4.7 Article

Optimal pricing and sourcing strategies in a symbiotic supply chain under supply uncertainty

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 408, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.137034

Keywords

Symbiotic supply chain; Waste recycling; Pricing; Supply uncertainty

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This study focuses on decision-making in symbiotic supply chains and derives the conditions for different degrees of symbiosis. The results show that decision-making is influenced by internal and external enterprise factors, with technical and market factors playing a role in partial symbiosis and a threshold formed by these factors in complete symbiosis. Additionally, the impact of government policies (subsidies or taxes) on the symbiotic supply chain is studied through numerical experiments.
Uncertainty around the amount of recycled material is common in symbiotic supply chains. However, there are few studies in the field of operational decision-making that focus on this uncertainty. Considering the uncertainty and supply-side competition in a symbiotic supply chain, this paper focuses on decision-making among symbiotic supply chain stakeholders. We derive the analytical forms of the equilibrium solution for order quantities and the wholesale prices of recycled materials. By comparing different decisions, we obtain the conditions for various degrees of symbiosis. In general, a partial symbiosis mode is incurred when the effective purchase cost of recycled materials is higher than that of raw materials. Otherwise, a complete symbiosis mode occurred. Furthermore, the research results show that the decisions of all stakeholders in the symbiotic supply chain are influenced by a union of internal and external enterprise factors. In the partial symbiosis model, the decisions of all parties are influenced by a combination of technical and market factors, while in the complete symbiosis model, the decision-making of all parties is influenced only by a threshold formed by the above factors. In addition, the impact exerted by government policies (subsidies or taxes) on the symbiotic supply chain is studied through numerical experiments. The results of these experiments show that infrastructure subsidies are effective in certain scenarios. In some cases, the waste extraction cost subsidy is effective, while in other cases, the waste disposal tax increases the waste utilized.

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