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Assessing the Drivers of Firm Participation in Global Value Chains: Empirical Evidence from Tanzania

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  • Kweka, Josaphat
  • Sooi, Fadhili

Abstract

Using firm-level data from the recently available Tanzania Enterprise Survey (TES) 2022, this paper provides empirical analysis of drivers of firm participation in global value chains (GVCs), and implication of such participation on firm performance in Tanzania. The findings show that, firm size, awareness of external markets, investment in Research and Development (RandD), and engagement in innovation and technology upgrading are significant drivers of firm participation in GVCs for Tanzania. The paper confirms the widely acclaimed conclusions in the literature that firm participation in GVCs is positively and significantly associated with higher firm performance. However, despite the positive role of GVC, the extent of firm participation appears low for Tanzania, mainly on account of low level of capacity of often small and informal firms. The findings underscore the need to increase government's efforts to improve environment and incentive for small firms to formalize and grow. The results are also supportive of the need for policy to promote regional integration, investment in RandD, innovation, and technology upgrading.

Suggested Citation

  • Kweka, Josaphat & Sooi, Fadhili, 2024. "Assessing the Drivers of Firm Participation in Global Value Chains: Empirical Evidence from Tanzania," Working Papers 014dd339-fb25-4c3f-a81b-d, African Economic Research Consortium.
  • Handle: RePEc:aer:wpaper:014dd339-fb25-4c3f-a81b-d4c2e1f7edb2
    Note: African Economic Research Consortium
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