In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the role of strongly interconnected markets in causing systemic instability has been increasingly acknowledged. Trade networks of commodities are susceptible to cascades of supply shocks that increase systemic trade risks and pose a threat to geopolitical stability. We show that supply risk, scarcity, and price volatility of nonfuel mineral resources are intricately connected with the structure of the worldwide trade networks spanned by these resources. At the global level, we demonstrate that the scarcity of a resource is closely related to the susceptibility of the trade network with respect to cascading shocks. At the regional level, we find that, to some extent,region-specific price volatility and supply risk can be understood by centrality measures that capture systemic trade risk. The resources associated with the highest systemic trade risk indicators are often those that are produced as by products of major metals. We identify significant strategic shortcomings in the management of systemic trade risk, in particular in the European Union.
Article
English
Systemic risk; Critical resources; Network effects; Trade risk; Non-fuel mineral resources
European Commission 317532
European Commission 318132
European Commission 610028
Science advances ; Vol. 1, Issue 10 (November 2015)
open access
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