The Port Is the Product: Why the Dominican Republic’s Biggest Export Opportunity May Not Be What It Ships

By: Robert SterlingSeaPRwire – Most countries spend years trying to attract manufacturers, exporters, and foreign investors. The Dominican Republic is taking a different route. It is building the infrastructure first. The latest Oxford Economics research around DP World’s operations at the Port of Caucedo points to a simple reality. In modern trade, the port is no longer just a place where cargo moves. It has become part of the product being sold to global businesses. Fast access, reliable logistics, and predictable delivery schedules now influence investment decisions as much as labor costs or tax incentives.

The official numbers help explain why. Located near Santo Domingo, the Port of Caucedo now handles more than 60% of the Dominican Republic’s containerized trade. DP World has combined terminal operations, logistics services, warehousing, customs capabilities, and multimodal transportation into one integrated system. According to Oxford Economics, these operations supported approximately US$269 million in economic activity during 2024 while facilitating US$13.3 billion in trade value through the port. The project’s direct contribution extends beyond shipping volumes. For businesses moving goods between North America, Latin America, Europe, and the Caribbean, fewer operational bottlenecks translate into lower risk and greater supply chain stability.

The larger commercial story sits beneath those figures. Every multinational manufacturer searching for a nearshoring destination asks the same question: can products move efficiently once they are made? Caucedo appears to be positioning itself as the answer. Oxford Economics estimates that improvements in maritime connectivity linked to the port could increase Dominican exports by 9.5% by 2035, adding roughly US$2.4 billion in annual exports. Those gains are expected to come from stronger market access, more dependable trade routes, higher productivity, and increased appeal for manufacturing investment. DP World’s expansion of both the Port of Caucedo and its adjacent Free Trade Zone, announced alongside the Dominican government, is aimed directly at capturing that opportunity. The expectation is that the project will attract billions of dollars in foreign investment while reinforcing the country’s role as a manufacturing and logistics center for the Americas.

From an investor’s perspective, this is not really a story about cranes, warehouses, or shipping containers. It is a story about competitive positioning. Countries that reduce trade friction tend to attract production. Countries that attract production tend to capture more capital. In that sense, the Dominican Republic is not simply expanding a port. It is strengthening an economic moat. Over the next decade, the winners in global trade may not be the countries with the cheapest labor or the largest markets. They may be the ones where goods move with the fewest headaches.

Author bio: Robert Sterling, a veteran entrepreneur and investor with decades of experience analyzing industrial development, global supply chains, logistics infrastructure, and international trade expansion strategies.