Abstract

This study investigates the channel coordination issue of a supply chain with a risk-neutral manufacturer and a loss-averse retailer facing stochastic demand that is sensitive to sales effort. Under the loss-averse newsvendor setting, a distribution-free gain/loss-sharing-and-buyback (GLB) contract has been shown to be able to coordinate the supply chain. However, we find that a GLB contract remains ineffective in managing the supply chain when retailer sales efforts influence the demand. To effectively coordinate the channel, we propose to combine a GLB contract with sales rebate and penalty (SRP) contract. In addition, we discover a special class of gain/loss contracts that can coordinate the supply chain and arbitrarily allocate the expected supply chain profit between the manufacturer and the retailer. We then analyze the effect of loss aversion on the retailer's decision-making behavior and supply chain performance. Finally, we perform a numerical study to illustrate the findings and gain additional insights.

Highlights

  • Coordination among members of a supply chain is an essential strategic issue [1]

  • We consider a single-period, two-echelon supply chain composed of a risk-neutral manufacturer and a loss-averse retailer facing stochastic demand that is sensitive to sales effort

  • To effectively coordinate the channel, we propose a GLB contract combined with sales rebate and penalty (SRP)

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Summary

Introduction

Coordination among members of a supply chain is an essential strategic issue [1]. With supply chain coordination, the upstream member offers a set of appropriate contract parameters to the downstream member such that the self-profit maximizing objective of the latter is aligned with the objective of the whole supply chain during decision making. A retailer can increase demand of the goods by applying promotional effort such as advertising, sales team, free gifts, discount on sales price, and attractive shelf space [1]. Incorporating the aforementioned factors, this study investigates the channel coordination issue of a single-period, two-echelon supply chain with a manufacturer, and a retailer facing stochastic demand that is influenced by sales effort. (1) Is there a contract that can coordinate a supply chain with a loss-averse retailer and effort dependent demand?. We develop supply chain models that incorporate both a loss-averse retailer and sales-effort dependent demand. We show that the two aforementioned coordinating contracts can arbitrarily allocate the expected supply chain profit between the manufacturer and the retailer.

Literature Review
Model Development
Coordinating Contracts
Efficiency of Coordination
Numerical Example
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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