Inventories, Diversification,and Trade Vulnerabilities

Raphaël LAFROGNE-JOUSSIER

Documents de travail
No 2025-22
Paru le :Paru le19/11/2025
Raphaël LAFROGNE-JOUSSIER
Documents de travail No 2025-22- November 2025

To reduce their exposure to supply-chain risk, firms commonly rely on two strategies: input stockpiling and diversification of supply sources. This paper presents new evidence on how French manufacturing firms used inventories and diversified their country-specific supply risks between 2012 and 2023. The use of these strategies varies widely: large firms are generally more diversified and maintain lower inventories relative to smaller firms. Overall, firms that diversify more tend to stockpile less, even conditional on firm size. Diversification is also linked to lower import volatility. Together, these patterns suggest that inventories act as a buffer when firms are unable to reduce risk through diversification. These insights matter for assessing trade vulnerabilities: products sourced from few countries may appear exposed to risk, yet in practice they are often imported by firms holding large stocks. Accounting for inventories can halve the number of products considered highly vulnerable.