1. Digitalization and resilience during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Abidi, Nordine, El Herradi, Mehdi, and Sakha, Sahra
- Subjects
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DIGITAL technology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *COVID-19 pandemic , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *ECONOMIC activity - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in an unprecedented shock to firms with adverse consequences for existing productive capacities. At the same time, digitalization has increasingly been touted as a key pathway for mitigating economic losses from the pandemic, and we expect firms facing digital constraints to be less resilient to supply shocks. This paper uses firm-level data to investigate whether digitally-enabled firms have been able to mitigate economic losses arising from the pandemic better than digitally-constrained firms in the Middle East and Central Asia region using a difference-in-differences approach. Controlling for demand conditions, we find that digitally-enabled firms faced a lower decline in sales by about 4 percentage points during the pandemic compared to digitally-constrained firms, suggesting that digitalization acted as a hedge during the pandemic. Against this backdrop, our results suggest that policymakers need to close the digital gap and accelerate firms' digital transformation. This will be essential for economies to bounce back from the pandemic, and build the foundations for future resilience. • We study the impact of digitalization on business performance during the COVID-19 crisis. • A difference-in-difference methodology is employed to study how investment in digital technologies affect both digitally-enabled and digitally constrained firms. • We find that firms that have invested in digitalization before the crisis experienced a smaller decline in sales compared to those that have not. • This effect is particularly stronger in contact-intensive sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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