Abstract

This paper considers the impact of consumer environmental awareness (CEA), retailer’s fairness concern, and government subsidies on the two echelon supply chain with one manufacturer and one retailer. The manufacturer produces green products with carbon emission reduction. The government provides two types of alternative subsidies: a fixed subsidy (referred to as an F-type subsidy) or a discount subsidy (referred to as a D-type subsidy) to encourage the manufacturer to produce a product with a high carbon emission reduction rate. We aim to provide optimal solutions to the manufacturer and the retailer with regard to the retailer’s fairness concern and government subsidies; thus we discuss four decision scenarios: the benchmark model without the fairness concern and subsidy, the model with the retailer’s fairness concern, the model with fairness concern and the F-type subsidy, and the model with fairness concern and the D-type subsidy. We provide explicit solutions and numerical examples of the optimal carbon emission reduction rate, wholesale price, and retail price. Our study has four main findings: firstly, high consumer environmental awareness will benefit both the manufacturer and the retailer in the above four scenarios; secondly, the fairness concern and subsidy have a counter effect on the optimal strategies (the subsidy could alleviate the negative influence caused by retailer’s fairness concern); thirdly, the government could subsidize the retailer when there is unfairness in the supply chain so that the manufacturer could produce a product with lower carbon emission; finally, using the subsidy related to the environmental quality will be more helpful for improving environment quality, especially when the government has a budget constraint.

Highlights

  • As environment quality decreases, consumer environmental awareness increases and more and more consumers are willing to purchase environment-friendly products [1,2]

  • Note that in this paper we focus on green products that generate lower carbon emission, not the green production technology used in the process of the production

  • In this paper we will consider the consumer environmental awareness (CEA), fairness concern, and government subsidies simultaneously, and mainly investigate the following questions: 1. How has the carbon emission reduction rate of green products changed with regard to the subsidy and fairness concern?

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Summary

Introduction

Consumer environmental awareness increases and more and more consumers are willing to purchase environment-friendly products [1,2]. How has the carbon emission reduction rate of green products changed with regard to the subsidy and fairness concern?. Most studies that focus on green products do not consider the fairness concern [4,5,13]; (2) We explore the changes of the optimal carbon emission reduction rate and both parties’ profits with the fairness concern and government subsidy. Qiu (2013) analyzed the effects of government subsidies and the fairness concern on the decision making and performance of the two parties, but this paper does not discuss the change in the carbon emission reduction rate of green products [14]. The impacts of CEA, the fairness concern, and the government subsidy on optimal decisions and profits in the two-echelon supply chain under the low carbon background will be significant.

Literature Review
CEA and Government Policies
Supply Chain and Fairness Concern
Problem Assumptions and Benchmark Model
Benchmark Model
Retailer’s Fairness Concern and Government Subsidy
Fairness Concern
Fairness Concern and Government Subsidy
F-Type Subsidy
D-Type Subsidy
Numerical Examples
The Impact of Retailer’s Fairness Concern λ on Supply Chain
The Impact of Fixed Subsidy s on Supply Chain
Discussion and Conclusions
Managerial Implications
Limitations and Future Research
Full Text
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