Surviving Firms of the Syrian Arab Republic. Salmon, K., Assaf, N., & Francis, D. Technical Report World Bank, Washington, D.C., April, 2018.
Surviving Firms of the Syrian Arab Republic [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
This paper details the results from the first comprehensive survey of private firms across major urban areas in the Syrian Arab Republic – including Aleppo, Homs, Hama, Latakia, and Damascus – since the conflict began in 2011. This builds on the World Bank's Enterprise Survey from 2009 and attempts to survey each of the 508 firms from 2009 again. The survey highlights the major challenges facing firms in Syria today, such as access to electricity, fuel, and water. Yet, loss of workers, managers, and supply chain relationships are also notably severe. Rebuilding the social and human capital of Syria may be even more difficult than the bricks and mortar. The paper also identifies the ways firms have been affected in their prices, sales, supply chains, taxation, and costs as well as how they have adapted in financing and employment. These constraints and impacts are also analyzed at the subnational level and across sectors. Firms in Aleppo stand out for their uniquely difficult challenges and responses that are sometimes at odds with the rest of the country. Finally, the paper analyzes firm exit from 2009 to 2017 and finds that higher productivity firms from 2009 were more likely to survive, except in Aleppo where the reverse holds. The paper hypothesizes that productive firms facing the particularly severe destruction in Aleppo may have made a different calculation compared with productive firms elsewhere: to use their capabilities to leave rather than to use their capabilities to weather the storm.
@techreport{salmon_surviving_2018,
	address = {Washington, D.C.},
	type = {Working {Paper}},
	title = {Surviving {Firms} of the {Syrian} {Arab} {Republic}},
	copyright = {http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo},
	url = {https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/29610},
	abstract = {This paper details the results from the
            first comprehensive survey of private firms across major
            urban areas in the Syrian Arab Republic -- including Aleppo,
            Homs, Hama, Latakia, and Damascus -- since the conflict
            began in 2011. This builds on the World Bank's
            Enterprise Survey from 2009 and attempts to survey each of
            the 508 firms from 2009 again. The survey highlights the
            major challenges facing firms in Syria today, such as access
            to electricity, fuel, and water. Yet, loss of workers,
            managers, and supply chain relationships are also notably
            severe.  Rebuilding the social and human capital of Syria
            may be even more difficult than the bricks and mortar. The
            paper also identifies the ways firms have been affected in
            their prices, sales, supply chains, taxation, and costs as
            well as how they have adapted in financing and employment.
            These constraints and impacts are also analyzed at the
            subnational level and across sectors. Firms in Aleppo stand
            out for their uniquely difficult challenges and responses
            that are sometimes at odds with the rest of the country.
            Finally, the paper analyzes firm exit from 2009 to 2017 and
            finds that higher productivity firms from 2009 were more
            likely to survive, except in Aleppo where the reverse holds.
            The paper hypothesizes that productive firms facing the
            particularly severe destruction in Aleppo may have made a
            different calculation compared with productive firms
            elsewhere: to use their capabilities to leave rather than to
            use their capabilities to weather the storm.},
	language = {English},
	urldate = {2020-07-30},
	institution = {World Bank},
	author = {Salmon, Kinley and Assaf, Nabila and Francis, David},
	month = apr,
	year = {2018},
	doi = {10.1596/1813-9450-8397},
}

Downloads: 0