IMF Working Papers

Assessing the Impact of Supply Disruptions on the Global Pandemic Recovery

ByHarri Kemp, Rafael A Portillo, Marika Santoro

February 24, 2023

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Format: Chicago

Harri Kemp, Rafael A Portillo, and Marika Santoro. "Assessing the Impact of Supply Disruptions on the Global Pandemic Recovery", IMF Working Papers 2023, 042 (2023), accessed 12/22/2025, https://doi.org/10.5089/9798400235672.001

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Disclaimer: IMF Working Papers describe research in progress by the author(s) and are published to elicit comments and to encourage debate. The views expressed in IMF Working Papers are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the IMF, its Executive Board, or IMF management.

Summary

We estimate the role of (pre-Ukraine war) supply disruptions in constraining the Covid-19 pandemic recovery, for several advanced economies and emerging markets, and globally. We rely on two approaches. In the first approach, we use sign-restricted Vector Auto Regressions (SVAR) to identify supply and demand shocks in manufacturing, based on the co-movement of surveys on new orders and suppliers’ delivery times. The effects of these shocks on industrial production and GDP are recovered through a combination of local projection methods and the input-output framework in Acemoglu et al. (2016). In the second approach, we use the IMF’s G20 model to gauge the importance of supply shocks in jointly driving activity and inflation surprises. We find that supply disruptions subtracted between 0.5 and 1.2 percent from global value added during the global recovery in 2021, while also adding about 1 percent to global core inflation that same year.

Subject: Economic growth, Economic recovery, Economic sectors, Economic theory, Industrial production, Inflation, Manufacturing, Prices, Production, Supply shocks

Keywords: Economic recovery, Global, Industrial production, inflation, inflation deviation, manufacturing, output, supply and demand demand shock, Supply constraints, supply disruption, Supply shocks, supply-demand decomposition, Ukraine war