“…Their strength lies in the micro-interactions between individual decision-making agents (Tesfatsion 2006) each with their own characteristics; for example, businesses, households, or consumers, as well as spatial characteristics that geographically localize these interactions (Barthelemy 2016;Crosato et al 2018). These interactions can, in turn, be affected by banks' policies (Teglio et al 2012;Dosi et al 2013;Banwo et al 2019) and macroeconomics conditions (Cardaci 2018;Guilmi 2017;Mérő 2019). These agent-to-agent interactions produce complex (Jensen 2010), nonlinear effects such as tipping-points (Brock and Durlauf 2001;Harré et al 2019), boom-bust cycles (Geanakoplos et al 2012), and chaos Hommes 1998, Xin andHuang 2017), as well as the equilibrium dynamics predicted by classical models.…”