4.7 Article

Supply Chain Viability and the COVID-19 pandemic: a conceptual and formal generalisation of four major adaptation strategies

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION RESEARCH
Volume 59, Issue 12, Pages 3535-3552

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00207543.2021.1890852

Keywords

Supply chain dynamics; supply chain resilience; pandemic; COVID-19; adaptation; supply chain viability

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The study identifies four adaptation strategies for supply chains during the COVID-19 pandemic and offers a model for analyzing and quantifying the deployment and impact of these strategies. It combines literature analysis, case studies, and quantitative techniques to generalize these strategies and suggests future research directions.
The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged supply chains (SC) on an unprecedented scale testing viability and adaptation under severe uncertainty. However, the literature on the adaptation strategies and quantification of their impacts is still scarce. Mixing literature analysis, case study approach, and quantitative techniques for performance assessment under disruptions, our study generalises four adaptations strategies - intertwining, scalability, substitution, and repurposing - to maintain SC viability when facing a pandemic, and offers a model to analyse and quantify deployment and impact of adaptation. First, we analyse the recent literature and identify some of the general characteristics of adaptation strategies during the COVID-19 pandemic. We then describe case studies to illustrate the practical context and supplement the literature analysis in order to derive relevant determinants for building of a conceptual framework and construction of a formal model. In the conceptual framework, we show how the adaptation strategies can be aligned with the SC viability, encompassing the levels of the ecosystem, network, and resources. In the generalised model, we formalise the impacts and efforts in deploying and assessing the adaptation strategies as both a process and an outcome. We close by proposing some open research questions and outline several future research directions.

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