Supply Chain Disruption and Business Continuity: Analyzing the Economic Ripple Effects of Cloudburst-Induced Agricultural Losses in Pakistan
Keywords:
Cloudbursts; Supply Chain Disruption; Agricultural Losses; Business Continuity Planning; Technology Management; Pakistan.Abstract
This study examines the immediate economic impacts of agricultural losses caused by cloudbursts in Pakistan, focusing on the ensuing supply chain disruptions and the deterioration of business continuity within the agro-textile value chain that drives the nation's economy. The study utilizes a mixed-methods approach, combining thematic analysis of qualitative data from farmers and industry executives with quantitative data on crop loss, import surges, and export revenue decline, to demonstrate a direct causal relationship between localized climate shocks and systemic financial instability. The data indicate that severe physical losses of essential crops, like cotton, lead to considerable raw material shortages, resulting in prompt rises in expensive international imports and significantly diminishing national export revenues. The study reveals a significant disparity in resilience, indicating that Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) are particularly susceptible due to substantial institutional and financial obstacles that hinder the implementation of formal Business Continuity Planning (BCP) and critical technology management tools for swift damage assessment. The study indicates that the nation's existing catastrophe management framework, mostly reactive and deficient in technology integration, inadequately protects the country's economic foundation. Therefore, the study advocates for a transition to proactive, policy-oriented resilience by establishing a national fund for technology subsidies and mandating the implementation of subsidized risk transfer mechanisms to ensure the long-term operational integrity and climate stability of Pakistan's commercial sectors.


