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Is There Any Pattern Regarding the Vulnerability of Smart Contracts in the Food Supply Chain to a Stressed Event? A Quantile Connectedness Investigation

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  • Bikramaditya Ghosh

    (Symbiosis Institute of Business Management, Symbiosis International, Deemed University, Bengaluru 560100, India
    FLAM Department, Harper Adams University, Newport TF10 8NB, UK)

  • Dimitrios Paparas

    (FLAM Department, Harper Adams University, Newport TF10 8NB, UK)

Abstract

Blockchain can support the food supply chain in several aspects. Particularly, food traceability and trading across pre-existing contracts can make the supply chain fast, error-free, and support in detecting potential fraud. A proper algorithm, keeping in mind specific geographic, demographic, and additional essential parameters, would let the automated market maker (AMM) supply ample liquidity to pre-determined orders. AMMs are usually run by a set of sequential algorithms called a ‘smart contract’ (SM). Appropriate use of SM reduces food waste, contamination, extra or no delivery in due course, and, possibly most significantly, increases traceability. However, SM has definite vulnerabilities, making it less adaptable at times. We are investigating whether they are genuinely vulnerable during stressful periods or not. We considered seven SM platforms, namely, Fabric, Ethereum (ETH), Waves, NEM (XEM), Tezos (XTZ), Algorand (ALGO), and Stellar (XLM), as the proxies for food supply-chain-based smart contracts from 29 August 2021 to 5 October 2022. This period coincides with three stressed events: Delta (Covid II), Omicron (Covid III), and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. We found strong traces of risk transmission, comovement, and interdependence of SM return among the diversified SMs; however, the SMs focused on the food supply chain ended up as net receivers of shocks at both of the extreme tails. All these SMs share a stronger connection in both positive shocks (bullish) and negative shocks (bearish).

Suggested Citation

  • Bikramaditya Ghosh & Dimitrios Paparas, 2023. "Is There Any Pattern Regarding the Vulnerability of Smart Contracts in the Food Supply Chain to a Stressed Event? A Quantile Connectedness Investigation," JRFM, MDPI, vol. 16(2), pages 1-12, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jjrfmx:v:16:y:2023:i:2:p:58-:d:1038318
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    1. Che-Pin Chen & Kai-Wen Huang & Yung-Chi Kuo, 2023. "Conditional Token: A New Model to Supply Chain Finance by Using Smart Contract in Public Blockchain," FinTech, MDPI, vol. 2(1), pages 1-35, March.

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