| Article ID: | iaor20021094 |
| Country: | United States |
| Volume: | 31 |
| Issue: | 9 |
| Start Page Number: | 881 |
| End Page Number: | 898 |
| Publication Date: | Jan 1999 |
| Journal: | IIE Transactions |
| Authors: | Apte U.M. |
| Keywords: | location |
There is a significant worldwide trend for countries to participate in economic integration schemes on a regional basis for the planning of industrial development programs. These regional industrial programs are characterized by plant allocation decisions coupled with cost/benefit distribution decisions. The research work described in this paper addresses these issues by combining the traditional mathematical programming approach for determining plant location, size, timing, with a game theoretic approach for determining a reasonable distribution of costs and benefits among the members of a collectivity. After developing the necessary theoretical framework by introducing and evaluating the properties of certain new concepts such as the Sharing Mechanism and the Durable Bargaining Equilibrium, they are illustrated through a real-life application to the planning of the petrochemical industry in a regional integration scheme. The theoretical results of this research can be applied to a wide range of situations involving multiple parties where the incentive for cooperation is present and yet the elements of self-interest bring in the possibility of conflict.