TY - JOUR
T1 - Outsourcing or Licensing? Remanufacturing Mode Selection in the Presence of Technological Innovation
AU - Li, Guo
AU - Li, Jinchao
AU - Zheng, Hong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 IEEE.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Nowadays, remanufacturing has attracted widespread attention. Many original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) collaborate with third-party remanufacturers (TPRs) through outsourcing or licensing mode, while simultaneously investing in technological innovation. This study develops a supply chain consisting of an OEM and a TPR to examine how innovation decision interacts with remanufacturing mode choices. Using game-theoretical analysis, we first derive the equilibrium remanufacturing strategies under outsourcing and licensing modes. Three strategies may arise: no remanufacturing, partial remanufacturing, and full remanufacturing, corresponding to none, partial, and complete reuse of recycled products from the previous period. We show that under the outsourcing mode, partial remanufacturing cannot be sustained when consumers' willingness-to-pay for remanufactured products is sufficiently high. Then, we analyze the innovation incentives and find that outsourcing better fosters technological innovation when the new-product production cost is moderate, whereas licensing is preferable otherwise. Moreover, when the equilibrium strategy shifts to full remanufacturing, the technological innovation level counterintuitively increases with the new-product production cost under both modes. Finally, we demonstrate that the OEM's optimal remanufacturing mode depends jointly on consumers' valuation of remanufactured products and new-product production cost, which challenges the conventional wisdom. Furthermore, we find that outsourcing achieves superior environmental performance, while consumer surplus is higher under outsourcing when the new-product production cost is moderate or extremely large. The robustness of technological innovation decisions and remanufacturing mode choices is verified in an extended model with positive remanufacturing cost. Our findings provide new insights for remanufacturing mode selection incorporating technological innovation.
AB - Nowadays, remanufacturing has attracted widespread attention. Many original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) collaborate with third-party remanufacturers (TPRs) through outsourcing or licensing mode, while simultaneously investing in technological innovation. This study develops a supply chain consisting of an OEM and a TPR to examine how innovation decision interacts with remanufacturing mode choices. Using game-theoretical analysis, we first derive the equilibrium remanufacturing strategies under outsourcing and licensing modes. Three strategies may arise: no remanufacturing, partial remanufacturing, and full remanufacturing, corresponding to none, partial, and complete reuse of recycled products from the previous period. We show that under the outsourcing mode, partial remanufacturing cannot be sustained when consumers' willingness-to-pay for remanufactured products is sufficiently high. Then, we analyze the innovation incentives and find that outsourcing better fosters technological innovation when the new-product production cost is moderate, whereas licensing is preferable otherwise. Moreover, when the equilibrium strategy shifts to full remanufacturing, the technological innovation level counterintuitively increases with the new-product production cost under both modes. Finally, we demonstrate that the OEM's optimal remanufacturing mode depends jointly on consumers' valuation of remanufactured products and new-product production cost, which challenges the conventional wisdom. Furthermore, we find that outsourcing achieves superior environmental performance, while consumer surplus is higher under outsourcing when the new-product production cost is moderate or extremely large. The robustness of technological innovation decisions and remanufacturing mode choices is verified in an extended model with positive remanufacturing cost. Our findings provide new insights for remanufacturing mode selection incorporating technological innovation.
KW - Licensing mode
KW - outsourcing mode
KW - remanufacturing business
KW - technological innovation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105037735909
U2 - 10.1109/TEM.2026.3688740
DO - 10.1109/TEM.2026.3688740
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105037735909
SN - 0018-9391
VL - 73
SP - 3359
EP - 3371
JO - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
JF - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
ER -