THE ECONOMY AS A COMPLEX SYSTEM: THE BALANCE SHEET DIMENSION

Authored by Dirk J. Bezemer

Date Published: 2012-09

DOI: 10.1142/s0219525912500476

Sponsors: No sponsors listed

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Model Documentation: Other Narrative Flow charts Mathematical description

Model Code URLs: Model code not found

Abstract

Given the economy's complex behavior and sudden transitions as evidenced in the 2007-2008 crisis, agent-based models are widely considered a promising alternative to current macroeconomic research dominated by DSGE models. Their failure is commonly interpreted as a failure to incorporate heterogeneous interacting agents. This paper explains that complex behavior and sudden transitions also arise from the economy's financial structure as reflected in its balance sheets, not just from heterogeneous interacting agents. It introduces “flow-of-funds” or “accounting” models, which were pre eminent in successful anticipations of the recent crisis. In illustration, a simple balance sheet model of the economy is developed to demonstrate that non-linear behavior and sudden transition may arise from the economy's balance sheet structure, even without any micro-foundations. The paper concludes by discussing one recent example of combining flow-of-funds and agent-based models. This appears a promising avenue for future research.
Tags
Agent-based models Complex systems Credit crisis DSGE finance stock-flow consistent models