Financial Interactions and Capital Accumulation
Pierre Gosselin (IF), A\"ileen Lotz

TL;DR
This paper extends a formalism called Field Economics to analyze complex financial systems with interconnected heterogeneous agents, revealing multiple collective states and their implications for market stability and capital flow dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a refined model allowing financial agents to invest in each other and banks with credit multipliers, expanding previous frameworks to better understand systemic behaviors.
Findings
Multiple collective states can emerge depending on system parameters.
Financial networks exhibit unstable behaviors due to multiple equilibria.
Capital diffusion and default risks are analyzed at macro and micro levels.
Abstract
In a series of precedent papers, we have presented a comprehensive methodology, termed Field Economics, for translating a standard economic model into a statistical field-formalism framework. This formalism requires a large number of heterogeneous agents, possibly of different types. It reveals the emergence of collective states among these agents or type of agents while preserving the interactions and microeconomic features of the system at the individual level. In two prior papers, we applied this formalism to analyze the dynamics of capital allocation and accumulation in a simple microeconomic framework of investors and firms.Building upon our prior work, the present paper refines the initial model by expanding its scope. Instead of considering financial firms investing solely in real sectors, we now suppose that financial agents may also invest in other financial firms. We also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic theories and models · Global Financial Crisis and Policies
