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Testing Centralized and Polycentric Computational Planning

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  • Ricardo Alonzo Fern'andez Salguero

Abstract

This paper presents a reproducible synthetic benchmark comparing a computational planner, an agent-based market, and a hybrid meta-market within a common simulated economy. The benchmark incorporates input-output production networks, heterogeneous firms, capacity constraints, endogenous prices, welfare metrics, structural shocks, adversarial stress testing, and information-reporting experiments. Across training, holdout, and adversarial scenarios, the planner consistently achieves lower welfare losses than the decentralized alternatives. The main contribution is methodological rather than ideological. While the benchmark demonstrates a falsifiable framework for comparing economic coordination mechanisms, it does not establish the empirical superiority of planning. Several design choices mechanically favor the planner, including informational asymmetries, incomplete market representation, and simplified institutional assumptions. The results should therefore be interpreted as validation of a synthetic experimental architecture and as a prototype for future research. The paper concludes by outlining a validation agenda based on empirical calibration, structural holdouts, sensitivity analysis, uncertainty quantification, mechanism-design tests, and independent replication.

Suggested Citation

  • Ricardo Alonzo Fern'andez Salguero, 2026. "Testing Centralized and Polycentric Computational Planning," Papers 2606.19214, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2606.19214
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