Assessment of Cost-Benefit Dynamics of Cybersecurity Compliance Investments: A Multi-Sectoral Analysis Across Financial, Energy and Intelligence Industries

Oluwatobi Bamigbade *

Washington University of Science and Technology, 2900 Eisenhower Ave, Alexandria, VA 22314, USA.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

This study examines the cost-benefit dynamics of cybersecurity compliance across the financial, energy, and military intelligence sectors, utilising open-access datasets from the BLS, Statista, Verizon DBIR, ENISA, and IBM. A one-way ANOVA, chi-square test, cost-benefit analysis, and logistic regression were employed to analyse sectoral differences in compliance costs, breach reductions, return on compliance investment (ROCI), and institutional success factors. Results show that financial institutions incur the highest average compliance costs ($30.94 million), while military intelligence yields the highest Return on Capital Invested (ROCI) (1.67). Compliance reduces breach incidents by 57.14% in finance, 50% in energy, and 48.57% in intelligence. Regression findings highlight workforce capacity (β = 3.06, p = .019) and training investment (β = 0.00044, p < .001) as strong predictors of compliance success, while budget constraints significantly hinder outcomes (β = -4.11, p < .001). It is recommended that regulatory bodies develop sector-specific frameworks, expand budget flexibility, institutionalise role-specific training, and incentivise automation and intelligence sharing.

Keywords: Cybersecurity compliance, cost-benefit analysis, sectoral comparison, return on investment, logistic regression


How to Cite

Bamigbade, Oluwatobi. 2025. “Assessment of Cost-Benefit Dynamics of Cybersecurity Compliance Investments: A Multi-Sectoral Analysis Across Financial, Energy and Intelligence Industries”. Journal of Energy Research and Reviews 17 (7):86-105. https://doi.org/10.9734/jenrr/2025/v17i7435.

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