skip to content

Faculty of Economics

Journal Cover

Acemoglu, D., Carvalho, V. M., Ozdaglar, A. and Tahbaz-Salehi, A.

The network origins of aggregate fluctuations.

Econometrica

Vol. 9 no. 1 pp. 336-343 (2012)

Abstract: This paper argues that, in the presence of intersectoral input-output linkages, microeconomic idiosyncratic shocks may lead to aggregate fluctuations. We show that, as the economy becomes more disaggregated, the rate at which aggregate volatility decays is determined by the structure of the network capturing such linkages. Our main results provide a characterization of this relationship in terms of the importance of different sectors as suppliers to their immediate customers, as well as their role as indirect suppliers to chains of downstream sectors. Such higher-order interconnections capture the possibility of "cascade effects" whereby productivity shocks to a sector propagate not only to its immediate downstream customers, but also to the rest of the economy. Our results highlight that sizable aggregate volatility is obtained from sectoral idiosyncratic shocks only if there exists significant asymmetry in the roles that sectors play as suppliers to others, and that the "sparseness" of the input-output matrix is unrelated to the nature of aggregate fluctuations.

Keywords: Business cycle, aggregate volatility, diversification, input–output linkages, intersectoral network, cascades

JEL Codes: M21

Author links: Vasco Carvalho  

Publisher's Link: https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA9623



Papers and Publications



Recent Publications


Bhattacharya, D. and Shvets, J. Inferring Trade-Offs in University Admissions: Evidence from Cambridge Journal of Political Economy, accepted [2023]

Porzio, T., Rossi, F. and Santangelo, G. The Human Side of Structural Transformation American Economic Review [2022]

Ritz, R. Does Competition Increase Pass-Through? Rand Journal of Economics, forthcoming [2023]

Rauh, C. and Valladares-Esteban, A. On the Black-White Gaps in Labor Supply and Earnings over the Lifecycle in the US Review of Economic Dynamics [2023]