Quality Improvement Incentives and Product Recall Cost Sharing Contracts

As companies outsource more product design and manufacturing activities to other members of the supply chain, improving end-product quality has become an endeavor extending beyond the boundaries of the firms' in-house process capabilities. In this paper, we discuss two contractual agreements by...

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Veröffentlicht in:Management science 2009-07, Vol.55 (7), p.1122-1138
Hauptverfasser: Chao, Gary H, Iravani, Seyed M. R, Savaskan, R. Canan
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container_title Management science
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creator Chao, Gary H
Iravani, Seyed M. R
Savaskan, R. Canan
description As companies outsource more product design and manufacturing activities to other members of the supply chain, improving end-product quality has become an endeavor extending beyond the boundaries of the firms' in-house process capabilities. In this paper, we discuss two contractual agreements by which product recall costs can be shared between a manufacturer and a supplier to induce quality improvement effort. More specifically, we consider (i) cost sharing based on selective root cause analysis (Contract S), and (ii) partial cost sharing based on complete root cause analysis (Contract P). Using insights from supermodular game theory, for each contractual agreement, we characterize the levels of effort the manufacturer and the supplier would exert in equilibrium to improve their component failure rate when their effort choices are subject to moral hazard. We show that both Contract S and Contract P can achieve the first best effort levels; however, Contract S results in higher profits for the manufacturer and the supply chain. For the case in which the information about the quality of the supplier's product is not revealed to the manufacturer (i.e., the case of information asymmetry), we develop a menu of contracts that can be used to mitigate the impact of information asymmetry. We show that the menu of contracts not only significantly decreases the manufacturer's cost due to information asymmetry, but also improves product quality.
doi_str_mv 10.1287/mnsc.1090.1008
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Management science ; Product design ; Product management ; Product quality ; Product recalls ; Product reliability ; Production costs ; quality control ; Quality improvement ; Quality standards ; reliability ; Reliability theory. 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R</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Savaskan, R. Canan</creatorcontrib><title>Quality Improvement Incentives and Product Recall Cost Sharing Contracts</title><title>Management science</title><description>As companies outsource more product design and manufacturing activities to other members of the supply chain, improving end-product quality has become an endeavor extending beyond the boundaries of the firms' in-house process capabilities. In this paper, we discuss two contractual agreements by which product recall costs can be shared between a manufacturer and a supplier to induce quality improvement effort. More specifically, we consider (i) cost sharing based on selective root cause analysis (Contract S), and (ii) partial cost sharing based on complete root cause analysis (Contract P). 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identifier ISSN: 0025-1909
ispartof Management science, 2009-07, Vol.55 (7), p.1122-1138
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source Informs; RePEc; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Applied sciences
Asymmetric information
Asymmetry
Business studies
Capital costs
Consumer behavior
contracts
Cost allocation
Cost analysis
Cost efficiency
Cost incentives
Cost sharing
Exact sciences and technology
Firm modelling
Game theory
Incentives
Industrial design
information asymmetry
Logistics
Management
Manufacturers
Manufacturing processes
Operational research and scientific management
Operational research. Management science
Product design
Product management
Product quality
Product recalls
Product reliability
Production costs
quality control
Quality improvement
Quality standards
reliability
Reliability theory. Replacement problems
Studies
Suppliers
supply chain coordination
Supply chain management
Supply chains
Total quality
title Quality Improvement Incentives and Product Recall Cost Sharing Contracts
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