We analyse global export data within the Economic Complexity framework. We couple the new economic dimension Complexity, which captures how sophisticated products are, with an index called logPRODY, a measure of the income of the respective exporters. Products’ aggregate motion is treated as a 2-dimensional dynamical system in the Complexity-logPRODY plane. We find that this motion can be explained by a quantitative model involving the competition on the markets, that can be mapped as a scalar field on the Complexity-logPRODY plane and acts in a way akin to a potential. This explains the movement of products towards areas of the plane in which the competition is higher. We analyse market composition in more detail, finding that for most products it tends, over time, to a characteristic configuration, which depends on the Complexity of the products. This market configuration, which we called asymptotic, is characterized by higher levels of competition.
Correction: The complex dynamics of products and its asymptotic properties (PLoS ONE (2017) 12:5 (e0177360) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177360) / Angelini, Orazio; Cristelli, Matthieu; Zaccaria, Andrea; Pietronero, Luciano. - In: PLOS ONE. - ISSN 1932-6203. - ELETTRONICO. - 12:10(2017), p. e0186436. [10.1371/journal.pone.0186436]
Correction: The complex dynamics of products and its asymptotic properties (PLoS ONE (2017) 12:5 (e0177360) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177360)
Cristelli, Matthieu;Pietronero, Luciano
2017
Abstract
We analyse global export data within the Economic Complexity framework. We couple the new economic dimension Complexity, which captures how sophisticated products are, with an index called logPRODY, a measure of the income of the respective exporters. Products’ aggregate motion is treated as a 2-dimensional dynamical system in the Complexity-logPRODY plane. We find that this motion can be explained by a quantitative model involving the competition on the markets, that can be mapped as a scalar field on the Complexity-logPRODY plane and acts in a way akin to a potential. This explains the movement of products towards areas of the plane in which the competition is higher. We analyse market composition in more detail, finding that for most products it tends, over time, to a characteristic configuration, which depends on the Complexity of the products. This market configuration, which we called asymptotic, is characterized by higher levels of competition.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.