Getting the Best of Both Worlds? Developing Complementary Equation-Based and Agent-Based Models

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Abstract

We argue that building agent-based and equation-based versions of the same theoretical model is a fruitful way of gaining insights into real-world phenomena. We use the epistemological concept of “models as isolations and surrogate systems” as the philosophical underpinning of this argument. In particular, we show that agent-based and equation-based approaches align well when used simultaneously and, contrary to some common misconceptions, should be considered complements rather than substitutes. We illustrate the usefulness of the approach by examining a model of the long-run relationship between economic development and inequality (i.e., the Kuznets hypothesis).

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Gräbner, C., Bale, C. S. E., Furtado, B. A., Alvarez-Pereira, B., Gentile, J. E., Henderson, H., & Lipari, F. (2019). Getting the Best of Both Worlds? Developing Complementary Equation-Based and Agent-Based Models. Computational Economics, 53(2), 763–782. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10614-017-9763-8

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