Title
Constructive and blocking power in collaborative transportation
Abstract
We empirically investigate constructive and blocking power concepts in transportation planning. Our main question is what do these concepts represent in collaborative transportation. We address it by studying cost allocation and coalition structure problems in a real-world case on forest transportation involving eight companies. The potential savings of collaboration in this case account for about 9 %. We find that players more centrally located tend to benefit from the nucleolus allocation, which takes into account only the constructive power. Other methods, which take into account the blocking power, namely the modiclus and the SM-nucleolus, correct the relative importance of the central players with respect to those in more peripheral areas. The blocking power acknowledges that the more peripheral companies, as a block, are still crucial to the collaboration, despite among themselves they have little opportunities for collaboration. Our main conclusion is that incorporating the blocking power as a criterion in a cost sharing rule for collaborative planning in transportation is important specially in the case where the coalition consists of one or few centrally located companies and several peripheral companies. A method based merely on the constructive power might extremely benefit the central companies, hurting the possibilities of sustaining the coalition.
Year
DOI
Keywords
2016
10.1007/s00291-015-0413-z
Collaborative logistics, Game theory, Forest transportation, Nucleolus, Modiclus
Field
DocType
Volume
Mathematical optimization,Economics,Constructive,Cost sharing,Operations research,Game theory,Cost allocation,Transportation planning,Operations management
Journal
38
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
1
0171-6468
10
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.52
21
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Mario Guajardo112712.49
Kurt Jørnsten223224.52
Mikael Ronnqvist3776.06