Hall-Like Transversal Stress and Sandpile Criticality on Real Production Networks
Diego Vallarino

TL;DR
This paper introduces a model combining transversal stress and sandpile dynamics on real production networks to analyze economic instability and systemic risk.
Contribution
It presents a finite-size, real-network model showing how transversal stress activates structural fragility, without asserting universal criticality.
Findings
Mean avalanche size increases with external field and stress.
Four regimes identified: stable, latent fragility, critical, avalanche.
Tail distribution thickens but does not show universal power-law criticality.
Abstract
This paper develops a Hall-Sandpile model of economic instability that combines a Hall-like transversal stress mechanism with sandpile threshold dynamics on a real production-network substrate. In analogy with the physical Hall effect, where exposed flows under an external field generate stress in a transversal direction, we model economic shocks as fields that act on flow-intensive, low-redundancy, low-capacity nodes and produce systemic stress through a multiplicative conversion function. The accumulated stress drives a discrete toppling rule and an avalanche dynamics whose effective activation threshold declines with transversal exposure. The model is calibrated on annual World Input--Output Database (WIOD) production networks for 2000--2014 and simulated on the 2014 substrate (2{,}283 country--sector nodes) under three alternative propagation normalisations to avoid mechanical…
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