Strategic Formation of Credit Networks

Abstract

Credit networks are an abstraction for modeling trust among agents in a network. Agents who do not directly trust each other can transact through exchange of IOUs (obligations) along a chain of trust in the network. Credit networks are robust to intrusion, can enable transactions between strangers in exchange economies, and have the liquidity to support a high rate of transactions. We study the formation of such networks when agents strategically decide how much credit to extend each other. We find strong positive network formation results for the simplest theoretical model. When each agent trusts a fixed set of other agents and transacts directly only with those it trusts, all pure-strategy Nash equilibria are social optima. However, when we allow transactions over longer paths, the price of anarchy may be unbounded. On the positive side, when agents have a shared belief about the trustworthiness of each agent, simple greedy dynamics quickly converge to a star-shaped network, which is a social optimum. Similar star-like structures are found in equilibria of heuristic strategies found via simulation studies. In addition, we simulate environments where agents may have varying information about each others’ trustworthiness based on their distance in a social network. Empirical game analysis of these scenarios suggests that star structures arise only when defaults are relatively rare, and otherwise, credit tends to be issued over short social distances conforming to the locality of information. Overall, we find that networks formed by self-interested agents achieve a high fraction of available value, as long as this potential value is large enough to enable any network to form.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Mar 12, 2015
Source ID
10.1145/2700058

Entities

People

  • Ashish Goel
  • Bryce Wiedenbeck
  • Michael P. Wellman
  • Pranav Dandekar

Organizations

  • National Science Foundation
  • Stanford University
  • United States Army Research Laboratory
  • University of Michigan

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Computer science
  • Economics

Readers

  • Computer Networking
  • Industrial Economics
  • Military History of the United States in the 20th Century.