Essays on economic linkages and resilience

This thesis consists of five chapters that explore the theme of economic linkages and resilience. My research investigates the structure of Kenya's formal firm network and its connections to both international markets and the domestic informal sector. Chapter 1 discusses how tax returns can be...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Wiedemann, V
Otros Autores: Woodruff, C
Formato: Tesis
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
_version_ 1826313476271767552
author Wiedemann, V
author2 Woodruff, C
author_facet Woodruff, C
Wiedemann, V
author_sort Wiedemann, V
collection OXFORD
description This thesis consists of five chapters that explore the theme of economic linkages and resilience. My research investigates the structure of Kenya's formal firm network and its connections to both international markets and the domestic informal sector. Chapter 1 discusses how tax returns can be used to map Kenya's domestic firm network and describes the network’s fundamental properties. In Chapter 2, my co-authors and I address the informal sector's significance in shaping spatial patterns of firm-to-firm trade observed in formal sector data. We document stylized facts about trade among formal firms, revealing a high degree of spatial concentration, beyond the concentration of aggregate economic activity. Using census data and a network formation model we show that solely relying on formal sector network data might underestimate both the connectivity but also vulnerability of smaller regional markets to shocks, especially those passing through hubs like Nairobi. Chapter 3 draws on qualitative interviews to study the role of Internet infrastructure in shaping supply chains. I find that a firm’s choice to adopt Internet-based technologies is influenced by its capacity to make complementary investments, which in turn correlate with to firm size. Turning to linkages of Kenya's supply chains with international markets in Chapter 4, my co-authors and I show that firms with strong direct or indirect connections to international markets tend to be older, larger, and account for a substantial share of Kenya's formal economy. We find that both importers and exporters adjust their domestic supply chains in response to international trade shocks -- before and during the COVID-19 crisis alike. Sourcing from international markets does not crowd out domestic purchases, while sales abroad and at home can act as substitutes. In Chapter 5, my co-authors and I study the impact of changes in mobility patterns during COVID-19 pandemic on food price dynamics in Kenya and Uganda. Using geo-referenced price data collected through a crowdsourcing approach, we find that a 10 percentage point reduction in mobility leads to a 0.3% and 1.5% increase in food prices in Kenya and Uganda, respectively.
first_indexed 2024-09-25T04:14:04Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:86a0acf3-2f50-4b57-9f7e-df28a1c7ed65
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:14:04Z
publishDate 2023
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:86a0acf3-2f50-4b57-9f7e-df28a1c7ed652024-07-15T09:45:24ZEssays on economic linkages and resilienceThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:86a0acf3-2f50-4b57-9f7e-df28a1c7ed65International tradeDevelopment economicsEnglishHyrax Deposit2023Wiedemann, VWoodruff, CTeytelboym, APakel, FDonovan, KThis thesis consists of five chapters that explore the theme of economic linkages and resilience. My research investigates the structure of Kenya's formal firm network and its connections to both international markets and the domestic informal sector. Chapter 1 discusses how tax returns can be used to map Kenya's domestic firm network and describes the network’s fundamental properties. In Chapter 2, my co-authors and I address the informal sector's significance in shaping spatial patterns of firm-to-firm trade observed in formal sector data. We document stylized facts about trade among formal firms, revealing a high degree of spatial concentration, beyond the concentration of aggregate economic activity. Using census data and a network formation model we show that solely relying on formal sector network data might underestimate both the connectivity but also vulnerability of smaller regional markets to shocks, especially those passing through hubs like Nairobi. Chapter 3 draws on qualitative interviews to study the role of Internet infrastructure in shaping supply chains. I find that a firm’s choice to adopt Internet-based technologies is influenced by its capacity to make complementary investments, which in turn correlate with to firm size. Turning to linkages of Kenya's supply chains with international markets in Chapter 4, my co-authors and I show that firms with strong direct or indirect connections to international markets tend to be older, larger, and account for a substantial share of Kenya's formal economy. We find that both importers and exporters adjust their domestic supply chains in response to international trade shocks -- before and during the COVID-19 crisis alike. Sourcing from international markets does not crowd out domestic purchases, while sales abroad and at home can act as substitutes. In Chapter 5, my co-authors and I study the impact of changes in mobility patterns during COVID-19 pandemic on food price dynamics in Kenya and Uganda. Using geo-referenced price data collected through a crowdsourcing approach, we find that a 10 percentage point reduction in mobility leads to a 0.3% and 1.5% increase in food prices in Kenya and Uganda, respectively.
spellingShingle International trade
Development economics
Wiedemann, V
Essays on economic linkages and resilience
title Essays on economic linkages and resilience
title_full Essays on economic linkages and resilience
title_fullStr Essays on economic linkages and resilience
title_full_unstemmed Essays on economic linkages and resilience
title_short Essays on economic linkages and resilience
title_sort essays on economic linkages and resilience
topic International trade
Development economics
work_keys_str_mv AT wiedemannv essaysoneconomiclinkagesandresilience