The Accounting Network: how financial institutions react to systemic crisis
Andrea Flori, Giuseppe Pappalardo, Michelangelo Puliga, Alessandro, Chessa, Fabio Pammolli

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Accounting Network, constructed from banks' financial statements using vector similarity, revealing community structures and economic components that reflect the 2008 financial crisis.
Contribution
It presents a novel network approach based on financial statement similarities to analyze banks' reactions during systemic crises.
Findings
Community detection reveals regional bank clusters, especially US and Japan.
The financial crisis signature emerges clearly around 2008.
Banks show signs of converging practices across borders.
Abstract
The role of Network Theory in the study of the financial crisis has been widely spotted in the latest years. It has been shown how the network topology and the dynamics running on top of it can trigger the outbreak of large systemic crisis. Following this methodological perspective we introduce here the Accounting Network, i.e. the network we can extract through vector similarities techniques from companies' financial statements. We build the Accounting Network on a large database of worldwide banks in the period 2001-2013, covering the onset of the global financial crisis of mid-2007. After a careful data cleaning, we apply a quality check in the construction of the network, introducing a parameter (the Quality Ratio) capable of trading off the size of the sample (coverage) and the representativeness of the financial statements (accuracy). We compute several basic network statistics…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBanking stability, regulation, efficiency · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Italy: Economic History and Contemporary Issues
