The Network-Correlation Theorem: Why Tax Is the Correlated-Shock Case Kinship Networks Were Not Designed to Absorb
Description
Paper IV introduced the network coupling of household discharge capacity through the kinship network and showed that atomic tax extraction destroys household discharge capacity super-multiplicatively. This paper formalises the structural reason. We prove the Network-Correlation Theorem: tax extraction is the correlated-shock case across the kinship network — a uniform proportional shock to every node simultaneously — and the network’s contingent discharge function is structurally designed to buffer idiosyncratic shocks, not correlated ones. The theorem identifies why network amplification of tax-induced deficit is not a parametric feature but a categorical one: the architecture of kinship discharge is foreclosed permanently rather than temporarily under continuous correlated extraction. The paper includes the Categorical Worst-Case Theorem which establishes that tax is the categorical worst case among extraction structures by structural form (continuous, uniform, fixed-fraction, every period, every node reduced by the same fraction), not merely by magnitude.
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- Cites
- Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19228708 (DOI)
- Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19809921 (DOI)
- Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19809925 (DOI)
- Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19809935 (DOI)