Good speciation and endogenous business cycles in a constraint satisfaction macroeconomic model
Dhruv Sharma, Jean-Philippe Bouchaud, Marco Tarzia, Francesco Zamponi

TL;DR
This paper presents an agent-based macroeconomic model using constraint satisfaction principles, revealing how debt constraints influence economic stability, crises, and spontaneous speciation of goods through complex feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a novel CSP-based price-setting mechanism in macroeconomics, linking individual debt constraints to emergent macroeconomic phenomena and stability regimes.
Findings
Endogenous crises occur with loose debt constraints.
High debt constraints lead to a structure-less economy.
Intermediate constraints produce stable, self-organizing speciation phenomena.
Abstract
We introduce a prototype agent-based model of the macroeconomy, with budgetary constraints at its core. The model is related to a class of constraint satisfaction problems (CSPs), which has been thoroughly investigated in computer science. The CSP paradigm allows us to propose an alternative price-setting mechanism: given agents' preferences and budgets, what set of prices satisfies the maximum number of agents? Such an approach permits the coupling of production and output within the economy to the allowed level of debt in a simplified framework. Within our model, we identify three different regimes upon varying the amount of debt that each agent can accumulate before defaulting. In presence of a very loose constraint on debt, endogenous crises leading to waves of synchronized bankruptcies are present. In the opposite regime of very tight debt constraining, the bankruptcy rate is…
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