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UNRELIABLE SUPPLY HINDERS GROWTH IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Manufacturing firms in developing countries often hold surprisingly
large stocks of inputs compared to similar firms in the developed
world. In new research published in the latest Economic Journal,
Marcel Fafchamps, Jan Willem Gunning and Remco Oostendorp show that
this fact stems from the higher risks these firms face compared
to their developed-world counterparts. Unreliable sources of supply
force manufacturers to hold large inventories of inputs, tying up
funds that could have been used for investment. This implies that
the risky environment in which firms have to operate in is costly
in terms of economic growth.
The research uses survey data for 200 manufacturing firms in Zimbabwe.
These data include detailed information on the pervasive risks that
firms face: inputs not arriving on time, delays in payments, large
changes in demand from one year to another, etc.
Analysing these data, Gunning and his colleagues find strong evidence
that the risk of delayed deliveries and payments explains much of
the inventory and financial behaviour of manufacturers. Holding
large inventories of inputs offer firms insurance against the risk
that late deliveries will disrupt their production process. Inventories
reflect unreliable input supply whereas large unused overdraft limits
reflect the risk of payment delays.
The researchers argue that economic liberalisation (which Zimbabwe
undertook in the early 1990s but later reversed) reduces the risks
firms face by strengthening competition and improving infrastructure.
Liberalisation thereby removes the need for holding large stocks.
In Zimbabwe, this was important: manufacturing firms reported drastic
reductions in inventories when supplies became more reliable.
The study also shows that firms deal with changes in demand by
maintaining excess capacity so that they have the flexibility to
adjust to these changes. Hence, the day-to-day risks of delays in
payments and deliveries induce large stocks while the year-to-year
market risk is reflected in low capacity utilisation.
This is important because although firms' response to their risky
environment is efficient, it is costly in terms of forgone growth.
Rather than investing in inventories or in stand-by capacity, firms
could have invested in expansion. In Zimbabwe, managers reported
that they drastically reduced stocks of inputs when the economic
reforms of the early 1990s made the delivery of inputs much more
reliable.
The results imply that stocks are a measure of the risk of a firm's
environment. Economic reform is not just about 'getting prices right'
but also about releasing firms from the need for holding large inventories.
Note for Editors: 'Inventories and Risk in African Manufacturing'
by Marcel Fafchamps, Jan Willem Gunning and Remco Oostendorp is
published in the October 2000 issue of the Economic Journal. Fafchamps
is at Oxford University; Gunning and Oostendorp are at the Free
University Amsterdam.
For Further Information: contact Jan Willem Gunning on 00-31-20-4446141
(email: Jgunning@econ.vu.nl); RES Media Consultant Romesh Vaitilingam
on 0117-983-9770 or 07768-661095 (email: romesh@compuserve.com);
or RES Media Assistant Niall Flynn on 020-7878-2919 (email: nflynn@cepr.org).
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