On the Value of Mitigation and Contingency Strategies for Managing Supply Chain Disruption Risks
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Abstract
We study a single-product setting in which a firm can source from two suppliers, one that is unreliable and another that is reliable but more expensive. Suppliers are capacity constrained, but the reliable supplier may possess volume flexibility. We prove that in the special case in which the reliable supplier has no flexibility and the unreliable supplier has infinite capacity, a risk-neutral firm will pursue a single disruption-management strategy: mitigation by carrying inventory, mitigation by single-sourcing from the reliable supplier, or passive acceptance. We find that a supplier’s percentage uptime and the nature of the disruptions (frequent but short versus rare but long) are key determinants of the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 51.47
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Flexibility (engineering)
- Business
- Contingency
- Supply chain
- Supplier relationship management
- Risk analysis (engineering)
- Industrial organization
- Operations management