Abstract

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has become a popular and important strategy for corporate operation and sustainable development. Meanwhile, many social or environmental incidents that occur in one enterprise could bring huge risk or disruption for the entire supply chain. This study discusses the manufacturer’s cooperation strategy of closed-loop supply chain (CLSC) composed of a dominant manufacturer with CSR behavior consciousness, a retailer with CSR investment, and a third-party recycler. In the CSR-CLSC, the manufacturer exhibits CSR behavior consciousness through considering stakeholders welfare, the retailer makes CSR investment through profit donation and the third-party recycler exhibits CSR activity through product recycling. And under the Stackelberg Game setting, we formulate four different decision-making models to investigate the interaction between manufacturer’s CSR behavior consciousness and retailer’s CSR investment, as well as their impact on the manufacturer’s cooperative strategy selection and CLSC operation. The results show that both the CSR behavior consciousness of manufacturer and CSR investment of retailer are conducive to reducing the wholesale price of new products, enhancing the recycling rate of waste products and improving the performance of CSR-CLSC members, and both of them have the function of mutual incentives. The vertical cooperation strategy of manufacturer is conducive to increasing the overall performance of CSR-CLSC, and compared with the cooperation with the third-party recycler, the manufacturer has stronger motivation to cooperate with the retailer, and it is also more beneficial to improving the CSR investment level, the waste product recycling rate, and the performance of CSR-CLSC members.

Highlights

  • With the continuous development of 5G, artificial intelligence and other technologies, the speed of product update iterations has gradually accelerated

  • This study considers the establishment of a Corporate social responsibility (CSR)-closed-loop supply chain (CLSC) that includes a dominant manufacturer with CSR behavior consciousness, a retailer with CSR investment, and a third-party recycler

  • We consider a CSR-CLSC consisting of a manufacturer, a retailer and a third-party recycler, and the three players belong to Stackelberg Game with complete information and the manufacturer is the channel leader

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Summary

Introduction

With the continuous development of 5G, artificial intelligence and other technologies, the speed of product update iterations has gradually accelerated. By participating in the recycling and remanufacturing of waste products, enterprises obtain good economic benefits, and effectively reduce raw material consumption, energy consumption and environmental impact. The purpose of this paper is to address the above-mentioned issues by merging five research streams: CSR, consumer surplus, profit donation, recycling and manufacturer cooperation. In this regard, this study considers the establishment of a CSR-CLSC that includes a dominant manufacturer with CSR behavior consciousness, a retailer with CSR investment, and a third-party recycler. (3) Can the manufacturer pursuing maximum social welfare encourage the retailer to make more profit donations and the third-party to try its best to recycle waste products?.

CLSC operation
CSR and sustainable supply chain
Manufacturer’s cooperation strategy
Problem description
Model notations and assumptions
Game models of CSR-CLSC
Analysis of the impact of CSR on CSR-CLSC decision and performance
Comparative analysis of different cooperation strategy of manufacturer
Numerical analysis
Full Text
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