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An analysis of contract form for supply chains with quality improvement
Author(s) -
Yan* Xinghao
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international transactions in operational research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.032
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1475-3995
pISSN - 0969-6016
DOI - 10.1111/itor.12266
Subject(s) - quality (philosophy) , business , supply chain , quality management , contract management , microeconomics , industrial organization , compensation (psychology) , outcome (game theory) , economics , marketing , psychology , philosophy , epistemology , psychoanalysis , service (business)
This study examines different contract forms for the supply chain with quality improvement decision and retailer price decision. We consider three types of quality improvement: cost consuming, cost identical, and cost saving, which correspond to the cases in which quality improvement leads to an increment, no change, and a decrease in production cost, respectively. We compare the performance of two types of quality contracts: (1) pay‐before‐performance contract, under which the supplier receives monetary support from the buyer before exerting quality improvement effort; and (2) pay‐after‐performance contract, under which the supplier receives monetary compensation based on the outcome of effort. We find that the performance of each contract depends on the types of quality improvement. Further, the pay‐after‐performance contract leads to close‐to‐perfect contract efficiency and dominates the pay‐before‐performance contract from the supplier's perspective in most cases. However, this result does not apply in two extended cases: when there are multiple competing suppliers, the pay‐before‐performance contract can dominate the pay‐after‐performance contract if quality improvement is cost consuming; and when the buyer can exert sales effort, neither contract can achieve close‐to‐perfect efficiency in most cases.