Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks

Abstract Understanding the complexity of international trading is critical for a variety of issues ranging from quantifying the competitiveness of individual nations to forecasting the collective evolution of the world economy. Despite the significant progress made in this direction, the internation...

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Main Authors: Zhuo-Ming Ren, An Zeng, Yi-Cheng Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2020-11-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-00651-3
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spelling doaj-cc7cde997e6a4163aa712ea5753d4d5b2020-12-07T19:23:03ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922020-11-01711810.1057/s41599-020-00651-3Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networksZhuo-Ming Ren0An Zeng1Yi-Cheng Zhang2Alibaba Business School, Hangzhou Normal UniversitySchool of Systems Science, Beijing Normal UniversityAlibaba Business School, Hangzhou Normal UniversityAbstract Understanding the complexity of international trading is critical for a variety of issues ranging from quantifying the competitiveness of individual nations to forecasting the collective evolution of the world economy. Despite the significant progress made in this direction, the international trading system is mainly modeled with a single network in the previous works such as the monopartite product space network and the bipartite country-product network to capture economic complexity. In order to better capture the more detailed dynamics, we characterize the international trading system with a multilayer network with each layer representing the transnational trading relations of a product. This framework immediately reveals the nested structure in each layer and accordingly allows us to develop an alternative measure of the complexity of products. The metric provides a ranking of products’ complexity more consistent with common understanding. The nested structure of a network layer seems to correlate with the asymmetric export relations resulted from the technology barriers, and the evolution of product complexity indicates that the growth of product nestedness is faster than the relevance decay. Finally, we remark a comparison of trade competitive by nestedness between China and the United States to explore the evolution of the economy industries, and the aggregated nestedness index can predict a nation’s future economic growth.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-00651-3
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhuo-Ming Ren
An Zeng
Yi-Cheng Zhang
spellingShingle Zhuo-Ming Ren
An Zeng
Yi-Cheng Zhang
Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
author_facet Zhuo-Ming Ren
An Zeng
Yi-Cheng Zhang
author_sort Zhuo-Ming Ren
title Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks
title_short Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks
title_full Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks
title_fullStr Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks
title_full_unstemmed Bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks
title_sort bridging nestedness and economic complexity in multilayer world trade networks
publisher Springer Nature
series Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
issn 2662-9992
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Understanding the complexity of international trading is critical for a variety of issues ranging from quantifying the competitiveness of individual nations to forecasting the collective evolution of the world economy. Despite the significant progress made in this direction, the international trading system is mainly modeled with a single network in the previous works such as the monopartite product space network and the bipartite country-product network to capture economic complexity. In order to better capture the more detailed dynamics, we characterize the international trading system with a multilayer network with each layer representing the transnational trading relations of a product. This framework immediately reveals the nested structure in each layer and accordingly allows us to develop an alternative measure of the complexity of products. The metric provides a ranking of products’ complexity more consistent with common understanding. The nested structure of a network layer seems to correlate with the asymmetric export relations resulted from the technology barriers, and the evolution of product complexity indicates that the growth of product nestedness is faster than the relevance decay. Finally, we remark a comparison of trade competitive by nestedness between China and the United States to explore the evolution of the economy industries, and the aggregated nestedness index can predict a nation’s future economic growth.
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-00651-3
work_keys_str_mv AT zhuomingren bridgingnestednessandeconomiccomplexityinmultilayerworldtradenetworks
AT anzeng bridgingnestednessandeconomiccomplexityinmultilayerworldtradenetworks
AT yichengzhang bridgingnestednessandeconomiccomplexityinmultilayerworldtradenetworks
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