TY - JOUR
T1 - Push or Pull? Perishable Products with Freshness-Keeping Effort
AU - Zhang, Lianmin
AU - Guan, Lei
AU - Kuo, Yong Hong
AU - Shen, Houcai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 World Scientific Publishing Co.
PY - 2019/2/1
Y1 - 2019/2/1
N2 - With the gradual improvement of living standards, people's consumption levels and habits are changing. One notable fact is that the demand for fresh products is growing steadily. Accordingly, fresh-product preservation and logistics distribution also require higher standards. Based on the practice of fresh domestic transport and preservation, for which the producer and the distributor are responsible, this paper discusses their optimal decisions taking into account the freshness-keeping effort of the distributor. Our main contributions include the derivations of the optimal decisions of the order quantity and the freshness-keeping effort in both the pull and push models, which are common in practice but have not been studied in the literature. Our analytical models lead to the result that, all other settings being the same, the distributor always puts a greater effort into preserving the product quality in the pull model than in the push model. This phenomenon results in a greater distributor's order quantity and producer's shipping quantity in the pull model. We also conduct a comprehensive numerical comparison of the effects of different modulating factors, including the price and the proportion and variation of surviving quantity, in these two settings. We find that the profits of the participants and the supply chain are always larger in the pull model, which indicates that the pull model is a better choice for the supply chain.
AB - With the gradual improvement of living standards, people's consumption levels and habits are changing. One notable fact is that the demand for fresh products is growing steadily. Accordingly, fresh-product preservation and logistics distribution also require higher standards. Based on the practice of fresh domestic transport and preservation, for which the producer and the distributor are responsible, this paper discusses their optimal decisions taking into account the freshness-keeping effort of the distributor. Our main contributions include the derivations of the optimal decisions of the order quantity and the freshness-keeping effort in both the pull and push models, which are common in practice but have not been studied in the literature. Our analytical models lead to the result that, all other settings being the same, the distributor always puts a greater effort into preserving the product quality in the pull model than in the push model. This phenomenon results in a greater distributor's order quantity and producer's shipping quantity in the pull model. We also conduct a comprehensive numerical comparison of the effects of different modulating factors, including the price and the proportion and variation of surviving quantity, in these two settings. We find that the profits of the participants and the supply chain are always larger in the pull model, which indicates that the pull model is a better choice for the supply chain.
KW - Fresh products
KW - freshness-keeping effort
KW - push and pull models
KW - supply chain
KW - transportation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85061535708&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1142/S0217595919500088
DO - 10.1142/S0217595919500088
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85061535708
SN - 0217-5959
VL - 36
JO - Asia-Pacific Journal of Operational Research
JF - Asia-Pacific Journal of Operational Research
IS - 1
M1 - 1950008
ER -