Managing Chaos in Nonlinear Economic Systems

Managing Chaos in Nonlinear Economic Systems

Author: 
Cole, Sam
Place: 
Hershey, PA
Publisher: 
IGI Global
Date published: 
2012
Editor: 
Banerjee, Santo
Journal Title: 
Chaos and Complexity Theory for Management
Source: 
Chaos and Complexity Theory for Management
Abstract: 

The logistic equation (Lorentz, 1963) has been advanced as an explanation of the chaotic growth patterns observed human settlements. It is questioned, however, whether the growth potential in population systems is sufficient for chaos. By modifying the logistic equation to account for the impact of globalization and agglomeration economies on small tourist destinations, Cole (2009a) demonstrates using data from the Caribbean that solutions and trajectories can replicate formal criteria for chaos. Theoretically, the reason for this, in addition to the availability of investment, demand, information, and labor (that alleviate the conventional restrictions on growth), is the demand and supply-side synergies between activities within a dynamic market-segmented sector. This chapter presents continuous and discrete solutions to the model and explains key findings for destination take-off, accelerated growth, and economic maturity, with a rule for modulating and managing chaos-prone economic systems.

Series: 
Advances in Business Strategy and Competitive Advantage

CITATION: Cole, Sam. Managing Chaos in Nonlinear Economic Systems edited by Banerjee, Santo . Hershey, PA : IGI Global , 2012. Chaos and Complexity Theory for Management - Available at: https://library.au.int/managing-chaos-nonlinear-economic-systems