Supply Chain Resilience Strategies in Emerging Economies

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ID: 311396
2025
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Abstract
This study examines the effectiveness of supply chain resilience strategies in emerging economies through a mixed-methods experimental design integrating quantitative and qualitative approaches. Data were collected from 500 firms across multiple sectors using surveys, interviews, and secondary trade reports. Quantitative analysis, including regression and structural equation modeling, demonstrated that supplier diversification, predictive analytics, inventory buffering, and regional collaboration significantly enhance resilience outcomes by improving recovery speed, adaptability, and operational stability. Nine comprehensive tables and twelve figures provided robust evidence, showing consistent improvements in adoption rates, performance gains, and sectoral comparisons. Scatter plots confirmed strong correlations between predictive analytics adoption and resilience scores, while hybrid visualizations captured the multifaceted benefits of combining strategies. Qualitative findings further highlighted the critical role of social capital, trust-based networks, and supportive policy frameworks in enabling effective resilience. The integration of results affirmed that resilience in emerging markets is not universal but context-sensitive, shaped by infrastructural, cultural, and institutional dynamics. Overall, the study establishes that supply chain resilience in emerging economies is best achieved through hybrid strategies that balance technological innovations with relational and policy-driven enablers, offering both academic contributions and actionable insights for practitioners and policymakers.
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Authors Saima Munir, Muhammad Ehsan Elahi, Yumna Fatima
Journal Finance and Management Review
Year 2025
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