Stability of the World Trade Web over Time - An Extinction Analysis
N. Foti, S. Pauls, Daniel N. Rockmore

TL;DR
This paper applies extinction analysis to the World Trade Web to assess its robustness over time, revealing a shift to a 'robust yet fragile' state linked to globalization and network connectance.
Contribution
It introduces extinction analysis to macroeconomic trade networks and demonstrates how globalization affects the network's stability and vulnerability.
Findings
WTW is robust to random failures but fragile to targeted attacks.
Network robustness increased sharply in the 1960s-70s before declining.
Globalization correlates with increased robustness and trade imbalances.
Abstract
The World Trade Web (WTW) is a weighted network whose nodes correspond to countries with edge weights reflecting the value of imports and/or exports between countries. In this paper we introduce to this macroeconomic system the notion of extinction analysis, a technique often used in the analysis of ecosystems, for the purposes of investigating the robustness of this network. In particular, we subject the WTW to a principled set of in silico "knockout experiments," akin to those carried out in the investigation of food webs, but suitably adapted to this macroeconomic network. Broadly, our experiments show that over time the WTW moves to a "robust yet fragile" configuration where it is robust to random failures but fragile under targeted attack. This change in stability is highly correlated with the connectance (edge density) of the network. Moreover, there is evidence of a sharp change…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis
