Cooperative Security Against Interdependent Risks
Firms in inter-organizational networks such as supply chains or strategic alliances are exposed to interdependent risks. These are risks that are transferable across partner firms. They can be decomposed into intrinsic risks a firm faces from its own operations and extrinsic risks transferred from i...
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Zusammenfassung: | Firms in inter-organizational networks such as supply chains or strategic
alliances are exposed to interdependent risks. These are risks that are
transferable across partner firms. They can be decomposed into intrinsic risks
a firm faces from its own operations and extrinsic risks transferred from its
partners. Firms broadly have access to two security strategies: either they can
independently eliminate both intrinsic and extrinsic risks by securing their
links with partners, or alternatively, firms can cooperate with partners to
eliminate sources of intrinsic risk in the network. We develop a
graph-theoretic model of interdependent security and demonstrate that the
network-optimal security strategy can be computed in polynomial time. Then, we
use cooperative game-theoretic tools to examine whether and when firms can
sustain the network-optimal security strategy via cost-sharing mechanisms that
are stable, fair, computable, and implementable via a series of bilateral
cost-sharing arrangements. We consider different informational assumptions in
the network and show that, when the players know only their own costs, firms
have a clear incentive to cooperate globally whereas, in the presence of public
information, there may not exist cost-sharing mechanisms that can sustain
network-wide cooperation. We then design a novel cost-sharing mechanism: the
agreeable allocation, that is easy to compute, bilaterally implementable,
ensures stability, and is fair in a well-defined sense. However, the agreeable
allocation need not always exist. We then generalize levels of agreeable
allocation, with weaker implementability properties but greater existence
guarantees. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2201.04308 |