Financial Markets and the Real Economy: A Statistical Field Perspective on Capital Allocation and Accumulation
Pierre Gosselin (IF), A\"ileen Lotz, Marc Wambst (IRMA)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a field-formalism approach to model the interactions between financial markets and the real economy, revealing how capital allocation patterns and stability depend on agents' expectations and sector dynamics.
Contribution
It develops a novel field-based framework to analyze large-agent economic models, capturing sectoral interactions, capital accumulation patterns, and stability conditions.
Findings
Three distinct capital accumulation patterns identified.
Sectoral capital depends on short-term and long-term returns.
Stability hinges on expectations formation processes.
Abstract
This paper provides a general method to directly translate a classical economic framework with a large number of agents into a field-formalism model. This type of formalism allows the analytical treatment of economic models with an arbitrary number of agents, while preserving the system's interactions and microeconomic features of the individual level.We apply this methodology to model the interactions between financial markets and the real economy, described in a classical framework of a large number of heterogeneous agents, investors and firms. Firms are spread among sectors but may shift between sectors to improve their returns. They compete by producing differentiated goods and reward their investors by paying dividends and through their stocks' valuation. Investors invest in firms and move along sectors based on firms' expected long-run returns.The field-formalism model derived…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Economic theories and models · Financial Markets and Investment Strategies
