Abstract:
This study investigates the mechanisms driving freight rate asymmetry within the road transport corridor connecting the European Union and the Republic of Moldova. Significant directional price spreads are traditionally attributed to trade imbalances, but this research posits that the "Rational Risk Premium" associated with the Empty Mile Index (EMI) acts as the primary amplifier of costs. Utilizing a Hierarchical Bayesian Panel Model (HBPM), we quantify how carriers internalize Knightian uncertainty – stochastic variables that cannot be easily insured – into their pricing strategies. Empirical evidence from 2024–2025 reveals that while Moldovan exports to the EU surged by 57%, a limited capacity ceiling and return-load deficits forced carriers to adopt aggressive, state-dependent pricing regimes. Furthermore, the study identifies institutional frictions, such as legacy border delays of seven hours at the Leușeni-Albița gate, as "quasi-fixed" costs that impede market efficiency. The paper concludes that resolving freight asymmetry requires a dual strategy of policy-driven border streamlining and structural market modernization to eliminate the "information noise" currently exploited by dominant logistics aggregators.