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Electoral Violence and Supply Chain Disruptions in Kenya's Floriculture Industry, Review of Economics and Statistics

Abstract

Violent conflicts, particularly at election times in Africa, are a common cause of instability and economic disruption. This paper studies how firms react to electoral violence using the case of Kenyan flower exporters during the 2008 postelection violence as an example. The violence induced a large negative supply shock that reduced exports primarily through workers' absence and had heterogeneous effects: larger firms and those with direct contractual relationships in export markets suffered smaller production and loss of workers. On the demand side, global buyers were not able to shift sourcing to Kenyan exporters located in areas not directly affected by the violence or to neighboring Ethiopian suppliers. Consistent with difficulties in ensuring against supply-chain risk disruptions caused by electoral violence, firms in direct contractual relationships ramp up shipments just before the subsequent 2013 presidential election to mitigate risk.

Type

Article

Author(s)

Christopher Ksoll, Ameet Morjaria, Rocco Macchiavello

Date Published

2023

Citations

Ksoll, Christopher, Ameet Morjaria, and Rocco Macchiavello. 2023. Electoral Violence and Supply Chain Disruptions in Kenya's Floriculture Industry. Review of Economics and Statistics.(6): 1335–1351.

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