Workshop’s Topic: A project involves several "participants" - including agencies, contractors, and subcontractors-all working concurrently on multiple projects and allocating resources among them. This interdependency creates a network of otherwise unrelated projects. By constructing the largest project network ever mapped, we track the timelines of 2.6 million infrastructure projects involving 140,000 participants. We show that a seemingly localized disruption, affecting only one project site, eventually causes delays and penalties across unrelated projects. This is because self-interest drives participants to opportunistically reallocate resources into disrupted projects, at the expense of other projects, triggering a domino effect of further reallocations in the network. Thus, the costs of on-site disruptions end up being evenly shared by multiple participants within the network, rather than being fully absorbed by the affected project. Performance-based contracts, which reward contractors for timeliness, exacerbate these externalities by encouraging self-interested resource reallocation.
Time and Location: 10:00-11:30 AM (GMT+8), Room A523 (School of Management)
Language: English