Risk intermediation in supply chains
- 1 September 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in IIE Transactions
- Vol. 32 (9) , 819-831
- https://doi.org/10.1080/07408170008967441
Abstract
This paper demonstrates that an important role of intermediaries in supply chains is to reduce the financial risk faced by retailers. It is well known that risk averse retailers when faced by the classical single-period inventory (newsvendor) problem will order less than the expected value maximizing (newsboy) quantity. We show that in such situations a risk neutral distributor can offer a menu of mutually beneficial contracts to the retailers. We show that a menu can be designed to simultaneously: (i) induce every risk averse retailer to select a unique contract from it; (ii) maximize the distributor's expected profit; and (iii) raise the order quantity of the retailers to the expected value maximizing quantity. Thus inefficiency created due to risk aversion on part of the retailers can be avoided. We also investigate the influence of product/market characteristics on the offered menu of contracts.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Increasing risk II: Its economic consequencesPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Modeling Supply Chain Contracts: A ReviewPublished by Springer Nature ,1999
- A Model for Assessing the Value of Warehouse Risk-Pooling: Risk-Pooling Over Outside-Supplier LeadtimesManagement Science, 1989
- Approximations of Dynamic, Multilocation Production and Inventory ProblemsManagement Science, 1984
- Competitive nonlinear tariffsJournal of Economic Theory, 1983
- Equilibrium in Competitive Insurance Markets: An Essay on the Economics of Imperfect InformationThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1976
- Point Estimation and Risk PreferencesJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1973
- Addendum to “increasing risk: I. A definition”Journal of Economic Theory, 1972
- Increasing risk: I. A definitionJournal of Economic Theory, 1970
- Risk Aversion in the Small and in the LargeEconometrica, 1964