Article ID: | iaor1989428 |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Volume: | 40 |
Issue: | 9 |
Start Page Number: | 805 |
End Page Number: | 813 |
Publication Date: | Sep 1989 |
Journal: | Journal of the Operational Research Society |
Authors: | Rachamadugu Ram |
Keywords: | credit management |
The paper addresses the problem of determining the economic order quantity when the vendor permits delay in payment. Some early researchers argued that the best order quantity is invariant with respect to the trade credit. Others argued that the order quantity should increase as the delay in payment increases. The paper analyses this problem using the discounted cash-flow approach, and provides clarification on the inconsistencies between these approaches. First, it shows that the best order quantity is an increasing function of the permitted delay in payment. The paper also shows that an approach suggested by Chand and Ward not only yields an upper bound on the optimum, but also provides robust results. Though the classical square-root formula disregards trade-credit information, under some circumstances, it will yield better results than the formulation taking into account that information. The paper illustrates this anomaly with an example, and provides analytical explanation for it. It also discusses some potential conceptual pitfalls in using the average cost analysis as an approximation to the discounted cash-flow approach.