Supply Chain Contracting Under Competition: Bilateral Bargaining vs. Stackelberg

We analyze contracting behaviors in a two-tier supply chain system consisting of competing manufacturers and competing retailers. We contrast the contracting outcome of a Stackelberg game, in which the manufacturers offer take-it-or-leave-it contracts to the retailers, with that of a bargaining game, in which the firms bilaterally negotiate contract terms via a process of alternating offers. The manufacturers in the Stackelberg game possess a Stackelberg-leader advantage in that the retailers are not entitled to make counteroffers. Our analysis suggests that whether this advantage would benefit the manufacturers depends on the contractual form. With simple contracts such as wholesale-price contracts, which generally do not allow one party to fully extract the trade surplus, the Stackelberg game replicates the boundary case of the bargaining game with the manufacturers possessing all bargaining power. In contrast, with sophisticated contracts such as two-part tariffs, which enable full surplus extraction, the two games lead to distinct outcomes. We further show that the game structure being Stackelberg or bargaining critically affects firms’ preferences over contract types and thus their equilibrium contract choices. These observations suggest that the Stackelberg game may not be a sufficient device to predict contracting behaviors in reality where bargaining is commonly observed.

[1]  G. Shaffer,et al.  Bargaining, Bundling, and Clout: The Portfolio Effects of Horizontal Mergers , 2003 .

[2]  G. Shaffer,et al.  Vertical Control with Bilateral Contracts , 1992 .

[3]  Minakshi Trivedi,et al.  Distribution Channels: An Extension of Exclusive Retailership , 1998 .

[4]  Jonas Björnerstedt,et al.  Bilateral oligopoly — The efficiency of intermediate goods markets , 2007 .

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

[6]  Florian Zettelmeyer,et al.  Advertising in a Distribution Channel , 2004 .

[7]  Sanjog Misra,et al.  Estimating Bargaining Games in Distribution Channels , 2004 .

[8]  Terry A. Taylor,et al.  Supply Chain Coordination Under Channel Rebates with Sales Effort Effects , 2002, Manag. Sci..

[9]  Asher Wolinsky,et al.  BILATERAL MONOPOLIES AND INCENTIVES FOR MERGER , 1988 .

[10]  Roman Inderst,et al.  Buyer Power and Supplier Incentives , 2003 .

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

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

[13]  Christopher M. Snyder,et al.  The Role of Firm Size in Bilateral Bargaining: A Study of the Cable Television Industry , 1999, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[14]  Erica L. Plambeck,et al.  Sell the Plant? The Impact of Contract Manufacturing on Innovation, Capacity, and Profitability , 2005, Manag. Sci..

[15]  Gérard P. Cachon,et al.  Competing Manufacturers in a Retail Supply Chain: On Contractual Form and Coordination , 2010, Manag. Sci..

[16]  Mark E. Ferguson,et al.  PRODUCTION AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT , 2008 .

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

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

[19]  Dale T. Mortensen,et al.  Bargaining Game , 2007 .

[20]  Carl Davidson,et al.  Multiunit Bargaining in Oligopolistic Industries , 1988, Journal of Labor Economics.

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

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

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

[24]  Mahesh Nagarajan,et al.  Game-Theoretic Analysis of Cooperation Among Supply Chain Agents: Review and Extensions , 2008, Eur. J. Oper. Res..

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

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

[27]  Özalp Özer,et al.  Supply Chain Sourcing Under Asymmetric Information , 2007 .

[28]  Gérard P. Cachon Supply Chain Coordination with Contracts , 2003, Supply Chain Management.

[29]  Robert M. Fuhrer,et al.  Coordinating Investment, Production, and Subcontracting , 1999 .

[30]  Albert Y. Ha,et al.  Contracting and Information Sharing Under Supply Chain Competition , 2008, Manag. Sci..

[31]  A. Rubinstein,et al.  Bargaining and Markets , 1991 .

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

[33]  Anthony J. Dukes,et al.  Negotiations and Exclusivity Contracts for Advertising , 2003 .

[34]  Steffen Ziss,et al.  Vertical Separation and Horizontal Mergers , 1995 .

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

[36]  Elodie Adida,et al.  Supply Chain Competition with Multiple Manufacturers and Retailers , 2011, Oper. Res..

[37]  William S. Lovejoy,et al.  Bargaining Chains , 2010, Manag. Sci..

[38]  Emmanuel Petrakis,et al.  Upstream horizontal mergers, vertical contracts, and bargaining , 2007 .