cover image: Production Networks and Firm-level Elasticities of Substitution

20.500.12592/d254f6g

Production Networks and Firm-level Elasticities of Substitution

23 May 2024

This paper provides one of the first estimates of elasticities of substitution across suppliers within the same product. This paper estimates these elasticities using new real-time administrative tax data on firm-to-firm transactions, with product-level prices and quantities, leveraging geographic and temporal variation from India's Covid-19 lockdowns to derive causal estimates of these elasticities. Suppliers are highly complementary even at this granular level, with an estimated elasticity of $0.55$. The paper shows that the quality of institutions, input specificity, inventories, and time horizons explain the low elasticity. These firm-level complementarities amplify the propagation of negative shocks through production networks, and make connected firms important for shock propagation. In policy counterfactuals, the paper shows that given these complementarities, allowing more connected firms to operate in the face of shocks mitigates output declines non-linearly with the size of the productivity shock.
trade macroeconomics microeconomics resilience production networks macroeconomics and economic growth::economic development macroeconomics and economic growth::macroeconomic management industry, innovation and infrastructure sdg 9 sdg 8 decent work and economic growth international economics and trade::trade and multilateral issues elasticities of substitution shock propagation

Authors

Fujiy, Brian C., Ghose, Devaki, Khanna, Gaurav

Citation
“ Fujiy, Brian C. ; Ghose, Devaki ; Khanna, Gaurav . 2024 . Production Networks and Firm-level Elasticities of Substitution . Policy Research Working Paper; 10782 . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/41586 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO . ”
Collection(s)
Policy Research Working Papers
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10782
Identifier externaldocumentum
34322856
Identifier internaldocumentum
34322856
Published in
United States of America
RelationisPartofseries
Policy Research Working Paper; 10782
Report
WPS10782
Rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
Rights Holder
World Bank
Rights URI
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
UNIT
DECRG: Trade & Intl. Integration (DECTI)
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41586
date disclosure
2024-05-23
region geographical
World

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