cover image: Mobile Access Expansion and Price Information Diffusion : Firm Performance after Ethiopia’s Transition to 3G in 2008

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Mobile Access Expansion and Price Information Diffusion : Firm Performance after Ethiopia’s Transition to 3G in 2008

1 Aug 2021

This paper investigates whether enhanced access to mobile communications, including internet, primarily through smart phones, increases competition as price information is more widely available to customers—both households and firms. The exogenous shock to identify these impacts is the transition from 2G to the 3G broadband network standard in 2008, and the induced changes in the geographic variation across districts of data plan availability for households. The operational mechanism is that better household and firm telecommunications access can close information asymmetry gaps between buyers and sellers, with increased competition leading to improved firm performance. Lower markups and reduced price dispersion can result from better incentives for firms to preserve and grow market share. And as price competition squeezes profit margins, there are more incentives for firms to reduce costs—inducing higher total factor productivity growth. Improved firm performance can generate jobs and economic transformation. Indeed, faster productivity growth, due to enhanced access for buyers to mobile telecommunications, can translate into higher formal employment and wages. One open question is whether the potential competition, driven by the increased mobile telecommunications access of buyers, which help them have the best alternative prices at their fingertips, will also impact export-oriented companies. The prior is that the firm performance improvement effect would be more salient for firms mostly focused on local markets. The primary data sources are manufacturing firm census data and household expenditure survey data across woredas (districts or counties) in Ethiopia. First, the paper investigates the relation between expanded access with the 3G network to price information through mobile phones (measured at the woreda level as share of households with substantive expenditure to access data through smartphones) and firm performance measures (markups, total factor productivity, labor productivity, wage growth, wage gaps and employment growth.), across districts with different shares of mobile telecommunication and data plan penetration subscription. The paper estimates models with difference-in-differences and triple differences. The evidence is consistent with competition intensification after the improvement in access to mobile communication due to the 3G network rollout. In particular, markups were reduced and there was higher growth in productivity, wages, and employment.
internet access employment productivity firm performance information asymmetry social protections and labor :: labor markets private sector development :: private sector economics information and communication technologies :: information technology information and communication technologies :: telecommunications infrastructure 3g broadband

Authors

Abreha, Kaleb, Choi, Jieun, Kassa, Woubet, Kim, Hyun Ju, Kugler, Maurice

Collection(s)
Policy Research Working Papers
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-9752
Googlescholar linkpresent
yes
Identifier externaldocumentum
090224b0888edb94_1_0
Identifier internaldocumentum
33360757
Published in
United States of America
Region country
Ethiopia
RelationisPartofseries
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9752
Report
WPS9752
Rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
Rights Holder
World Bank
Rights URI
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo
UNIT
Office of the Chief Economist, Africa Region (AFRCE)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36194
citation
“Abreha, Kaleb; Choi, Jieun; Kassa, Woubet; Kim, Hyun Ju; Kugler, Maurice. 2021. Mobile Access Expansion and Price Information Diffusion : Firm Performance after Ethiopia’s Transition to 3G in 2008 . Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9752. World Bank, Washington, DC. © World Bank. https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/36194 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
date disclosure
2021-08-23
region administrative
Africa

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