arXiv Open Access 2026

When Coordination Is Avoidable: A Monotonicity Analysis of Organizational Tasks

Harang Ju
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Abstrak

Organizations devote substantial resources to coordination, yet which tasks actually require it for correctness remains unclear. The problem is acute in multi-agent AI systems, where coordination overhead is directly measurable and routinely exceeds the cost of the work itself. However, distributed systems theory provides a precise answer: coordination is necessary if and only if a task is non-monotonic, meaning new information can invalidate prior conclusions. Here we show that a classic taxonomy of organizational interdependence maps onto the monotonicity criterion, yielding a decision rule and a measure of avoidable overhead (the Coordination Tax). Multi-agent simulations confirm both predictions. We classify 65 enterprise workflows and find that 48 (74%) are monotonic, then replicate on 13,417 occupational tasks from the O*NET database (42% monotonic). These classification rates imply that 24-57% of coordination spending is unnecessary for correctness.

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Harang Ju

Format Sitasi

Ju, H. (2026). When Coordination Is Avoidable: A Monotonicity Analysis of Organizational Tasks. https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.18673

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2026
Bahasa
en
Sumber Database
arXiv
Akses
Open Access ✓