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Theoretical Economics

Nestedness in Networks: A Theoretical Model and Some Applications

Journal Article
Reference
König, Michael D., Claudio J. Tessone and Yves Zenou (2014). “Nestedness in Networks: A Theoretical Model and Some Applications”. Theoretical Economics 9(3), 695–752. doi.org/10.3982/TE1348

Authors
Michael D. König, Claudio J. Tessone, Yves Zenou

We develop a dynamic network formation model that can explain the observed nestedness in real-world networks. Links are formed on the basis of agents' centrality and have an exponentially distributed lifetime. We use stochastic stability to identify the networks to which the network formation process converges and find that they are nested split graphs. We completely determine the topological properties of the stochastically stable networks and show that they match features exhibited by real-world networks. Using four different network data sets, we empirically test our model and show that it fits well the observed networks.