Networks: An Economics Approach
An accessible and comprehensive overview of the economic theory and the realities of networks written by a pioneering economics researcher.

Networks are everywhere: the infrastructure that brings water into our homes, the social networks made up of our friends and families, the supply chains connecting cities, people, and goods. These interconnections contain economic trade-offs: for example, should an airline operate direct flights between cities or route all its flights through a hub? Viewing networks through an economics lens, this textbook considers the costs and benefits that govern their formation and functioning. 

Networks are central to an understanding of the production, consumption, and information that lie at the heart of economic activity. Sanjeev Goyal provides advanced undergraduate and graduate students with an accessible and comprehensive introduction to the economics research on networks of the past twenty-five years. Each chapter introduces a theoretical model illustrated with the help of case studies and formal proofs. After introducing the theoretical concepts, Goyal examines economic networks, including infrastructure, security, market power, and financial networks. He then covers social networks, with chapters on coordinating activity, communication and learning, information networks, epidemics, and impersonal markets. Finally, Goyal locates social and economic networks in a broader context covering networked markets, economic development, trust, and group networks in their relation to markets and the state.

  • First textbook to provide a broad and comprehensive overview of twenty-first-century economic theory of networks 
  • Features engaging case studies and accessible exercises
  • Written by a pioneering economics researcher 
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Networks: An Economics Approach
An accessible and comprehensive overview of the economic theory and the realities of networks written by a pioneering economics researcher.

Networks are everywhere: the infrastructure that brings water into our homes, the social networks made up of our friends and families, the supply chains connecting cities, people, and goods. These interconnections contain economic trade-offs: for example, should an airline operate direct flights between cities or route all its flights through a hub? Viewing networks through an economics lens, this textbook considers the costs and benefits that govern their formation and functioning. 

Networks are central to an understanding of the production, consumption, and information that lie at the heart of economic activity. Sanjeev Goyal provides advanced undergraduate and graduate students with an accessible and comprehensive introduction to the economics research on networks of the past twenty-five years. Each chapter introduces a theoretical model illustrated with the help of case studies and formal proofs. After introducing the theoretical concepts, Goyal examines economic networks, including infrastructure, security, market power, and financial networks. He then covers social networks, with chapters on coordinating activity, communication and learning, information networks, epidemics, and impersonal markets. Finally, Goyal locates social and economic networks in a broader context covering networked markets, economic development, trust, and group networks in their relation to markets and the state.

  • First textbook to provide a broad and comprehensive overview of twenty-first-century economic theory of networks 
  • Features engaging case studies and accessible exercises
  • Written by a pioneering economics researcher 
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Networks: An Economics Approach

Networks: An Economics Approach

by Sanjeev Goyal
Networks: An Economics Approach

Networks: An Economics Approach

by Sanjeev Goyal

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Overview

An accessible and comprehensive overview of the economic theory and the realities of networks written by a pioneering economics researcher.

Networks are everywhere: the infrastructure that brings water into our homes, the social networks made up of our friends and families, the supply chains connecting cities, people, and goods. These interconnections contain economic trade-offs: for example, should an airline operate direct flights between cities or route all its flights through a hub? Viewing networks through an economics lens, this textbook considers the costs and benefits that govern their formation and functioning. 

Networks are central to an understanding of the production, consumption, and information that lie at the heart of economic activity. Sanjeev Goyal provides advanced undergraduate and graduate students with an accessible and comprehensive introduction to the economics research on networks of the past twenty-five years. Each chapter introduces a theoretical model illustrated with the help of case studies and formal proofs. After introducing the theoretical concepts, Goyal examines economic networks, including infrastructure, security, market power, and financial networks. He then covers social networks, with chapters on coordinating activity, communication and learning, information networks, epidemics, and impersonal markets. Finally, Goyal locates social and economic networks in a broader context covering networked markets, economic development, trust, and group networks in their relation to markets and the state.

  • First textbook to provide a broad and comprehensive overview of twenty-first-century economic theory of networks 
  • Features engaging case studies and accessible exercises
  • Written by a pioneering economics researcher 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262374071
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 04/18/2023
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 824
File size: 70 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Sanjeev Goyal is Arthur C. Pigou Professor of Economics at the University of Cambridge, a Fellow of Christ’s College, Cambridge, and Professor of Economics at New York University Abu Dhabi. He is a Fellow of the British Academy, a Fellow of the Econometric Society, and the author of Connections: An Introduction to the Economics of Networks.

Table of Contents

Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction 1
I Foundations
1 Concepts and Measures 15
2 Random Origins 51
3 The Costs and Benefits of Links 83
4 Network Structure and Human Behavior 125
II Economic Networks
5 Production and Supply Chains 171
6 Infrastructure 199
7 Security 237
8 Intermediaries and Platforms 277
9 Financial Contagion 317
10 Wars 359
III Social Networks
11 The Law of the Few 403
12 Social Coordination 437
13 Communication and Social Learning 475
14 Epidemics and Diffusion 519
15 Social Ties and Markets 557
IV Broader Themes
16 Networked Markets 597
17 Communities and Economic Growth 633
18 Trust 667
19 Groups, Impersonal Exchange, and State Capacity 709
References 755
Index 783
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