Title of article :
The perils of group purchasing in a competing supply chain
Author/Authors :
Soleimani Sedehi, M. Department of Industrial Engineering - Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, Iran , Makui, A. Department of Industrial Engineering - Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, Iran , Bolandifar, E. Department of Decision Sciences and Managerial Economics - the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Abstract :
Group Purchasing Organizations (GPOs) are well-known intermediary rms
that play an important role in some supply chains. An important question that arises
regarding GPOs is whether a GPO that benets from group buying discounts always
benets Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) under market competition. In other
words, does the role of a GPO always result in a win-win outcome for OEMs and GPOs? In
response, a bargaining framework has been used to investigate the procurement strategies of
competing OEMs. The incorporation of a GPO in a two-tier supply chain consisting of two
competing OEMs with a common supplier that has a quantity discount menu is analyzed.
The result shows that low-purchasing cost for GPOs may harm OEMs from a cost-benet
perspective. This unintuitive result can be explained by dierent impacts that a GPO
has on the purchasing process. Although a GPO can enlarge the size of trade surplus,
it has important in
uence on the size of the slice of the pie (prot sharing). Moreover,
the procurement strategy of an OEM in equilibrium depends on not only the bargaining
power, but also the competing OEM. Interestingly, unlike a weak OEM, a strong one may
not prefer procuring through GPO.
Keywords :
Purchasing strategy , Multiunit bilateral bargaining , Market competition , Quantity discount , Wholesale price contract
Journal title :
Scientia Iranica(Transactions E: Industrial Engineering)