On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy

<strong>Purpose:</strong> One of the most usual indicators to measure the performance of any inventory policy is the mean stock level. In the generalized base stock, periodic review policy, the expected mean stock during the replenishment cycle is usually estimated by practitioners and r...

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Main Authors: Eugenia Babiloni, Manuel Cardós, Ester Guijarro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OmniaScience 2011-07-01
Series:Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/297
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spelling doaj-473db98fb5de4478a4c88aec8633dcf32020-11-24T22:40:52ZengOmniaScienceJournal of Industrial Engineering and Management2013-84232013-09532011-07-014219420510.3926/jiem..v4n2.p194-20584On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policyEugenia Babiloni0Manuel Cardós1Ester Guijarro2Universidad Politécnica de ValenciaUniversidad Politécnica de ValenciaUniversidad Politécnica de Valencia<strong>Purpose:</strong> One of the most usual indicators to measure the performance of any inventory policy is the mean stock level. In the generalized base stock, periodic review policy, the expected mean stock during the replenishment cycle is usually estimated by practitioners and researchers with the traditional Hadley-Whitin approximation. However it is not accurate enough and exact methods suggested on the related literature focus on specific demand distributions. This paper proposes a generalized method to compute the exact value of the expected mean stock to be used when demand is modelled by any uncorrelated, discrete and stationary demand pattern.<br /><br /><strong>Design/methodology/approach:</strong> The suggested method is based on computing the probability of every stock level at every point of the replenishment cycle for which it is required to know the probability of any stock level at the beginning of the cycle and the probability transition matrix between two consecutive periods of time. Furthermore, the traditional Hadley-Whitin approximation is compared with the proposed exact method over different discrete demand distributions<br /><br /><strong>Findings:</strong> This paper points out the lack of accuracy that the Hadley-Whitin approximation shows over a wide range of service levels and discrete demand distributions. <br /><br /><strong>Research limitations/implications:</strong> The suggested method requires the availability of appropriate tools as well as a sound mathematical background. For this reason, approximations to it are the logical further research of this work. <br /><br /><strong>Practical implications: </strong>The use of the Hadley-Whitin approximation instead of an exact method can lead to underestimate systematically the expected mean stock level. This fact may increase total costs of the inventory system.<br /><br /><strong>Originality/value:</strong> The original derivation of an exact method to compute the expected mean stock level for the base stock, periodic review policy when demand is modelled by any discrete function and backlog is not allowed.<br /><br />http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/297mean stock level, periodic review, discrete demand distribution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eugenia Babiloni
Manuel Cardós
Ester Guijarro
spellingShingle Eugenia Babiloni
Manuel Cardós
Ester Guijarro
On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy
Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
mean stock level, periodic review, discrete demand distribution
author_facet Eugenia Babiloni
Manuel Cardós
Ester Guijarro
author_sort Eugenia Babiloni
title On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy
title_short On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy
title_full On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy
title_fullStr On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy
title_full_unstemmed On the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy
title_sort on the exact calculation of the mean stock level in the base stock periodic review policy
publisher OmniaScience
series Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
issn 2013-8423
2013-0953
publishDate 2011-07-01
description <strong>Purpose:</strong> One of the most usual indicators to measure the performance of any inventory policy is the mean stock level. In the generalized base stock, periodic review policy, the expected mean stock during the replenishment cycle is usually estimated by practitioners and researchers with the traditional Hadley-Whitin approximation. However it is not accurate enough and exact methods suggested on the related literature focus on specific demand distributions. This paper proposes a generalized method to compute the exact value of the expected mean stock to be used when demand is modelled by any uncorrelated, discrete and stationary demand pattern.<br /><br /><strong>Design/methodology/approach:</strong> The suggested method is based on computing the probability of every stock level at every point of the replenishment cycle for which it is required to know the probability of any stock level at the beginning of the cycle and the probability transition matrix between two consecutive periods of time. Furthermore, the traditional Hadley-Whitin approximation is compared with the proposed exact method over different discrete demand distributions<br /><br /><strong>Findings:</strong> This paper points out the lack of accuracy that the Hadley-Whitin approximation shows over a wide range of service levels and discrete demand distributions. <br /><br /><strong>Research limitations/implications:</strong> The suggested method requires the availability of appropriate tools as well as a sound mathematical background. For this reason, approximations to it are the logical further research of this work. <br /><br /><strong>Practical implications: </strong>The use of the Hadley-Whitin approximation instead of an exact method can lead to underestimate systematically the expected mean stock level. This fact may increase total costs of the inventory system.<br /><br /><strong>Originality/value:</strong> The original derivation of an exact method to compute the expected mean stock level for the base stock, periodic review policy when demand is modelled by any discrete function and backlog is not allowed.<br /><br />
topic mean stock level, periodic review, discrete demand distribution
url http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/297
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