1. Introduction
Sustainable development is a development strategy that has been proposed by countries around the world to solve global economic, social, and environmental problems [
1]. Sustainable trade is a new trade model that is driven by the concept of sustainable development, which aims to promote economic growth, enhance social capital and integration into environmental management, and participate in regional trade development. The transportation industry plays an important role in sustainably developing trade [
2]. However, the data of global greenhouse gas emissions showed that the carbon emissions that are generated by the transportation industry ranked fourth, with a 14% share [
3]. According to the Energy Department in China, road carbon emissions account for 80% of the carbon emissions of the transportation sector [
4]. Therefore, the Chinese government has proposed actively adjusting the transportation structure, developing a green transportation system, introducing a special plan to promote “conversion of roads to railways”, and increasing the proportion of railway transportation to effectively mitigate greenhouse gas emissions [
5]. Railways maintain low energy consumption, low scale cost, and high time efficiency. They have comparative advantages in medium- and long-distance transportation and bulk cargo transportation, playing an important role in the sustainable development of trade. However, railways also require large investment and a long construction period and occupy a large amount of space [
6]. Due to the appearance of roads, aviation, and new modes of transportation, railway transportation has developed slowly, which has led railway transportation to play a limited role in the promotion of sustainable trade [
7].
“The Belt and Road” (B&R) initiatives have made important contributions to global economic recovery [
8]. The economic and trade exchanges of the countries along the line are rapidly developing, there is high transportation demand, and the trade channels and trade methods are being continuously improved. Railway transportation is an important link and carrier of economic linkages in countries along the B&R [
9]. By the end of June 2018, Central European Trains had opened 9000 trains and continues to grow at a faster rate [
10]. A perfect transportation pattern is one where the necessary conditions promote regional economic development [
11] and the lack of transportation resources directly leads to the polarization of the world economy [
12]. Transport infrastructure is also vital to trade [
13]. Most of the countries along the B&R are emerging economies and developing countries. Problems regarding the uneven development of railway infrastructure, ancillary services, and insufficient support capacity still exist, which seriously restrict the trade relations between the economic and trade development of various countries [
14]. The model of economy and trade in countries along the B&R needs to be transformed from a traditional growth model to a high-quality sustainable growth model. Railway transportation plays an important role in this process [
15]. In order to achieve a synergistic effect and sustainable trade, and to avoid the negative externalities that are caused by the excessive development of railway transportation, we studied the synergy level between railway transportation and trade by exploring the development path of sustainable trade among countries along the B&R.
Many studies have shown that transportation infrastructure can achieve an economic scale by reducing the transportation costs, increasing social cohesion by increasing personal social welfare, or promoting the transfer and flow of production factors by increasing the liquidity of goods [
16,
17]. Some scholars have reported that the construction of the influence of transportation infrastructure may lead to imbalances in regional development [
18,
19], and they could even change the international status of these regions [
20]. However, few empirical researches focus on how the transportation system affects the countries’ trade [
21]. Early studies on railway transportation focused on the effect of railway transportation promotion on economic growth and trade [
22]. Murayama Y constructed a supply-driven econometric model and simulated alternative hypothesis scenarios for the Japanese Shinkansen network. The results showed that the expansion of the Shinkansen network promoted the spatial diffusion of developed regions to some extent [
23]. Sasaki et al. found that the development of railway transportation could lead the economy and population to spread to the surrounding areas and cause a spatial radiation effect of economic development [
24]. Hong et al. showed that the construction of railway trunk lines could promote the level of economic activity [
25]. Vaturi studied the development of a railway network in Tel Aviv, Israel, and reported that, the higher the accessibility of the railway network pattern, the more favorable the urban population growth [
26]. Qin stated that the construction of railway infrastructure would promote the development of economic and trade along the railway and form a belt-like state among the countries along the railway [
27]. Zuo et al. used a modeling framework to compare the carbon emissions of road transportation and railway transportation, and found that the relative cost of railway transportation was reduced by 50%, which could significantly reduce economic costs [
28]. Donaldson determined that construction of the rail network in colonial India could help to reduce trade costs and interregional price differences and promoted India’s domestic and international trade [
29]. Cong et al. studied that economic and geographical factors make rail transport an important part of the domestic transportation system in China [
30]. From the above literature, it is generally thought that there is a strong correlation between transportation and trade. Different scholars have different research perspectives and some differences in their conclusions have been expressed, which provides a broader reference for this paper. However, the existing literature is more concerned with the strong relationship between transportation systems and economic trade from the production function [
31], causality test [
32,
33,
34,
35], and meta-analysis [
36]. When compared with the relationship between railway transportation and trade, the synergy between railway transportation and trade development is a problem that deserves more attention, which was the basic starting point of this study.
As a mature model for studying the degree of interaction between two or more systems, coupling theory is widely used [
37] to explain the dynamic relationship between two systems and evaluate their coordinated relationship. Based on data from 30 provinces in China, Song established a model of coupling and coordination of carbon emissions and urbanization, and explored how to achieve low-carbon development in the rapid urbanization stage. The results showed that the coordination of carbon emissions and urbanization in each province was directly related to the stage of economic development and geographical location [
38]. The research showed that the transportation demand coupled regional transportation and social economic development. Their interaction can be divided into three stages, i.e., the pre-transportation stage with the characteristics of the weak demand and weak support, the transportation stage with the characteristics of strong demand and strong support, and the post-transportation stage with the characteristics of relatively weak demand and optimization support [
39]. Based on these studies, we selected coupling theory to study the coordinated development between railway transportation and trade.
Generally, railway transportation and trade between two neighboring countries are mutually influential. Countries with higher levels of trade development usually have closer economic and trade relations with neighboring countries. As the level of economic and trade development or the level of railway transportation in neighboring countries will change, changes occur in the coordination degree between them, which may lead to spatial effects in the coordination degree. However, current research lacks further exploration of the relationship between them from a spatial perspective. Therefore, based on the study of the coordination degree between railway transportation and trade, we further studied the spatial effects of the two. The most commonly used indicator of spatial correlation is the Moran’s index, which can accurately reflect the spatial relationship of the research object [
40,
41], and it has been widely used in carbon emissions [
42], ecological environment [
43], medicine [
44], and other fields. Aljoufie used the Moran’s index to study the spatial effects between transportation infrastructure and trade [
45]. Jeffrey suggested that ignoring the spatial effects might incorrectly estimate the relationship between transportation infrastructure and economy [
46]. Therefore, we used the Moran’s index to analyze the coordination degree between railway transportation and trade in different countries from the spatial perspective.
When compared with previous studies, we produced some improvements. First, we analyzed the interaction between railway transportation and trade and then studied the important role of railway in the sustainable development of trade. Railway transportation evaluation indicators from the aspects of railway transportation infrastructure and service capacity were constructed. The scale of trade, industrial structure, and trade vitality were used to construct trade evaluation indicators. Second, when combined with a geographic information system (ArcGIS, 12.6, Esri, Redlands, America), the spatial evolution of the coordination degree between railway transportation and trade development was demonstrated. Relevant measures were proposed to promote the coordinated development of railway transportation and trade, achieve the sustainable development of trade, support the implementation of the Belt and Road, and provide a theoretical basis for reshaping the time and space patterns and patterns of countries along the B&R. Simultaneously, we provide a theoretical basis for the subsequent theoretical study of sustainable trade from the spatial perspective.
Figure 1 presents our research framework.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows.
Section 2 introduces the evaluation index of railway transportation, trade development, and the coupling-coordination measurement model of the two;
Section 3 presents the calculation result of the level of railway transportation (LRT), the level of trade development (LTD), the coordination degree of the railway transportation and trade development (CRT), the spatial situation analysis of the coordination degree, and the spatial effect analysis.
Section 4 summarizes the full text and then provides corresponding recommendations.
4. Conclusions and Suggestions
In this study, we constructed an evaluation index system for railway transportation (railway infrastructure and operational service capability) and trade development (economic scale, industrial structure, and trade vitality). Based on the entropy method, the LRT and LTD in the countries along the B&R were calculated. When combined with the coupling-coordination model, the coordination degree was calculated and its spatial evolution was further studied.
As seen from the calculated results of the LRT and LTD, the LRTs among the B&R countries were unevenly distributed, and they had a spatial distribution characteristic of “low on the south and high on the north”, meaning that countries with high LRTs are probably distributed in Southeast Asia, Central Asia, and West Asia, meanwhile, countries with low LRTs are distributed in Central and Eastern Europe and East Asia. About 45.0% of the countries’ LRTs were high and 55.0% of the countries’ LRTs were relatively low. The average LRTs and the average LTDs had the same downward trend, indicating that there was no significant change in the development of railway transportation and trade in various countries along the B&R after the proposal of the Belt and Road Initiative. Considerable unbalance still exists in the LRTs and LTDs among the countries along the B&R.
As seen from the calculated results of the coupling degree, the average coupling degree between the LRT and LTD in the countries along the B&R was between 0.717 and 0.737, which means that railway transportation along the B&R had many correlations with trade. Among them, 17.5% of countries were in the low level coupling stage, 25% of countries were in the Run-in phase, and 57.5% of the countries had a high level of coupling. The results of the coordination degree showed that only 25% of countries in Central and Eastern Europe had achieved highly coordinated development of railway transportation and trade. Most of the countries in Central and Eastern Europe are small in area and railway transportation and do not exert their own advantages. Southeast Asian countries and some Central and Eastern European countries had lower CRTs as railways are not the main mode of transportation in trade, because they have natural harbors that are used instead. For these countries, they can increase railway infrastructure construction in the future and improve the level of railway operations. These countries should also make full use of the advantages of railway transportation and maritime transportation to realize sustainable trade development. The CRTs of the countries in Central and West Asia were low, which is mainly because these countries have relatively low economic development. They should increase railway infrastructure construction in the future and seize the opportunity that is provided by the Belt and Road initiative to achieve the coordinated development of railway transportation and trade.
The spatial correlation analysis showed that there was a significant positive spatial correlation between the CRTs, that is, there were high-high aggregation and low–low aggregation in the CRTs along the B&R. The CRTs along the B&R had obvious Matthew effects in space, and the Matthew effect is more significant over time along the B&R. The CRTs in space distributed unevenly and countries along the B&R urgently need to achieve the coordinated development of railway transportation. At the same time, countries along the B&R should play the spatial and radiative effects of high-coordination countries, take advantage of the railway transportation of the countries along B&R, realize the effective flow of goods between the countries, and form sustainable development that is based on the sharing of railway resources.
Our study also has some limitations. The first potential defect may exist in the coupling analysis process of two related variables of railway infrastructure and trade volume. Obviously, there is a clear correlation between the level of railway transportation and the trade volume. However, the changes in railway infrastructure have been relatively slow, while the trade volume has fluctuated greatly due to numerous exogenous effects. Therefore, the robustness of the results of the coupling analysis of the two variables may be affected. The study is also trying to eliminate this problem. On the one hand, we have chosen the indicator of 11 years to measure the coupling and coordination relationship between the annual railway transportation and trade development level. On the other hand, the railway transportation level includes not only the indicators of railway infrastructure, but also the indicators of transportation volume and other factors that are greatly affected by exogenous variables. Secondly, for the limitation of data availability in the whole regions of B&R we mainly constructed the evaluation index system from the perspectives of economic scale, industrial structure, trade vitality, infrastructure and service capabilities for the sustainable development of trade. However, some indexes that are also important to sustainable trade, such as ecological indicators, were not included in this study. With the gradual improvement in relevant statistical data of countries along the B&R, future study will enrich the indicator system and analyze the coordinated development of railway transportation and trade in multiple dimensions.