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Economic Networks

Economic Networks. by Hema Jayaprakash. Outline. Introduction Socioeconomic Perspective R&D Project Game Theory Complex Network Perspective Interbank Network International Financial Network International Economic Integration New Methodology Summary. Introduction.

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Economic Networks

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  1. Economic Networks by Hema Jayaprakash

  2. Outline • Introduction • Socioeconomic Perspective • R&D Project • Game Theory • Complex Network Perspective • Interbank Network • International Financial Network • International Economic Integration • New Methodology • Summary

  3. Introduction • Dynamic Interaction of a large number of different agents. • Systemic behavior are hard to predict. • More fundamental insight into the system dynamics. • How they can be traced back to the structural properties of the underlying interaction network. Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  4. Introduction • Economic Networks are studied from two Perspectives • Economics and Sociology • Physics and Computer Science • In both perspective • Nodes represent different individual agents (firms, banks and countries) • Link between the nodes represent mutual interactions, trade, ownership, R&D alliances or credit-debt relationships. Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  5. Socioeconomic Perspective • How the strategic behavior of the interacting agents is influenced by relatively simple network architectures. • Example: Star Network Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  6. Socioeconomic Perspective • Microeconomics Approach • Individual system elements and their detailed network of relations • Macroeconomics Approach • Statistical regularities of the network as a whole Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  7. Socioeconomic Perspective – R&D Project • World bank has set up several projects to foster the development of a collaboration network between firms from the least developed countries and partners from the strong economies • Inter-firm networks play an important role in international technological development and economic growth. • Collaborative R&D enables firms to avoid the duplication of research investments and to exploit complementarities between technology stocks. The structure and dynamics of the global network of inter-firm R&D partnerships 1989-2002 - Bojanowski, Micha l, Corten, Rense and Westbrock, Bastian Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Economics

  8. Socioeconomic Perspective – R&D Project • Investigate major structural properties of the inter-firm R&D alliance network on a global scale and over the extensive time period 1989-2002 for firms from 52 countries situated in different parts of the world • Connectedness - how the rate at which new partnerships have been added to the network changed over time • Concentration - whether the concentration of collaborative activity is also reflected on the level of countries and world regions • Integration - concerning the extent to which the global network of R&D partnerships connected firms from different countries and regions in the period 1989-2002 The structure and dynamics of the global network of inter-firm R&D partnerships 1989-2002 - Bojanowski, Micha l, Corten, Rense and Westbrock, Bastian Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Economics

  9. Socioeconomic Perspective – R&D Project Anglo-Saxon countries: United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, and Israel; East Asia: Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, and Singapore; Western Europe: Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Netherland, Sweden and Switzerland; Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing, Mining, Construction, Manufacturing, Transportation, Communications, Finance, Insurance, Real Estate The structure and dynamics of the global network of inter-firm R&D partnerships 1989-2002 - Bojanowski, Micha l, Corten, Rense and Westbrock, Bastian Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Economics

  10. Socioeconomic Perspective – R&D Project Connectedness Number of newly formed R&D partnerships and average degree over time. The structure and dynamics of the global network of inter-firm R&D partnerships 1989-2002 - Bojanowski, Micha l, Corten, Rense and Westbrock, Bastian Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Economics

  11. SocioEconomic Perspective – R&D Project Connectedness Firms and collaborators in the global network of R&D partnerships The structure and dynamics of the global network of inter-firm R&D partnerships 1989-2002 - Bojanowski, Micha l, Corten, Rense and Westbrock, Bastian Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Economics

  12. SocioEconomic Perspective – R&D Project Concentration Distribution of R&D partnerships and regional average degrees in 1989-2002. The structure and dynamics of the global network of inter-firm R&D partnerships 1989-2002 - Bojanowski, Micha l, Corten, Rense and Westbrock, Bastian Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Economics

  13. SocioEconomic Perspective – R&D Project Integration Regional and worldwide average homophily over time The structure and dynamics of the global network of inter-firm R&D partnerships 1989-2002 - Bojanowski, Micha l, Corten, Rense and Westbrock, Bastian Department of Sociology, Utrecht University, Utrecht School of Economics

  14. Issues with macroeconomic approach • Economic networks were often viewed as the result of a network formation game among competing and cooperating agents • Their links are added or deleted as the consequence of purposeful decisions attempting to maximize their payoffs • Agents must rely on (and be able to) anticipate what others may do • Use information about their environment (which may be limited) • Frame the problem within some necessarily bounded time horizon • Learn from the past, which may create a biased experience if similar situations are encountered later • These considerations tended to result in a dramatically large number of options that agents must choose from on the basis of limited information Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  15. Socioeconomic Perspective – Game Theory • Game Theory • A game consists of a set of players, a set of moves (or strategies) available to those players, and a specification of payoffs for each combination of strategies • Game theory attempts to mathematically capture behavior in strategic situations, in which an individual's success in making choices depends on the choices of others micro analysis of economic networks relies on game theory, which aims at identifying Nash equilibrium (i.e., situations that are strategically stable in the sense that no agent has an incentive to deviate) Bargaining in a network of buyers and sellers by Margarida Corominas-Bosch Department of Economics, Spain

  16. Issues with Microeconomic approach • As the number of nodes and possible links scales up, such problems become very difficult to solve, and classical approaches are unsatisfactory • Highlighted the crucial role of incentives in the endogenous and induced behavior of socioeconomic networks • This micro approach has not typically been integrated with macro approaches that can identify the complex systemic forces at work • Cannot fully understand important issues, such as the conflict between individual incentives and aggregate welfare, or their impact on the overall efficiency in the performance of the network at large • This problem is exacerbated if the underlying environment is subject to persistent volatility, and if agents are out of equilibrium, as in most real world situations • Agents are unable to attain efficient configurations, despite their continuous efforts to adapt to an ever-changing situation Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  17. Issues with Microeconomic approach Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  18. Complex Network Perspective • Complex-systems approach that may provide predictions for large-scale networks. • These predictions are made from • the testing of stochastic rules that affect link formation • randomness • the characteristic features of the agents, such as their degree of connectivity (number of links) or their centrality, as measured on the basis of the importance of a node which, in turn, can be affected by its links to other nodes Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  19. Complex Network Perspective – Interbank network • Empirical analysis of the network structure of the Austrian interbank market. • Data – 10 Liability matrices between 2000 and 2003 • Seven Sectors: • savings banks (S), Raiffeisen (agricultural) banks (R), Volksbanken (VB), joint stock banks (JS), state mortgage banks (SM), housing construction savings and loan associations (HCL), and special purpose banks (SP). • eight federal states (B,St,K,V,T,N,O,S) The Network Topology of the Interbank Market by Michael Boss, Helmut Elsinger, Martin Summer, and Stefan Thurner

  20. Complex Network Perspective – Interbank network The banking network of Austria . Clusters are grouped (colored) according to regional and sectorial organization RB yellow RSt orange RKlight orange RV gray RT dark green RN black RO light green RS light yellow VB-sector: dark gray S-sector: orange-brown other: pink. The Network Topology of the Interbank Market by Michael Boss, Helmut Elsinger, Martin Summer, and Stefan Thurner

  21. Complex Network Perspective – Interbank network The Network Topology of the Interbank Market by Michael Boss, Helmut Elsinger, Martin Summer, and Stefan Thurner

  22. Complex Network Perspective – Interbank network • Clustering Coefficient: • A high clustering coefficient means that two banks that have interbank connections with a third bank, have a greater probability to have interbank connections with one another, than will any two banks randomly chosen on the network • C = 0.12 + 0.01 (mean and standard deviation over the 10 data sets) – small • Two small banks have a link with their head institution there is no reason for them to additionally open a link among themselves. The Network Topology of the Interbank Market by Michael Boss, Helmut Elsinger, Martin Summer, and Stefan Thurner

  23. Complex Network Perspective – Interbank network • Average Shortest Path Length: • L = 2.26 + 0.03 • Austrian interbank network looks like a very small world with about three degrees of separation • Sector organization with head institutions and sub-institutions apparently leads to short interbank distances via the upper tier of the banking system and thus to a low degree of separation. The Network Topology of the Interbank Market by Michael Boss, Helmut Elsinger, Martin Summer, and Stefan Thurner

  24. Complex Network Perspective - International financial network European Union members (red), North America (blue), other countries (green) Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  25. Complex Network Perspective - INTERNATIONALECONOMIC INTEGRATION HPAE — high-performing Asian economies LATAM—Latin American countries Bilateral trade data for 171 countries over the 1980–2005 period are used to build the trade matrix for the countries considered Columns represent importing countries, while rows denote exporting countries ASSESSING THE EVOLUTION OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION USING RANDOM WALK BETWEENNESS CENTRALITY: THE CASES OF EAST ASIA AND LATIN AMERICA by JAVIER REYES, STEFANO SCHIAVO, GIORGIO FAGIOLO

  26. Complex Network Perspective - INTERNATIONALECONOMIC INTEGRATION • Country integration (centrality) in the World Trade Network (WTN) by means of random walk betweenness centrality (RWBC) • RWBC is a measure of node centrality that captures the effects of the magnitude of the relationships that a node has with other nodes within the network as well as the degree/strength of the node in question • RWBC exploits (randomly) the whole length of the trade chains present in the network for country i and, therefore, is a good measure for the degree of integration that a given node has within the WTN ASSESSING THE EVOLUTION OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION USING RANDOM WALK BETWEENNESS CENTRALITY: THE CASES OF EAST ASIA AND LATIN AMERICA by JAVIER REYES, STEFANO SCHIAVO, GIORGIO FAGIOLO

  27. Complex Network Perspective - INTERNATIONALECONOMIC INTEGRATION Average random walk betweenness centrality (RWBC). ASSESSING THE EVOLUTION OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION USING RANDOM WALK BETWEENNESS CENTRALITY: THE CASES OF EAST ASIA AND LATIN AMERICA by JAVIER REYES, STEFANO SCHIAVO, GIORGIO FAGIOLO

  28. Complex Network Perspective -Issue • A focus on centrality or other such properties of networks can only provide a first order classification that emphasizes the role of fluctuations and randomness and cannot predict the underlying dynamics of the agents, whether they are firms or countries Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  29. Complex Network Perspective – New Methodology • Merge the description of individual agents strategies with their coevolving networks of interactions • Predict and propose economic policies that favor networks structures that are more robust to economic shocks and that can facilitate integration or trade Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  30. Complex Network Perspective – Massive Data Analysis • Transition from a qualitative to a quantitative and evidence-based science • Large-scale network data can be gathered for different levels of the economy (e.g., firms, industries, and countries), and models can be tested through the generation of large, synthetic, data sets • Possible to gather individualized data on specific interactions over time such as employee flows, R&D collaborations, and so on within a business or firm-bank credit market interactions • Manipulate the huge scale of available information reflecting agent interactions and network properties • Databases containing this information may complement both theoretical economic network experiments and empirical economic network studies and provide large-scale observations in real-time Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  31. Complex Network Perspective – Time and Space • A time-dependent resolution of the properties of economic networks will help to move beyond a single snapshot approach • Identify the evolutionary path of networks through the combination of complementary information sources • R&D networks in the field of human biotechnology, which follow a predictable life cycle related to the timing of the exchange and integration of knowledge Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  32. Complex Network Perspective - Structure Identification • Extracting network topology from reported data, in particular for aggregated economic data is very difficult • banking sector, where detailed accounts of debt-credit relations are not publicly available • In an evolving economic network, information about agents’ roles, their function and their influence are needed • quantify both direct and indirect influence Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  33. Complex Network Perspective - Structure Identification • promising steps have begun to identify functional roles played by interactive agents that relate to specific patterns in the link structure of their multirelational interaction network • Mapping a large network as a homologous small one, with statistically optimal sets of distinctive roles, gives a statistical correspondence. Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  34. Complex Network Perspective – Beyond Simplicity • All economic networks are heterogeneous with respect to both their agents and interaction strength and can also strongly vary in time • Previous studies of efficient (i.e., not wasteful) and equilibrium (or strategically stable) networks assumed homogeneity • Heterogeneities of agents can turn out to become a source of stability Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  35. Complex Network Perspective – Systemic Feedbacks • Simple amplification mechanisms can dominate the network dynamics at large, despite the best intentions of the agents • electricity in a power grid or credit debt in a banking network • most stable dynamic network models account for only the addition or removal of a single agent to or from the network at each instance of time Economic Networks: The New Challenges by Frank Schweitzer, Giorgio Fagiolo, Didier Sornette,Fernando Vega-Redondo, Alessandro Vespignani,Douglas R. White

  36. Summary • Interaction between agents’ behavior and the dynamic interactions among them. • Massive data analysis, theory encompassing the appropriate description of economic agents and their interactions, and a systemic perspective bestowing a new understanding of global effects as coming from varying network interactions are needed • Such studies will create a more unified field of economic networks that advances our understanding and leads to further insight

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