EMBED has produced eleven peer-reviewed publications, including papers in the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, and the Review of Economic Studies.
A further nine working papers have been written, including one that is revise and resubmit at the Journal of Political Economy. In addition, a survey article in the Annual Review of Economics, a book chapter, and an overview piece on networks and policy in a special edition of the Oxford Review of Economic Policy have been produced.
Embed progressed four sub-projects on networked markets over the course of the study: (i) a theoretical analysis of dynamic relationships, (ii) a field experiment investigating relationship formation, (iii) a lab experiment investigating market efficiency, and (iv) a theoretical analysis of supply chain fragility. Sub projects (ii) and (iii) were significantly affected by the pandemic. In time subproject (ii) was able to successfully move to an online platform, unfortunately sub project (iii), despite various redesigns, was unable to overcome the impact of COVID in India. In contrast, the outputs attributable to subproject (iv) surpassed expectations.
A major contribution of EMBED has been to the understanding of the fragility of supply networks. An important output in the area, and one that was envisioned in the proposal, is our paper Supply Network Formation and Fragility (2022), published in the American Economic Review. This paper examined the incentives of firms embedded in complex production processes to form robust supply chains and found that firms’ investments in their supply relationships often leave supply chains fragile with respect to certain types of shocks.
This paper also provided new tools which EMBED has built on. For example, in Network Bottlenecks and Market Power (ongoing) we focus on capacity constraints in the supply network and show which firms that have market power conferred on them by their position in the supply network. The supply networks can be represented as goods flowing through the economy like water through pipes, and it firms located at bottlenecks in this system that have market power. Our relatively simple formulation of the problem allows these ideas to be applied at scale and permits us to find bottleneck firms on an economy-wide basis using firm-to-firm transaction data.
The results from EMBED outputs have been very widely disseminated though seminars and keynote talks at conferences in the US, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Australia. Dissemination has included talks to governments, international organizations, and videos that have been posted on Youtube. Coverage by the international press includes blogs and an article in the Economist.