How much should an investor trust the startup entrepreneur? A network model
Authored by Anna Klabunde
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11403-015-0147-7
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/3813/releases/1.4.0/
Abstract
Trust is an important determinant of start-up financing. In a simple
agent-based model it is determined what the best trusting strategy is
for a collective of investors and whether it is rational for an
individual investor to deviate from this collective optimum. Trust
depends on a measure of social distance and is the precondition for
investment. Trust increases and decreases based on whether an investor
is satisfied with the interest payments received from an entrepreneur.
If an investor is dissatisfied, he terminates the relation with the
entrepreneur. For assessing the quality of their own investments, investors communicate with other investors in a network-like structure.
I find that, as a collective, it is best for investors to compare their
returns critically in order to identify unproductive entrepreneurs, but
to be tolerant regarding existing links to entrepreneurs in order not to
terminate profitable relations because of minor productivity drops.
However, it is optimal for an individual investor to deviate from this
strategy and to be less easily disappointed, but to decrease trust in
larger steps. In a sense, an individual investor can free ride on the
others' critical assessment. If all investors behave according to this
latter strategy, too many unproductive firms remain in the market and
the average investor's return is lower than in the collective optimum.
Tags
exchange
Evolution
Cooperation
commitment
Cultural-differences
Crisis