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Published in: Empirical Economics 3/2020

19-10-2018

On the distribution of links in financial networks: structural heterogeneity and functional form

Author: Thomas Lux

Published in: Empirical Economics | Issue 3/2020

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Abstract

We investigate the distribution of links in three large data sets: one of these covering interbank loans in the electronic trading platform e-MID, and the other two covering a large part of the loans of banks to non-financial companies in the Spanish and Japanese economies, respectively. In contrast to all the previous literature, we do not assume homogeneity of the link distribution over time and across different categories of agents (banks, firms) but apply our hypothesized distributions as regression models. As it turns out, many of the tested sources of heterogeneity turn out to be significant regressors. For instance, we find pervasive time heterogeneity of link formation in all three data sets, and also heterogeneity for different categories of banks/firms that can be identified in the data as well as some explanatory power of balance sheet statistics in the case of the Japanese data set. Across all networks, the Negative Binomial model almost always outperforms all alternative models confirming its good performance as a model of economic count data in many previous applications.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
Evidence for a Pareto shape of the distribution of firm sizes is provided by, among others, Axtell (2001) and Segarra and Teruel (2012). In contrast, Cabral and Mata (2003) provide evidence for their proximity to a Lognormal distribution. Since both candidates (as well as some others) are strongly right-skewed, statistical discrimination between them can be a delicate problem. In recent literature, Crosato and Ganugi (2007) have attempted an explicit comparison of the Pareto and lognormal distributions and find a better fit of the former.
 
2
As proposed by Vuong (1989), one then subtracts \(0.5(K_1 - K_2)\hbox {log} N\) from the differences of the likelihoods (\(K_1\) and \(K_2\) the number of parameters of both alternative models, and N the number of observations).
 
3
The overall number of cases of these two categories is too small to consider them separately.
 
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Metadata
Title
On the distribution of links in financial networks: structural heterogeneity and functional form
Author
Thomas Lux
Publication date
19-10-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Empirical Economics / Issue 3/2020
Print ISSN: 0377-7332
Electronic ISSN: 1435-8921
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00181-018-1569-6

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