Complexity and the Economy

“Complexity and the Economy” by W. Brian Arthur, published by Oxford University Press in 2015, explores the evolving landscape of economics through the lens of complexity theory. This edition, comprising 211 pages, presents a collection of Arthur’s influential articles that challenge traditional economic frameworks. Rather than viewing the economy as a stable system, Arthur argues for a perspective that recognizes its dynamic and ever-changing nature, where individuals navigate complex situations using varied reasoning.
Readers will find a comprehensive examination of how complexity economics addresses key questions about market behavior, technological evolution, and the intricacies of economic systems. The book delves into topics such as the psychological factors influencing stock market trends and the reasons behind the dominance of major players in high-tech markets. Arthur’s work incorporates innovative methodologies, including evolutionary computation and agent-based modeling, to analyze how economies form and adapt over time, providing insights into the mechanisms that drive financial crises and their prevention.
Official synopsis Publisher
Economics is changing. In the last few years it has generated a number of new approaches. One of the most promising – complexity economics – was pioneered in the 1980s and 1990s by a small team at the Santa Fe Institute. Economist and complexity theorist W. Brian Arthur led that team, and in this book he collects many of his articles on this new approach. The traditional framework sees behavior in the economy as in an equilibrium steady state. People in the economy face well-defined problems and use perfect deductive reasoning to base their actions on. The complexity framework, by contrast, sees the economy as always in process, always changing. People try to make sense of the situations they face using whatever reasoning they have at hand, and together create outcomes they must individually react to anew. The resulting economy is not a well-ordered machine, but a complex evolving system that is imperfect, perpetually constructing itself anew, and brimming with vitality.
The new vision complements and widens the standard one, and it helps answer many questions: Why does the stock market show moods and a psychology? Why do high-tech markets tend to lock in to the dominance of one or two very large players? How do economies form, and how do they continually alter in structure over time?
The papers collected here were among the first to use evolutionary computation, agent-based modeling, and cognitive psychology. They cover topics as disparate as how markets form out of beliefs; how technology evolves over the long span of time; why systems and bureaucracies get more complicated as they evolve; and how financial crises can be foreseen and prevented in the future.
Author
Publisher
Topics
FAQ
What is “Complexity and the Economy” about?
Who is the author of “Complexity and the Economy”?
When was “Complexity and the Economy” published?
What is the ISBN for “Complexity and the Economy”?
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
