Quantifying Infrastructure and Disaster Management: A Simulation Augmented SEM Approach in Area od SCM

Authors

  • Ashrafuzzaman Nazim

Keywords:

Supply Chain Resilience, Institutional Amplification, Resilience Engineering, U.S. Manufacturing, Supply Chain Policy

Abstract

This study develops and validates a quantitative framework for assessing supply chain resilience
in U.S. manufacturing and infrastructure. Using 48 sector-year observations (2018–2025) and a
simulation-augmented SEM approach, it examines how structural risks, strategic enablers, and
institutional pressures shape resilience outcomes. Supplier concentration, disruption frequency,
and climate exposure weaken resilience capabilities, while domestic capacity, digital maturity, and
resilience investment strengthen them. Resilience capabilities mediate these effects, and
institutional pressure amplifies the benefits of enablers. Scenario simulations show that moderate
increases in domestic capacity and resilience investment (10–15%) raise the Resilience Index by
8–12%, with diminishing returns beyond this range. The study provides a replicable tool for
benchmarking and demonstrates resilience as a measurable, policy-responsive system property.

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Published

2025-12-12 — Updated on 2025-12-12

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