A Path Integral Approach to Business Cycle Models with Large Number of Agents
A\"ileen Lotz, Pierre Gosselin (IF), Marc Wambst (IRMA)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel path integral and field theory approach to modeling large agent-based economic systems, providing analytical tools to analyze interactions and equilibria without traditional aggregation.
Contribution
It develops a probabilistic, non-aggregative formalism using path integrals and field theory to analyze large-scale agent interactions in economic models.
Findings
Path integral formalism simplifies analysis of small agent systems.
Field theory approach provides approximate solutions for large agent systems.
The method reveals possible phases and equilibria in business cycle models.
Abstract
This paper presents an analytical treatment of economic systems with an arbitrary number of agents that keeps track of the systems' interactions and agents' complexity. This formalism does not seek to aggregate agents. It rather replaces the standard optimization approach by a probabilistic description of both the entire system and agents'behaviors. This is done in two distinct steps. A first step considers an interacting system involving an arbitrary number of agents, where each agent's utility function is subject to unpredictable shocks. In such a setting, individual optimization problems need not be resolved. Each agent is described by a time-dependent probability distribution centered around his utility optimum. The entire system of agents is thus defined by a composite probability depending on time, agents' interactions and forward-looking behaviors. This dynamic system is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Economic Growth and Productivity · Economic Theory and Policy
