Abstract

The spread of COVID-19 and ensuing containment measures have accentuated the profound interdependence among nations or regions. This has been particularly evident in tourism, one of the sectors most affected by uncoordinated mobility restrictions. The impact of this interdependence on the tendency to adopt less or more restrictive measures is hard to evaluate, more so if diversity in economic exposures to citizens’ mobility are considered. Here, we address this problem by developing an analytical and computational game-theoretical model encompassing the conflicts arising from the need to control the economic effects of global risks, such as in the COVID-19 pandemic. The model includes the individual costs derived from severe restrictions imposed by governments, including the resulting economic interdependence among all the parties involved in the game. By using tourism-based data, the model is enriched with actual heterogeneous income losses, such that every player has a different economic cost when applying restrictions. We show that economic interdependence enhances cooperation because of the decline in the expected payoffs by free-riding parties (i.e., those neglecting the application of mobility restrictions). Furthermore, we show (analytically and through numerical simulations) that these cross-exposures can transform the nature of the cooperation dilemma each region or country faces, modifying the position of the fixed points and the size of the basins of attraction that characterize this class of games. Finally, our results suggest that heterogeneity among regions may be used to leverage the impact of intervention policies by ensuring an agreement among the most relevant initial set of cooperators.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has caused the most severe global economic breakdown of the recent history, mainly due to the measures to control the virus spread, which have produced a dramatic shutdown of the economic activity

  • We analyze the results of three different experiments by considering the effects of the economic interdependence (EI) in the dilemma

  • To analyze the effect of economic interdependence (EI), we represent the trajectories with two models: one adopting the payoff Eqs. (1) and (2) and other one using the same equations but removing the term c i k Z

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused the most severe global economic breakdown of the recent history, mainly due to the measures to control the virus spread (e.g., quarantines, stay-at-home and social distancing policies), which have produced a dramatic shutdown of the economic activity. In this context, the coordination among countries is an essential instrument to efficiently control pandemic and enhance economic recovery [1,2]. The direct effects, derived from internal mobility restrictions, which seriously injure many sectors in the country. All this phenomena stem from the economic interdependence (EI) among countries

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