Vendor-managed inventory and bullwhip reduction in a two-level supply chain

Vendor-managed inventory and bullwhip reduction in a two-level supply chain

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Article ID: iaor200449
Country: United Kingdom
Volume: 23
Issue: 6
Start Page Number: 625
End Page Number: 651
Publication Date: Jan 2003
Journal: International Journal of Operations & Production Management
Authors: ,
Keywords: supply chain, bullwhip effect
Abstract:

Compares the bullwhip properties of a vendor managed inventory (VMI) supply chain with those of a traditional ‘serially-linked’ supply chain. The emphasis of this investigation is the comparative impact the two structures have on the ‘bullwhip effect’ generated. Particular attention is paid to the manufacturer's production ordering activities as demonstrated using a simulation model based on difference equations. Documents and considers each of the four important sources of the bullwhip effect in turn. The analysis shows that with VMI implementation two sources of the bullwhip effect may be completely eliminated, i.e. rationing and gaming or the Houlihan effect, and the order batching effect or the Burbidge effect. VMI is also significantly better at responding to rogue changes in demand due to the promotion effect or to price induced variations. However, the effect of VMI on demand signal processing induced bullwhip or the Forrester effect is less clear cut. Concludes that on balance VMI offers a significant opportunity to reduce the bullwhip effect in real-world supply chains.

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