Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving Products
This study establishes a two-echelon supply chain with one manufacturer who invests in energy-saving products (ESPs) and one retailer who sells the products and may possess demand-forecast advantage. Considering government subsidy and consumer preference for ESPs and a random demand, we develop a fo...
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2020-01-01
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Series: | Mathematical Problems in Engineering |
Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/3935762 |
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doaj-f381d8df4905420384c3970cca1dd3732020-11-25T03:28:36ZengHindawi LimitedMathematical Problems in Engineering1024-123X1563-51472020-01-01202010.1155/2020/39357623935762Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving ProductsJinxi Li0Yuyin Yi1Haishen Yang2Dongwu Business School, Soochow University, Suzhou 215006, ChinaManagement School, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, ChinaInstitute of International Studies, Guangdong Academy of Social Sciences, Guangzhou 510635, ChinaThis study establishes a two-echelon supply chain with one manufacturer who invests in energy-saving products (ESPs) and one retailer who sells the products and may possess demand-forecast advantage. Considering government subsidy and consumer preference for ESPs and a random demand, we develop a four-stage Stackelberg game model to research the optimal strategies of the information investment and sharing of the retailer and the energy-saving R&D of the manufacturer. The results show the following: (1) When incurring a low information investment cost, the retailer is willing to invest in information acquisition techniques, while the retailer agreeing to share market information is related to the government subsidies and the probability of a high demand. The optimal strategy for the retailer is to share information when the probability of a high demand is less than 50% and the government subsidies for ESPs are high. Otherwise, the optimal strategy is not to share information. (2) The manufacturer not always expects the retailer to share information, which depends on the probability of a high demand and manufacturing cost. Especially, when the probability of a high demand is less than 50%, only a manufacturer incurring high cost will expect. (3) If the retailer refuses to share the information, the manufacturer can motivate the retailer to change his/her decision by sharing the information investment cost.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/3935762 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jinxi Li Yuyin Yi Haishen Yang |
spellingShingle |
Jinxi Li Yuyin Yi Haishen Yang Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving Products Mathematical Problems in Engineering |
author_facet |
Jinxi Li Yuyin Yi Haishen Yang |
author_sort |
Jinxi Li |
title |
Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving Products |
title_short |
Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving Products |
title_full |
Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving Products |
title_fullStr |
Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving Products |
title_full_unstemmed |
Information Investment and Sharing in a Two-Echelon Supply Chain under Government Subsidy and Consumer Preference for Energy-Saving Products |
title_sort |
information investment and sharing in a two-echelon supply chain under government subsidy and consumer preference for energy-saving products |
publisher |
Hindawi Limited |
series |
Mathematical Problems in Engineering |
issn |
1024-123X 1563-5147 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
This study establishes a two-echelon supply chain with one manufacturer who invests in energy-saving products (ESPs) and one retailer who sells the products and may possess demand-forecast advantage. Considering government subsidy and consumer preference for ESPs and a random demand, we develop a four-stage Stackelberg game model to research the optimal strategies of the information investment and sharing of the retailer and the energy-saving R&D of the manufacturer. The results show the following: (1) When incurring a low information investment cost, the retailer is willing to invest in information acquisition techniques, while the retailer agreeing to share market information is related to the government subsidies and the probability of a high demand. The optimal strategy for the retailer is to share information when the probability of a high demand is less than 50% and the government subsidies for ESPs are high. Otherwise, the optimal strategy is not to share information. (2) The manufacturer not always expects the retailer to share information, which depends on the probability of a high demand and manufacturing cost. Especially, when the probability of a high demand is less than 50%, only a manufacturer incurring high cost will expect. (3) If the retailer refuses to share the information, the manufacturer can motivate the retailer to change his/her decision by sharing the information investment cost. |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/3935762 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jinxili informationinvestmentandsharinginatwoechelonsupplychainundergovernmentsubsidyandconsumerpreferenceforenergysavingproducts AT yuyinyi informationinvestmentandsharinginatwoechelonsupplychainundergovernmentsubsidyandconsumerpreferenceforenergysavingproducts AT haishenyang informationinvestmentandsharinginatwoechelonsupplychainundergovernmentsubsidyandconsumerpreferenceforenergysavingproducts |
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