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The struggle for existence in the world market ecosystem

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  • Viviana Viña-Cervantes
  • Michele Coscia
  • Renaud Lambiotte

Abstract

The global trade system can be viewed as a dynamic ecosystem in which exporters struggle for resources: the markets in which they export. We can think that the aim of an exporter is to gain the entirety of a market share (say, car imports from the United States). This is similar to the objective of an organism in its attempt to monopolize a given subset of resources in an ecosystem. In this paper, we adopt a multilayer network approach to describe this struggle. We use longitudinal, multiplex data on trade relations, spanning several decades. We connect two countries with a directed link if the source country’s appearance in a market correlates with the target country’s disappearing, where a market is defined as a country-product combination in a given decade. Each market is a layer in the network. We show that, by analyzing the countries’ network roles in each layer, we are able to classify them as out-competing, transitioning or displaced. This classification is a meaningful one: when testing the future export patterns of these countries, we show that out-competing countries have distinctly stronger growth rates than the other two classes.

Suggested Citation

  • Viviana Viña-Cervantes & Michele Coscia & Renaud Lambiotte, 2018. "The struggle for existence in the world market ecosystem," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(10), pages 1-20, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0203915
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203915
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    References listed on IDEAS

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