4.6 Article

A dynamic approach to supply chain reconfiguration and ripple effect analysis in an epidemic

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpe.2023.108935

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Control; Optimal control; Risk management; Supply chain adaptation; Ripple effect

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This paper proposes a dynamic approach and optimal control model for supply chain reconfiguration and ripple effect analysis integrated with an epidemic dynamics model. The model helps supply chain managers make optimal choices among interchangeable suppliers and orders, considering factors such as prices, lead times, infection exposure, and supplier risk exposure. Case studies show that the model can effectively reconfigure supply chains and mitigate ripple effects caused by infected workers.
The COVID-19 pandemic has illustrated the unprecedented challenges of ensuring the continuity of operations in a supply chain as suppliers' and their suppliers stop producing due the spread of infection, leading to a degradation of downstream customer service levels in a ripple effect. In this paper, we contextualize a dynamic approach and propose an optimal control model for supply chain reconfiguration and ripple effect analysis integrated with an epidemic dynamics model. We provide supply chain managers with the optimal choice over a planning horizon among subsets of interchangeable suppliers and corresponding orders; this will maximize demand satisfaction given their prices, lead times, exposure to infection, and upstream suppliers' risk exposure. Numerical illustrations show that our prescriptive forward-looking model can help reconfigure a supply chain and mitigate the ripple effect due to reduced production because of suppliers' infected workers. A risk aversion factor incorporates a measure of supplier risk exposure at the upstream echelons. We examine three scenarios: (a) infection limits the capacity of suppliers, (b) the pandemic recedes but not at the same pace for all suppliers, and (c) infection waves affect the capacity of some suppliers, while others are in a recovery phase. We illustrate through a case study how our model can be immediately deployed in manufacturing or retail supply chains since the data are readily accessible from suppliers and health authorities. This work opens new avenues for prescriptive models in operations management and the study of viable supply chains by combining optimal control and epidemiological models.

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