To the Question of the Development of a Methodology for Assessing
the Sustainability of Economic Network Structures
Natalya V. Efanova
a
, Elena A. Ivanova
b
and Ivan V. Slesarenko
c
Kuban State Agrarian University, Krasnodar, Russia
Keywords: Network Structure, Enterprise, Sustainability, Model, Node, Central Element, Fuzzy Classifier, Linguistic
Variable.
Abstract: The article is devoted to the issues of mathematical modeling of the network economic structures
sustainability. The network form of enterprises organization is a reflection of integration processes and
connections. Network sustainability can be viewed from different perspectives, taking into account different
aspects, including organizational. Therefore, research in this direction is relevant. The following models have
been developed to assess the organizational sustainability of the network: a model for assessing elementary
sustainability with an emphasis on the central element of the network, a model and methodology for assessing
integration sustainability. The issues of modeling elementary and integration stability have not been studied
before. A scale of stability levels of a network enterprise has been developed on the basis of the mathematical
apparatus of fuzzy sets theory. Sustainability can be represented as a linguistic variable. The scale in the first
approximation contains three levels to determine the degree of enterprise sustainability. To formalize the
semantics of the scale values, the adaptation of the standard fuzzy three-level 01-classifier is performed.
1 INTRODUCTION
In the era of economic globalization, the boundaries
between the national economies of different countries
are erased, the merger of individual national markets
into one world market is observed, the role of
integration processes is growing. Any enterprise at
the stage of formation and development makes the
transition from small to medium business and further
to large. This transition, as a rule, is carried out
through integration processes and connections, thus
ensuring the formation of networked business
structures (Efanova, 2020; Gerasimova, 2016).
Today, the networked form of business organization
is considered the most effective and promising form
that provides the organization with progressive
development and a stable position in the market.
Network structures are specific, which allows for a
new interpretation of the concept of economic
sustainability. A network enterprise is stable when it
has enough resources to maintain every aspect of its
activities in optimal condition, in the face of
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3152-4643
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6127-7762
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5552-1987
resistance to adverse changes in the external
environment. Each aspect is important, as the stability
of the network as a whole depends on it. Thus, it is
important to conduct a comprehensive assessment of
the network structures sustainability with an
emphasis on various aspects of activities
(Baranovskaya, 2017; Melkonyan, 2017; Patalas-
Maliszewska, 2020).
The purpose of this article is to study and assess
the sustainability of economic network structures as
the most promising and little-studied form of
organization of small and medium-sized businesses,
including the development of new promising methods
and techniques to improve the quality of management
of such structures.
In accordance with the set goal, it is necessary to
solve the following tasks:
1) develop a model for assessing elementary and
structural sustainability, as well as propose a model
and methodology for integration sustainability
assessing;
278
Efanova, N., Ivanova, E. and Slesarenko, I.
To the Question of the Development of a Methodology for Assessing the Sustainability of Economic Network Structures.
DOI: 10.5220/0010589402780285
In Proceedings of the International Scientific and Practical Conference on Sustainable Development of Regional Infrastructure (ISSDRI 2021), pages 278-285
ISBN: 978-989-758-519-7
Copyright
c
2021 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
2) build a scale of stability levels based on the
mathematical apparatus of the fuzzy sets theory as
one of the most promising areas of research for
weakly formalized concepts and criteria.
2 METHODS
In the process of work, the following methods will be
used: analytical (in the process of studying the
concept of sustainability in the context of the network
form of organization), solving multicriteria problems
and mapping (when developing a model for assessing
elementary, integration stability), fuzzy sets (to build
a scale of levels of stability of the economic network
structure).
All definitions of stability (Banerjee, 2011;
Efanova, 2020; Thierling, 2020), one way or another,
have similar features in a number of criteria. Such
criteria are:
Influence of external and internal environment;
Stability of economic activity;
Availability of compensation mechanisms.
According to the structural model of a network
enterprise (Efanova, 2020; Pereira, 2019), a business
network is considered as an association of business
elements (nodes) of a network and subnets with a
common central element. The integration of business
elements into a network or subnet is carried out on the
basis of vertical or horizontal integration (Loyko,
2015). Thus, by integration stability we mean the
ability of a business network to function under the
influence of internal and external destabilizing factors
or to function when an internal crisis occurs in any
particular business element (Efanova, 2020). That is,
the business network is able to keep in time within the
established limits the values of all control parameters
characterizing the activities of the enterprise.
By elementary stability we mean the ability of an
individual business element of a network or
subnetwork to maintain the ability to function under
the influence of internal destabilizing factors or to
restore its equilibrium state over time when a crisis
occurs (Efanova, 2020). The emphasis is on internal
destabilizing factors, since external ones are more
related to integration stability.
It should also be borne in mind that sustainability
can be influenced not only by the current state of
activity, but also by its stability.
To assess the integration stability, it is proposed
to use the integral indicator S

:
S

f
S

, S
, (1)
whereS

is an indicator of "elementary sustainability
" of a separate business element of the network;
S
aggregate index of the center element
sustainability;
f functional that allows to determine the value
for individual indicators of sustainability S

and S
.
In the simplest approximation, as the functional f,
we can denote the weighted sum over all S

and S
that form the network, then formula (1) takes the
form:
S

w∙S

w
S
, (2)
where w is the weight of the i-th business element, for
which the elementary sustainability S

is already
calculated; w
с
weight of the central element, for
which S
is already known. The sum of the weights in
(2) is equal to one. Towards S

, the weights are
distributed in proportion to their share of influence.
The central element plays the role of the main
strategic management element. Therefore, to
calculate its sustainability, a separate indicator S
,
different from S

, is used. So S
, is an aggregate
indicator for assessing the management aspect, while
S

is used to assess the operational or performance
aspect. The formation of a set of evaluation criteria
depends on this.
If the central element or any other element of the
network is presented not just as an abstract entity, but
as an object with its own internal structure, then its
sustainability depends mainly on the elements that
form this structure. The sustainability of the central
element is based on the sustainability of departments
and key performance indicators.
As a result of the above reasoning, Figure 1 shows
a methodology for assessing integration
sustainability.
To the Question of the Development of a Methodology for Assessing the Sustainability of Economic Network Structures
279
Figure 1: Integration sustainability assessment method.
As can be seen from this figure, in order to assess
the integration sustainability, it is necessary to
determine the functional for assessing the elementary
sustainability and with the functional for assessing the
sustainability of the central element.
To assess the sustainability of the central element,
we can propose a model based on the data analysis of
the organization effectiveness and including:
Model of sustainability of the activity’slevel
element (assumes the calculation of the
activity’s efficiency level and the stability
coefficient of this level according to the given
rules, as well as a model for calculating
sustainability based on the level and stability);
Model of a department-level element
sustainability (based on the rules for
sustainability calculating based on the
activities of the department);
Model of sustainabilityof the element of the
central element level (uses the rules for
sustainabilitycalculating based on the
departmentsustainability, as well as on the
basis of the critical activity’s sustainability).
The input of the model is information about the
effectiveness of the organization, the output indicator
is the sustainabilitylevel of the central element.
Figure 2 shows the stages which formalize the
model for assessing the central elementsustainability.
Figure 2: Formalization of the stages of the model for
assessing the central element sustainability.
The primary definition of activity’s sustainability
in this model involves an assessment of its
ISSDRI 2021 - International Scientific and Practical Conference on Sustainable Development of Regional Infrastructure
280
dependence on the efficiency levels of activities and
the values of activity levels stability. With the
secondary definition, the functional of the
dependence of the final indicator on the stability of
another activity is added to the calculations, taking
into account the influence of various types of activity
on each other.
The calculation of the department’s sustainability
is based on the assessment of its activities
sustainability, as well as their weight coefficients.
The central element’s sustainability is determined
by the dependence on the sustainability of the
departments and activities of the organization, also
taking into account their weights.
This model can be adapted to assess elementary
sustainability, where the focus of attention shifts from
the managerial to the executive aspect of the activity.
To determine the level of sustainability, you can
use several options for using these indicators as
variables.
The main problem in this case is that it is possible
to get an answer to the question "How sustainable is
the activity?", but it is difficult to give an answer to
the fuzzy ambiguous question "Is the activity
sustainable?"
This problem can be solved through the use of
fuzzy logic methods. In particular, the presentation of
the efficiency and sustainability concepts in the form
of linguistic variables with their own term-sets and
the use of standard 01-classifiers to cover the
universal set, where the semantics of the terms
meanings is formalized. The first step in this direction
is the development of a scale of sustainability levels
based on the mathematical apparatus of the fuzzy sets
theory.
In the general case, the scale assumes that a
mapping is given that sets the corresponding scale
value in accordance with real situations. If we
consider the concept of sustainability as a linguistic
variable, then the term-set, which formalizes the
semantic load of terms, will just be the scale of values
that completely overlaps the universal set of the
linguistic variable. As a first approximation, three
levels are sufficient to determine the degree of
enterprise sustainability: "critical", "borderline state",
"normal". The range [0..1] has some versatility, so it
is convenient to use it as a universal set for setting
stability levels. This makes it possible to adapt the
standard three-level 01-classifier to the selected
levels of the sustainability scale (table 1). The
membership function formalizes the meaning of the
scale values. It should be noted that there can be more
scale levels, and other types, for example, triangular
membership functions, can also be used. The main
thing is that the adequacy of the comparison does not
suffer. More fine tuning of the scale levels is possible
with the assistance of experts.
Table 1: Comparison of sustainability levels and levels of
the standard 01-classifier.
Sustainability
level value
01-
classifier
level
value
Designation
Membersh
ip function
type
Critical Low
T
1
Z-sha
p
e
d
Borderline
state
Medium T
2
Trapezoid
al
Acce
p
table Hi
g
h
T
3
S-sha
p
e
d
Each of the proposed types of membership
functions has its own analytical form, represented by
the corresponding formula and depending on certain
sets of parameters.
The Z-shaped function is determined by the
formula (3), the trapezoidal function by the formula
(4), the S-shaped function – by the formula (5)
1,0
,
0,1
),,(
1
xb
bxa
ab
xb
ax
bax
T
(3)
1,0
,
,1
,
0,0
),,,,(
2
xd
dxc
cd
xd
cxb
bxa
ab
ax
ax
dcbax
T
(4)
1,1
,
0,0
),,(
2
xb
bxa
ab
ax
ax
bax
T
(5)
As an example, we can build and visually evaluate
the graphs of the reduced membership functions with
the following parameter values:
Z- shaped: a = 0,3; b = 0,7;
trapezoidal: a = 0,2; b = 0,4; c = 0,6; d = 0,8;
S- shaped: a = 0,5; b = 0,8.
A universal set in this case will be a certain
hypothetical level of sustainability, measured on a
scale from 0 to 1. The calculated values of
membership functions for three levels of
sustainability are shown in Table 2, and the graphs of
functions are shown in Figure 3.
For real use, the considered example requires
adjusting the parameters of the membership functions
in order to comply with the model adequacy.
To the Question of the Development of a Methodology for Assessing the Sustainability of Economic Network Structures
281
Table 2: An example of describing the linguistic variable
"Sustainability".
Sustainability
level (0-1)
Membershipfunctionvalues
Critical
Borderline
state
Acceptable
0 1 0 0
0,1 1 0 0
0,2 1 0 0
0,3 1 0,5 0
0,4 0,75 1 0
0,5 0,5 1 0
0,6 0,25 1 0,33
0,7 0 0,5 0,67
0,8 0 0 1
0,9 0 0 1
1 0 0 1
Figure 3: Graphs of membership functions of the stability
scale levels.
3 RESULTS
The technique of using a linguistic variable to
determine the sustainability of organizations
described in the previous section can be applied to
both traditional and networked enterprises.
Table 3 shows an example of setting intervals for
sustainability levels based on an adapted standard
three-level fuzzy 01-classifier.
Table 3: Classification of the sustainability level based on
the adapted standard three-level fuzzy 01-classifier.
Interval of
sustainability
level (SL)
values
Sustainability
level value
Degree of
estimated
confidence
(membership
function)
0 SL 0,2
Critical
1
0,2 <SL< 0,4
Critical
Т1
= 5 (0.4 -
SL
)
Borderline
state
1-
Т1
=
Т2
0,4 SL 0,6
Borderline
state
1
0,6 <SL< 0,8
Borderline
state
Т2
= 5 (0.8 -
SL
)
Acceptable
1-
Т2
=
Т3
0,8 SL 1,0
Acceptable 1
Based on the results of the classification carried
out, it is possible to calculate the values of the
membership functions for different sustainability
levels on a universal set of values of the sustainability
index from 0 to 1 (Table 4), as well as build graphs of
these functions (Figure 4).
Table 4: Setting the linguistic variable "Sustainability"
based on the classification carried out.
Sustainability
level (0-1)
Membershipfunctionvalues
Critical
Borderline
state
Acceptable
0 1 0 0
0,05 1 0 0
0,1 1 0 0
0,15 1 0 0
0,2 1 0 0
0,25 0,75 0,25 0
0,3 0,5 0,5 0
0,35 0,25 0,75 0
0,4 0 1 0
0,45 0 1 0
0,5 0 1 0
0,55 0 1 0
0,6 0 1 0
0,65 0 0,75 0,25
0,7 0 0,5 0,5
0,75 0 0,25 0,75
0,8 0 0 1
0,85 0 0 1
0,9 0 0 1
0,95 0 0 1
1 0 0 1
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282
Figure 4: Graphs of membership functions of the linguistic
variable "Sustainability" terms (adapted fuzzy 01-
classifier).
Based on the obtained membership functions, it is
possible to analyze the sustainability indicators of
specific enterprises.
For traditional (non-networked) organizations, it
is enough to have one single indicator of
sustainability to assess it.
Suppose that the sustainability indicator was
calculated for enterprise A, and it turned out to be
equal to 0.35, and for enterprise B – 0.7.
In this case, the following conclusions can be
drawn:
Enterprise A has a critical sustainability level
with a confidence level of 0.75, and with a
confidence level of 0.25 it is at the borderline
sustainability state;
The sustainability of enterprise B can be
assessed as borderline with a confidence degree
of 0.5 and as acceptable with a confidence
degree of 0.5.
For network enterprises, as the initial data for
sustainability assessing, it is necessary to have data of
its individual nodes sustainability indicators,
including the central element of the network, and to
assess the integral stability indicator, it is necessary to
know the weight coefficients of each node.
The initial data and results of the experiment to
assess the sustainability of a network enterprise are
shown in Table 5.
Table 5: Evaluation of the network enterprise sustainability
based on a three-level fuzzy 01-classifier.
Node
Sustainability S
Weightw
Confidence degree for
sustainability
assessing
Critical
Borderline
state
Acceptable
Central
element
C
0,55 0,4 0 1 0
Node 1
El
1
0,35 0,15 0,25 0,75 0
Node2El
2
0,8 0,15 0 0 1
Node3El
3
0,65 0,1 0 0,75 0,25
Node4El
4
0,2 0,2 1 0 0
It can be seen from the table that the central
element of the enterprise has a borderline state of
sustainability, and, therefore, the remaining nodes can
affect the overall stability of the organization, both for
the better and for the worse. Their sustainability
assessment can be characterized as follows:
Node 1 is at a critical level of sustainability
with a confidence level of 0.25, and in a
borderline state with a confidence level of 0.75;
Node 2 sustainability level unambiguously
acceptable (confidence level is equal to 1);
Node 3 has a borderline sustainability level
rather than an acceptable one (confidence
levels are 0.75 and 0.25 respectively);
For node 4, we can say for sure that its level of
sustainability is critical.
Next, we need to calculate and evaluate the
integral indicator of sustainability. The calculation
will use the linear convolution method given in
formula (6).
𝑆

𝑤∙𝑆

𝑤
𝑆
, (6)
Substituting the initial data of the analyzed
enterprise into this formula, we can get the following:
S
int
= 0,35 0,15 + 0,8 0,15 + 0,65 0,1 + 0,2 ××
0,2 + 0,55 0,4 = 0,4875 0,5
Thus, we can conclude that the value of the
integral indicator corresponds to the borderline state
of the organization's sustainability.
To the Question of the Development of a Methodology for Assessing the Sustainability of Economic Network Structures
283
4 DISCUSSION
The results of the experiment carried out in the
previous section indicate some differences in the
sustainability assessment of traditional and
networked enterprises.
In particular, the case should be highlighted when
the calculated value of sustainability turned out to be
equal to 0.5 or less. For a traditional enterprise, this
situation is critical and requires immediate adoption
of appropriate measures to improve the situation. For
a networked enterprise, the picture may be
completely different, especially if the critical value of
sustainability has been identified for an individual
node of the organization. Then the overall level of
sustainability can be adjusted and compensated for by
the rest elements of the network enterprise.
Special attention should be paid to the situation
when the value of the sustainability integral indicator
for the network enterprise turned out to be equal to
0.5. In this case, a complete analysis of all nodes of
the organization should be carried out in order to
identify the "weak spot" and plan measures to
improve the functioning efficiency of this element,
which, in turn, will lead to an increase in its
sustainability level.
To determine the sustainability degree of the
enterprise in the work, a three-level fuzzy classifier
was used. However, in some cases, three levels may
not be enough; a more accurate assessment of
indicators is required. Then it makes sense to increase
the number of levels and go, for example, to a five-
level classifier. The linguistic variable terms can be
roughly as follows:
absolutelyunstable;
critical;
borderline state;
acceptable;
high.
A further increase in the number of fuzzy
classifier levels is impractical, as it will lead to
"blurring" of the indicators assessment accuracy.
5 CONCLUSIONS
Summing up the general results of the work, it should
be noted that the mechanism of the functioning and
development of business networks has not yet been
sufficiently studied, the paradigm for managing
network structures has not been finally formulated.
Therefore, these questions require further research.
The organizational environment is dynamically
changing due to many factors to which the network
must respond. Otherwise, it is impossible to ensure
the economic sustainability of the network and
maintain or accelerate the pace of its development.
The problem of ensuring the economic
sustainability of enterprises is especially relevant for
enterprises in the small and medium-sized enterprise
sector, where today there is the greatest concentration
of networks. The methodology for assessing network
economic structures is in its infancy. This indicates
the advisability of continuing research in this
direction.
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