“Making Sense of Chaos” by J. Doyne Farmer

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  • Complexity Economics shift from “as if” models to “as is”
  • Models should fit the facts with plausible inputs
  • ‘Complicated’ (many moving parts) and ‘complex’ (outputs are not easily calculated) are not synonymous
  • Modern economies are ecosystems
  • Money is a contract, contracts live on balance sheets
  • “What are the nodes? What are the communities?”
  • Only 35% of improvements come from within the industry, the rest come from the supply chain
  • Technology typically shifts unemployment between industries
  • Risks are about known events, uncertainty is about the unknown
  • Chaos pervades complicated systems but is rare in simple systems
  • Data that look chaotic can have solid, short run predictions
  • Games enter a static state when they are not competitive
  • Leverage adds volatility that lead to crashes
  • When pressure is applied to a fluid, it is stable. When extreme pressure is applied, turbulence occurs.

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