Article ID: | iaor20173296 |
Volume: | 63 |
Issue: | 8 |
Start Page Number: | 2397 |
End Page Number: | 2419 |
Publication Date: | Aug 2017 |
Journal: | Management Science |
Authors: | Iancu Dan A, Swinney Robert, Ang Erjie |
Keywords: | management, risk, optimization, manufacturing industries, simulation |
We study sourcing in a supply chain with three levels: a manufacturer, tier 1 suppliers, and tier 2 suppliers prone to disruption from, e.g., natural disasters such as earthquakes or floods. The manufacturer may not directly dictate which tier 2 suppliers are used but may influence the sourcing decisions of tier 1 suppliers via contract parameters. The manufacturer’s optimal strategy depends critically on the degree of overlap in the supply chain: if tier 1 suppliers share tier 2 suppliers, resulting in a ‘diamond‐shaped’ supply chain, the manufacturer relies less on direct mitigation (procuring excess inventory and multisourcing in tier 1) and more on indirect mitigation (inducing tier 1 suppliers to mitigate disruption risk). We also show that while the manufacturer always prefers less overlap, tier 1 suppliers may prefer a more overlapped supply chain and hence may strategically choose to form a diamond‐shaped supply chain. This preference conflict worsens as the manufacturer’s profit margin increases, as disruptions become more severe, and as unreliable tier 2 suppliers become more heterogeneous in their probability of disruption; however, penalty contracts–in which the manufacturer penalizes tier 1 suppliers for a failure to deliver ordered units–alleviate this coordination problem.