Trading in Clusters and the Future of Small-Scale Trade in the Borderlands of the Great Lakes Region of Africa
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World Bank, Washington, DC
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This paper presents a coping strategy
that small-scale cross-border traders adopted in response to
the shock of the COVID-19 pandemic and examines its impact.
Using a cross-sectional data set of 1,159 traders from the
borderlands of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda,
the paper assesses the impact of adopting the Cluster
Trading Approach on trade outcomes, household income and
poverty reduction. When applying a local average treatment
effect approach, the findings reveal that adoption of the
CTA causes at least 21 and 31 percentage point increases in
traders' turnover and profit respectively. The
household income analysis and poverty decomposition
highlight an increase in income, even within the depth and
severity of poverty. Thus, although access to capital is
important for small-scale cross-border traders joining a
cluster according to the literature, the results show that
the level of capital is less important for income increase
once there. As the results are robust to competing
explanations and heterogeneity of the sample, the paper
concludes that the Cluster Trading Approach is a
poverty-reducing strategy and discusses the challenges for
its sustainability.
Palabras clave
CLUSTER, SMALL SCALE TRADERS, IMPACT, LATE, INCOME, POVERTY
