Strategic Behavior and the Environment > Vol 4 > Issue 4

Asymmetric Nash Solutions in the River Sharing Problem

Harold Houba, Department of Econometrics, VU University and Tinbergen Institute, The Netherlands, harold.houba@vu.nl , Gerard van der Laan, Department of Econometrics, VU University and Tinbergen Institute, The Netherlands, Yuyu Zeng, Department of Econometrics, VU University and Tinbergen Institute, The Netherlands
 
Suggested Citation
Harold Houba, Gerard van der Laan and Yuyu Zeng (2014), "Asymmetric Nash Solutions in the River Sharing Problem", Strategic Behavior and the Environment: Vol. 4: No. 4, pp 321-360. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/102.00000049

Publication Date: 18 Dec 2014
© 2014 H. Houba, G. van der Laan and Y. Zeng
 
Subjects
Water
 
Keywords
C70D60Q53
International riversInternational treatiesRiver basin managementPareto efficiencyDisagreement outcomeInternational water lawNegotiationsExternalitiesPolitical economy of property rightsPollution
 

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In this article:
1. Introduction 
2. Model Specification 
3. Legal Principles Defining Property Rights 
4. The ANBS in the River Sharing Problem 
5. The Asymmetric Nash Rationing Solution 
6. Two Numerical Examples 
7. Conclusion 
References 
Appendix with Proofs 

Abstract

We study unanimity bargaining among agents along a general river structure that is expressed by a geography matrix and who have access to limited local resources, cost functions that depend upon river inflow and own extraction, and quasi-linear preferences over water and money. Bargaining determines the water allocation and monetary transfers. We translate the legal principles of Absolute Territorial Sovereignty (ATS) and Unlimited Territorial Integrity (UTI) from International Water Law into our model. ATS and a strict interpretation of UTI result in disagreement outcomes that are feasible. And a second interpretation of UTI is translated into individual aspiration levels that are infeasible. For disagreement outcomes, we apply the asymmetric Nash bargaining solution. Common intuition that upstream and midstream countries always prefer the ATS principle to the strict UTI principle (while the opposite preference holds for the downstream country) is reversed for such countries with sufficient bargaining power. For individual aspiration levels, the agents have to compromise in order to agree and we apply the asymmetric Nash rationing solution. The participation constraints in the Nash rationing solution matter. In all cases the optimization problem is separable into two subproblems: the efficient water allocation that maximizes utilitarian welfare; and the determination of monetary transfers.

DOI:10.1561/102.00000049