The Effect of Supply Base Diversification on the Propagation of Shocks

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Bahal, G.
Jenkins, C.
Lenzo, D.

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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University

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Abstract

We study how supply base diversification affects the propagation shocks. We identify exoge-nous shocks with the occurrence of natural disasters in the US from 1978-2017. Affected suppliers reduce their customers' sales growth by 30% on average. Notably, firms with input purchases spanning many suppliers, geographies, or producers within industries attenuate the transmission of shocks by 60-70%. We then show, causally, that diverse firms mitigate shocks by temporarily substituting towards unaffected suppliers producing similar inputs. A general equilibrium production networks model reveals that aggregate volatility would have been 33%greater from 1978-2017 in a counterfactual without input substitution by diverse firms.

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Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis Working Papers

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