave of investment in X-Ray and other equipment to speed up the screening process.

ALAN BEATTIE: They found that in fact that speeded up all trade through their ports as well. So it’s a kind of happy byproduct of meeting American-led standards on security.

Serbia saw the most dramatic improvements, cutting the time for processing imports from 44 days to 12.

In London, this is Stephen Beard for Marketplace.

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