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Towards macroeconomic analysis without microfoundations: measuring the entropy of simulated exchange economies

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  • Yihang Luo
  • Robert S. MacKay
  • Nick Chater

Abstract

The theory of thermal macroeconomics (TM) analyses economic phenomena within the mathematical framework of classical thermodynamics, using a set of axioms that apply to the purely macroscopic aspects of an economy [CM]. The theory shows that the possible macro-behaviours are governed by an entropy function. In simple idealised cases, the entropy function can be calculated from the rules governing the interactions of individual agents. But where this is not possible, TM predicts that the entropy can nonetheless be measured empirically through an economic analogue of calorimetry in physics. We show using computer simulations the in-principle feasibility of this approach: an entropy function can successfully be measured for a range of simulated economies that we tested. In cases where entropy can be calculated analytically from microfoundational assumptions, the measured entropy agrees well. In more complex cases, where microfoundational analysis is infeasible, our method of measuring entropy still applies and is validated by demonstrations that entropy is a state function of an economic system, i.e., exhibits path independence. This appears to hold even for some systems to which we don't have a proof that the Axioms of TM apply. Furthermore, in all cases tested, entropy is concave, as predicted by TM. As shown in [CM], once the entropy function is established for a simulated exchange economy, it is possible to derive prices, the value of money and various other quantities, and make predictions about the effects of putting two or more economies in contact.

Suggested Citation

  • Yihang Luo & Robert S. MacKay & Nick Chater, 2026. "Towards macroeconomic analysis without microfoundations: measuring the entropy of simulated exchange economies," Papers 2603.10155, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2603.10155
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    5. N. J. Chater & R. S. MacKay, 2024. "Thermal Macroeconomics: An axiomatic theory of aggregate economic phenomena," Papers 2412.00886, arXiv.org, revised Jun 2025.
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