Sandpile Economics: Theory, Identification, and Evidence
Diego Vallarino

TL;DR
This paper introduces Sandpile Economics, a framework linking macroeconomic crises to the fragility of production networks, using geometric measures like Forman--Ricci curvature to predict systemic risk and economic resilience.
Contribution
It develops a novel formal model connecting network geometry to economic instability and provides empirical evidence linking curvature to output dynamics and resilience.
Findings
Production networks operate in negative curvature regimes.
Higher curvature predicts better medium-term growth.
Curvature outperforms standard metrics in resilience prediction.
Abstract
Why do capitalist economies recurrently generate crises whose severity is disproportionate to the size of the triggering shock? This paper proposes a structural answer grounded in the evolutionary geometry of production networks. As economies evolve through specialization, integration, and competitive selection, their inter-sectoral linkages drift toward configurations of increasing geometric fragility, eventually crossing a threshold beyond which small disturbances generate disproportionately large cascades. We introduce Sandpile Economics, a formal framework that interprets macroeconomic instability as an emergent property of disequilibrium production networks. The key state variable is the Forman--Ricci curvature of the input--output graph, capturing local substitution possibilities when supply chains are disrupted. We show that when curvature falls below an endogenous threshold,…
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