Pricing, greening, and transparency decisions considering the impact of government subsidies and CSR behavior in supply chain decisions

In this paper, we analytically model different government subsidy strategies in a supply chain manufacturing and selling a green product. We model the interaction between greening degree and transparency level set by a manufacturer and its impact on not only the supply chain, but also consumers and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of retailing and consumer services 2021-05, Vol.60, p.102485, Article 102485
Hauptverfasser: Khosroshahi, Hossein, Dimitrov, Stanko, Hejazi, Seyed Reza
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In this paper, we analytically model different government subsidy strategies in a supply chain manufacturing and selling a green product. We model the interaction between greening degree and transparency level set by a manufacturer and its impact on not only the supply chain, but also consumers and the government. The supply chain is composed of a manufacturer and a retailer. The manufacturer can choose two different strategies. First, he only cares about his production profit; and second, he concerns with CSR in addition to his production profit. We develop a new transparency-based index of consumer satisfaction to model how the market reacts to manufacturer CSR decisions. The government decide three different subsidy strategies. A three-stage Stackelberg game model is developed and solved to analytically derive managerial insights. As a result, if the transparency cost coefficient is sufficiently high, the greening degree and transparency level in CSR concerns strategy are higher than when the manufacturer is not concerned with corporate social responsibility. In addition, when the transparency cost coefficient is sufficiently high, the profit of supply chain members and government are equal in both strategies. We give a real-world example of Iranian brick industry. •Government subsidies for transparency and costs in green supply chains.•Transparency level and greening degree sensitive consumer choice model.•Consumer satisfaction index for corporate social responsibility.•Three-player game between government, manufacturer, and retailer.•Government provides wholesale and retail price subsidies as well as greening subsidies.
ISSN:0969-6989
1873-1384
DOI:10.1016/j.jretconser.2021.102485