How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia

This paper examines how formal firms have been impacted by and recovered from the pandemic, by drawing on two distinct but complementary data sources. This is the first attempt to use both survey and tax administrative data to measure the initial d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hoy, Christopher, Simbeye, Laban, Malik, Muhammad Abdullah Ali, Koivisto, Aliisa, Maboshe, Mashekwa
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099435008162218175/IDU08b96ddd40efa404ccc0965d0675d0e7c380f
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37897
id okr-10986-37897
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-378972022-08-18T05:10:34Z How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia Hoy, Christopher Simbeye, Laban Malik, Muhammad Abdullah Ali Koivisto, Aliisa Maboshe, Mashekwa IMPACT OF COVID ON FIRMS TAX ADMINISTRATIVE DATA ECONOMIC RECOVERY PANDEMIC ECONOMIC RECOVERY PRIVATE SECTOR PANDEMIC RESILIENCE MINING SECTOR PANDEMIC RECOVERY LABOR CUTS This paper examines how formal firms have been impacted by and recovered from the pandemic, by drawing on two distinct but complementary data sources. This is the first attempt to use both survey and tax administrative data to measure the initial decline and subsequent recovery of firm sales and employment in a low- or lower-middle-income country. The findings of three rounds of follow-up surveys to a standard World Bank Enterprise Survey completed immediately prior to the pandemic are compared to information contained in the universe of value-added tax and personal income tax returns filled by firms during 2020 and the first half of 2021 in Zambia. Despite substantial differences in terms of the breadth and depth of these data sources, they show a very similar pattern. The sales of formal firms recovered from the pandemic far more strongly than their employment levels. By July 2021, both the survey and tax administrative data show that most firms experienced a complete recovery in sales, while levels of employment worsened over the course of the pandemic for many firms. Two key insights emerge from this analysis. First, formal firms appear to have adjusted their operations in a way that reduced their need for as much labor to achieve the same (or higher) level of sales. Second, if formal firms’ reduced reliance on labor persists, lower levels of formal employment in low- and middle-income countries may be a concerning consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic that lingers for years to come. 2022-08-17T20:06:39Z 2022-08-17T20:06:39Z 2022-08 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099435008162218175/IDU08b96ddd40efa404ccc0965d0675d0e7c380f http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37897 English en Policy Research Working Papers;10139 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Africa Eastern and Southern (AFE) Africa Zambia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
English
topic IMPACT OF COVID ON FIRMS
TAX ADMINISTRATIVE DATA
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
PANDEMIC ECONOMIC RECOVERY
PRIVATE SECTOR PANDEMIC RESILIENCE
MINING SECTOR PANDEMIC RECOVERY
LABOR CUTS
spellingShingle IMPACT OF COVID ON FIRMS
TAX ADMINISTRATIVE DATA
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
PANDEMIC ECONOMIC RECOVERY
PRIVATE SECTOR PANDEMIC RESILIENCE
MINING SECTOR PANDEMIC RECOVERY
LABOR CUTS
Hoy, Christopher
Simbeye, Laban
Malik, Muhammad Abdullah Ali
Koivisto, Aliisa
Maboshe, Mashekwa
How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia
geographic_facet Africa Eastern and Southern (AFE)
Africa
Zambia
relation Policy Research Working Papers;10139
description This paper examines how formal firms have been impacted by and recovered from the pandemic, by drawing on two distinct but complementary data sources. This is the first attempt to use both survey and tax administrative data to measure the initial decline and subsequent recovery of firm sales and employment in a low- or lower-middle-income country. The findings of three rounds of follow-up surveys to a standard World Bank Enterprise Survey completed immediately prior to the pandemic are compared to information contained in the universe of value-added tax and personal income tax returns filled by firms during 2020 and the first half of 2021 in Zambia. Despite substantial differences in terms of the breadth and depth of these data sources, they show a very similar pattern. The sales of formal firms recovered from the pandemic far more strongly than their employment levels. By July 2021, both the survey and tax administrative data show that most firms experienced a complete recovery in sales, while levels of employment worsened over the course of the pandemic for many firms. Two key insights emerge from this analysis. First, formal firms appear to have adjusted their operations in a way that reduced their need for as much labor to achieve the same (or higher) level of sales. Second, if formal firms’ reduced reliance on labor persists, lower levels of formal employment in low- and middle-income countries may be a concerning consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic that lingers for years to come.
format Working Paper
author Hoy, Christopher
Simbeye, Laban
Malik, Muhammad Abdullah Ali
Koivisto, Aliisa
Maboshe, Mashekwa
author_facet Hoy, Christopher
Simbeye, Laban
Malik, Muhammad Abdullah Ali
Koivisto, Aliisa
Maboshe, Mashekwa
author_sort Hoy, Christopher
title How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia
title_short How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia
title_full How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia
title_fullStr How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia
title_full_unstemmed How Have Formal Firms Recovered from the Pandemic? : Insights from Survey and Tax Administrative Data in Zambia
title_sort how have formal firms recovered from the pandemic? : insights from survey and tax administrative data in zambia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099435008162218175/IDU08b96ddd40efa404ccc0965d0675d0e7c380f
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37897
_version_ 1764488082689622016