In a “zero-sum” situation, it
is impossible for one party to advance its position without the other party
suffering a corresponding loss. If one side gets $1,000 more, that means the
other side gets $1,000 less. The wins and losses add up to zero. These
situations typically arise in distributive
bargaining cases where a "fixed pie" must be divided between the
parties. For example, if two departments are splitting up a fixed amount of
money, the more one gets, the less available to the other. Or, if there is only
one job, one person will get it and the other person will not. (One job won and
one job lost equals zero.)