Supply shocks in supply chains: Evidence from the early lockdown in China

Raphael Lafrogne-Joussier (CREST-Ecole Polytechnique and INSEE), Julien Martin (Université du Québec à Montréal and CEPR), Isabelle Mejean (Sciences Po and CEPR)

Documents de travail
No 2023-08
Paru le :Paru le11/04/2023
Raphael Lafrogne-Joussier (CREST-Ecole Polytechnique and INSEE), Julien Martin (Université du Québec à Montréal and CEPR), Isabelle Mejean (Sciences Po and CEPR)
Documents de travail No 2023-08- April 2023

How do firms in global value chains react to input shortages? We examine micro-level adjustments to supply chain shocks, building on the COVID-19 pandemic as a case study. French firms sourcing inputs from China just before the early lockdown in the country experienced a relative drop in imports that increases from February to April 2020. This shock on input purchases transmits to the rest of the supply chain through exposed firms' domestic and export sales. Between February and June, firms exposed to the Chinese early lockdown experienced a 5.5% drop in domestic sales and a 5% drop in exports, in relative terms with respect to comparable non-exposed firms. The drop in foreign sales is entirely attributable to a lower volume of exports driven by a temporary withdrawal from occasional markets. We then dig into the heterogeneity of the transmission across treated firms. Whereas the ex-ante geographic diversication of inputs does not seem to mitigate the impact of the shock, firms with relatively high inventories have been able to absorb the supply shock better.