Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
483302 European Journal of Operational Research 2006 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

We consider a two-member supply chain that manufactures and sells newsboy-type products and comprises a downstream retailer and an upstream vendor. In this supply chain, the vendor is responsible for making stock-level decisions and holding the inventory, and the retailer is better informed about market demand. In each period, the retailer receives a signal about market demand before the actual demand is realized, and must decide whether to reveal the information to the vendor, at a cost, before the vendor starts production. We assume that any information that the retailer reveals is truthful. We model the situation as a Bayesian game, and find that, in equilibrium, whether the retailer reveals or withholds the information depends on two things—the cost of revealing the information and the nature of market demand signal that the retailer receives. If the cost of sharing the information is sufficiently large, then the retailer will withhold the information from the vendor regardless of the type of signal that is received. If the cost of sharing the information is small, then the retailer will reveal the information to the vendor if a high demand is signaled, but will withhold it from the vendor if a low demand is signaled. In general, reducing the cost of sharing information and increasing the profit margin of either the retailer or the vendor (or reducing the cost of the vendor or retailer) will facilitate information sharing.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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