How Big is Too Big? Critical Shocks for Systemic Failure Cascades

ETH RC Working Paper No. 12-015

25 Pages Posted: 12 Jan 2013

See all articles by Claudio J. Tessone

Claudio J. Tessone

ETH Zürich

Antonios Garas

Chair of Systems Design Department of Management, Technology and Economics

Beniamino Guerra

ETH Zürich

Frank Schweitzer

ETH Zürich

Date Written: September 6, 2012

Abstract

External or internal shocks may lead to the collapse of a system consisting of many agents. If the shock hits only one agent initially and causes it to fail, this can induce a cascade of failures among neighoring agents. Several critical constellations determine whether this cascade remains finite or reaches the size of the system, i.e. leads to systemic risk. We investigate the critical parameters for such cascades in a simple model, where agents are characterized by an individual threshold $\theta_{i}$ determining their capacity to handle a load $\alpha\theta_{i}$ with $1-\alpha$ being their safety margin. If agents fail, they redistribute their load equally to $K$ neiboring agents in a regular network. For three different threshold distributions $P(\theta)$, we derive analytical results for the size of the cascade, $X(t)$, which is regarded as a measure of systemic risk, and the time when it stops. We focus on two different regimes, (i) \emph{EEE}, an external extreme event where the size of the shock is of the order of the total capacity of the network, and (ii) \emph{RIE}, a random internal event where the size of the shock is of the order of the capacity of an agent. We find that even for large extreme events that exceed the capacity of the network finite cascades are still possible, if a power-law threshold distribution is assumed. On the other hand, even small random fluctuations may lead to full cascades if critical conditions are met. Most importantly, we demonstrate that the size of the "big'' shock is not the problem, as the systemic risk only varies slightly for changes of 10 to 50 percent of the external shock. Systemic risk depends much more on ingredients such as the network topology, the safety margin and the threshold distribution, which gives hints on how to reduce systemic risk.

Keywords: systemic risk, cascading processes, robustness

Suggested Citation

Tessone, Claudio J. and Garas, Antonios and Guerra, Beniamino and Schweitzer, Frank, How Big is Too Big? Critical Shocks for Systemic Failure Cascades (September 6, 2012). ETH RC Working Paper No. 12-015, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2198922 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2198922

Claudio J. Tessone (Contact Author)

ETH Zürich ( email )

Zürichbergstrasse 18
8092 Zurich, CH-1015
Switzerland

HOME PAGE: http://www.sg.ethz.ch/people/tessonec

Antonios Garas

Chair of Systems Design Department of Management, Technology and Economics ( email )

Weinbergstrasse 56/58
Zürich, 8092
Switzerland

Beniamino Guerra

ETH Zürich ( email )

CER-ETH Center of Economic Research at ETH Zurich
ZUE F7
Zurich, 8092
Switzerland

Frank Schweitzer

ETH Zürich ( email )

Weinbergstrasse 56/58
WEV Room G 211
Zurich, CH-8032
Switzerland
+41 44 632 83 50 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://www.sg.ethz.ch

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