TY - JOUR
T1 - Demand information sharing in port concession arrangements
AU - Zheng, Shiyuan
AU - Ge, Ying En
AU - Fu, Xiaowen
AU - (Marco) Nie, Yu
AU - Xie, Chi
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the anonymous referees for their very helpful comments and suggestions. This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation of China (No. 71671110 , 71774109 , 71803131, 71771150, 71890970 ), Hong Kong Polytechnic University (grant 1-BE2E ), and Key Research and Development Project of Ministry of Science and Technology of China (No. 2018YFB1600901). The authors are also grateful for the support of the Lloyd's Register Foundation, a charity that helps to protect life and property by supporting engineering-related education, public engagement, and the application of research.
PY - 2020/8
Y1 - 2020/8
N2 - This paper investigates the effects of demand information sharing on concession arrangements and market equilibria, when two ports, each managed by a welfare-maximizing port authority and a profit-maximizing port operator, compete for demands. The problem is formulated as a multi-stage game, in which the authority and the operator at each port first decide whether to share demand information and make concession arrangements; then, the port operators compete à la Cournot. Alternative scenarios are compared to identify the effects of information sharing and market structure. Our analytical results identify the conditions under which demand information sharing is beneficial in port concession arrangements and highlight the importance of the underlying market structure and congestion levels in achieving these benefits. Specifically, we show that information sharing is a source of welfare improvement, and the effects are more significant when the positive externality of information sharing on welfare is large, inter-port competition is strong, and port congestion is costly. However, with no compensation, the port operators have no incentive to share their private information because otherwise, this is likely to increase concession unit-fees, limit their ability to compete effectively with each other, and ultimately reduce their expected profits. Therefore, transfer payments are necessary to encourage information sharing. With this arrangement and the assumed symmetric cost and service structure, we show that a port operator prefers sharing information if the externality of information sharing on welfare exceeds a threshold. Furthermore, when this externality is sufficiently large, the operators at both ports benefit from sharing information. Finally, when the two ports compete in price, we show that a port operator's single-side information sharing may not always benefit its port authority.
AB - This paper investigates the effects of demand information sharing on concession arrangements and market equilibria, when two ports, each managed by a welfare-maximizing port authority and a profit-maximizing port operator, compete for demands. The problem is formulated as a multi-stage game, in which the authority and the operator at each port first decide whether to share demand information and make concession arrangements; then, the port operators compete à la Cournot. Alternative scenarios are compared to identify the effects of information sharing and market structure. Our analytical results identify the conditions under which demand information sharing is beneficial in port concession arrangements and highlight the importance of the underlying market structure and congestion levels in achieving these benefits. Specifically, we show that information sharing is a source of welfare improvement, and the effects are more significant when the positive externality of information sharing on welfare is large, inter-port competition is strong, and port congestion is costly. However, with no compensation, the port operators have no incentive to share their private information because otherwise, this is likely to increase concession unit-fees, limit their ability to compete effectively with each other, and ultimately reduce their expected profits. Therefore, transfer payments are necessary to encourage information sharing. With this arrangement and the assumed symmetric cost and service structure, we show that a port operator prefers sharing information if the externality of information sharing on welfare exceeds a threshold. Furthermore, when this externality is sufficiently large, the operators at both ports benefit from sharing information. Finally, when the two ports compete in price, we show that a port operator's single-side information sharing may not always benefit its port authority.
KW - Competition
KW - Concession contract
KW - Information sharing
KW - Port
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U2 - 10.1016/j.trb.2020.03.010
DO - 10.1016/j.trb.2020.03.010
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85086081661
VL - 138
SP - 118
EP - 143
JO - Transportation Research, Series B: Methodological
JF - Transportation Research, Series B: Methodological
SN - 0191-2615
ER -