Visualizing the Invisible Hand of Markets: Simulating complex dynamic economic interactions
Klaus Jaffe
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
In complex systems, many different parts interact in non-obvious ways. Traditional research focuses on a few or a single aspect of the problem so as to analyze it with the tools available. To get a better insight of phenomena that emerge from complex interactions, we need instruments that can analyze simultaneously complex interactions between many parts. Here, a simulator modeling different types of economies, is used to visualize complex quantitative aspects that affect economic dynamics. The main conclusions are: 1- Relatively simple economic settings produce complex non-linear dynamics and therefore linear regressions are often unsuitable to capture complex economic dynamics; 2- Flexible pricing of goods by individual agents according to their micro-environment increases the health and wealth of the society, but asymmetries in price sensitivity between buyers and sellers increase price inflation; 3- Prices for goods conferring risky long term benefits are not tracked efficiently by simple market forces. 4- Division of labor creates synergies that improve enormously the health and wealth of the society by increasing the efficiency of economic activity. 5- Stochastic modeling improves our understanding of real economies, and didactic games based on them might help policy makers and non specialists in grasping the complex dynamics underlying even simple economic settings.
Date: 2014-12, Revised 2015-04
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cmp
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:arx:papers:1412.6924
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