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Quantifying firm-level economic systemic risk from nation-wide supply networks

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Listed:
  • Christian Diem
  • Andr'as Borsos
  • Tobias Reisch
  • J'anos Kert'esz
  • Stefan Thurner

Abstract

Crises like COVID-19 or the Japanese earthquake in 2011 exposed the fragility of corporate supply networks. The production of goods and services is a highly interdependent process and can be severely impacted by the default of critical suppliers or customers. While knowing the impact of individual companies on national economies is a prerequisite for efficient risk management, the quantitative assessment of the involved economic systemic risks (ESR) is hitherto practically non-existent, mainly because of a lack of fine-grained data in combination with coherent methods. Based on a unique value added tax dataset we derive the detailed production network of an entire country and present a novel approach for computing the ESR of all individual firms. We demonstrate that a tiny fraction (0.035%) of companies has extraordinarily high systemic risk impacting about 23% of the national economic production should any of them default. Firm size alone cannot explain the ESR of individual companies; their position in the production networks does matter substantially. If companies are ranked according to their economic systemic risk index (ESRI), firms with a rank above a characteristic value have very similar ESRI values, while for the rest the rank distribution of ESRI decays slowly as a power-law; 99.8% of all companies have an impact on less than 1% of the economy. We show that the assessment of ESR is impossible with aggregate data as used in traditional Input-Output Economics. We discuss how simple policies of introducing supply chain redundancies can reduce ESR of some extremely risky companies.

Suggested Citation

  • Christian Diem & Andr'as Borsos & Tobias Reisch & J'anos Kert'esz & Stefan Thurner, 2021. "Quantifying firm-level economic systemic risk from nation-wide supply networks," Papers 2104.07260, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2104.07260
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Anton Pichler & Marco Pangallo & R. Maria del Rio-Chanona & Franc{c}ois Lafond & J. Doyne Farmer, 2020. "Production networks and epidemic spreading: How to restart the UK economy?," Papers 2005.10585, arXiv.org.
    2. Anton Pichler & J. Doyne Farmer, 2022. "Simultaneous supply and demand constraints in input–output networks: the case of Covid-19 in Germany, Italy, and Spain," Economic Systems Research, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 34(3), pages 273-293, July.
    3. Glenn Magerman & Karolien De Bruyne & Emmanuel Dhyne & Jan Van Hove, 2016. "Heterogeneous firms and the micro origins of aggregate fluctuations," Working Paper Research 312, National Bank of Belgium.
    4. Andras Borsos & Martin Stancsics, 2020. "Unfolding the hidden structure of the Hungarian multi-layer firm network," MNB Occasional Papers 2020/139, Magyar Nemzeti Bank (Central Bank of Hungary).
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    Cited by:

    1. László Lőrincz & Sándor Juhász & Rebeka O. Szabó, 2022. "Business transactions and ownership ties between firms," CERS-IE WORKING PAPERS 2216, Institute of Economics, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies.
    2. William Schueller & Christian Diem & Melanie Hinterplattner & Johannes Stangl & Beate Conrady & Markus Gerschberger & Stefan Thurner, 2022. "Propagation of disruptions in supply networks of essential goods: A population-centered perspective of systemic risk," Papers 2201.13325, arXiv.org.

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