Bargaining within the Supply Chain and Its Implications in an Industry

Our main objective is to investigate the influence of the bargaining power within a chain on its industry. As a building block, we first discuss the implications of bargaining within a single chain by considering an asymmetric Nash bargaining over the wholesale price (BW). We show that both Manufacturer Stackelberg (MS) and vertical integration (VI) strategies are special cases of the BW contract. We then develop the Nash equilibrium in an industry with two supply chains that use BW. We identify the profit-maximizing (coordinating) bargaining power within this industry. We show that when a chain is not monopolistic, VI does not coordinate the chain and that the MS contract, where the manufacturer has all the bargaining power, is coordinating when competition is intense. We find that the main determinant of the equilibrium in mature industries is to respond well to the actions of the competing chain rather than to directly maximize the profit of each chain. That is, the equilibrium does not necessarily maximize the profit of the entire industry. While a coordination of the industry could then increase the profitability of both chains, such a coordination is likely against antitrust law. Moreover, if one chain cannot change its actions, the other chain may unilaterally improve its profitability by deviating from the equilibrium. Our results lead to several predictions supported by empirical findings, such as that in competitive industries chains will work “close to” the MS contract.

[1]  Evan L. Porteus,et al.  Selling to the Newsvendor: An Analysis of Price-Only Contracts , 2001, Manuf. Serv. Oper. Manag..

[2]  Qi Feng,et al.  The Strategic Perils of Low Cost Outsourcing , 2012, Manag. Sci..

[3]  A. Coughlan Competition and Cooperation in Marketing Channel Choice: Theory and Application , 1985 .

[4]  M. Parry,et al.  Channel Coordination When Retailers Compete , 1995 .

[5]  Sridhar Balasubramanian,et al.  When Not All Conflict Is Bad: Manufacturing-Marketing Conflict and Strategic Incentive Design , 2004, Manag. Sci..

[6]  Z. K. Weng,et al.  Channel coordination and quantity discounts , 1995 .

[7]  K. Moorthy Strategic Decentralization in Channels , 1988 .

[8]  Daniel Klapper,et al.  A Larger Slice or a Larger Pie? An Empirical Investigation of Bargaining Power in the Distribution Channel , 2008, Mark. Sci..

[9]  Owen Q. Wu,et al.  Chain-to-Chain Competition Under Demand Uncertainty , 2016 .

[10]  Richard Staelin,et al.  Commentary - An Industry Equilibrium Analysis of Downstream Vertical Integration: Twenty-Five Years Later , 2008, Mark. Sci..

[11]  Haresh Gurnani,et al.  A Bargaining Model for a First-Time Interaction Under Asymmetric Beliefs of Supply Reliability , 2006, Manag. Sci..

[12]  Game-Theoretic Analysis of Cooperation Among Supply Chain Agents: Review and Extensions , 2006 .

[13]  Bin Shen,et al.  The Coordination of Fashion Supply Chains With a Risk-Averse Supplier Under the Markdown Money Policy , 2013, IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics: Systems.

[14]  Yunchuan Liu,et al.  The Benefits of Competitive Upward Channel Decentralization , 2011, Manag. Sci..

[15]  E. Kalai,et al.  OTHER SOLUTIONS TO NASH'S BARGAINING PROBLEM , 1975 .

[16]  Gérard P. Cachon Supply Chain Coordination with Contracts 1 , 2002 .

[17]  Mahesh Nagarajan,et al.  A Bargaining Framework in Supply Chains: The Assembly Problem , 2008, Manag. Sci..

[18]  Gérard P. Cachon,et al.  Supply Chain Coordination with Revenue-Sharing Contracts: Strengths and Limitations , 2005, Manag. Sci..

[19]  A. Tsay The Quantity Flexibility Contract and Supplier-Customer Incentives , 1999 .

[20]  Richard Staelin,et al.  An Industry Equilibrium Analysis of Downstream Vertical Integration , 2008, Mark. Sci..

[21]  Paul M. Griffin,et al.  Supplier- and buyer-driven channels in a two-stage supply chain , 2002 .

[22]  Elliot Bendoly,et al.  Coopetitive Buyer-Supplier Relationship: An Investigation of Bargaining Power, Relational Context, and Investment Strategies , 2011, Decis. Sci..

[23]  Desheng Dash Wu,et al.  Bargaining in competing supply chains with uncertainty , 2009, Eur. J. Oper. Res..

[24]  E. Mills Uncertainty and Price Theory , 1959 .

[25]  Sudheer Gupta,et al.  Process Innovation, Product Differentiation, and Channel Structure: Strategic Incentives in a Duopoly , 1998 .

[26]  Fernando Bernstein,et al.  Decentralized Supply Chains with Competing Retailers Under Demand Uncertainty , 2005, Manag. Sci..

[27]  Margaret E. Slade,et al.  Strategic Motives for Vertical Separation: Evidence from Retail Gasoline Markets , 1998 .

[28]  Barry Alan Pasternack,et al.  Optimal Pricing and Return Policies for Perishable Commodities , 2008, Mark. Sci..

[29]  A. Rubinstein,et al.  The Nash bargaining solution in economic modelling , 1985 .

[30]  Tsan-Ming Choi,et al.  Mean–Variance Analysis for the Newsvendor Problem , 2008, IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics - Part A: Systems and Humans.

[31]  Eric T. Anderson,et al.  A Bargaining Theory of Distribution Channels , 2003 .

[32]  B. Wernerfelt,et al.  On credible delegation by oligopolists: a discussion of distribution channel management , 1989 .

[33]  Anthony J. Dukes,et al.  Channel Bargaining with Retailer Asymmetry , 2006 .

[34]  J. Nash THE BARGAINING PROBLEM , 1950, Classics in Game Theory.

[35]  권보배,et al.  Supply chain coordination with revenue sharing contracts , 2010 .