We consider a single-item, periodic-review, serial inventory/production system, with linear inventory-holding and penalty costs. To facilitate shipment consolidation and capacity planning, we assume that the system has implemented fixed replenishment intervals; each stage is allowed to order only at given equidistant times. Further, for each stage except the most downstream one, the replenishment interval is assumed to be an integer multiple of the replenishment interval of the next downstream stage. This reflects the fact that the further upstream in a supply chain, the higher setup times and costs tend to be, and thus larger batches are desired. Our model with fixed replenishment intervals is a direct generalization of the serial model of Clark and Scarf (1960). For this generalized model, we prove the optimality of base-stock policies, we derive newsboy equations for the optimal base-stock levels, and we describe an efficient exact solution procedure for the case with mixed Erlang demands. Finally, we present extensions to assembly systems and to systems with a modified fill-rate constraint instead of backorder costs.
We consider capacity management with a long-term strategic choice, such as the number of production lines to install before demand is known, and short-term tactical decisions relating to production, inventory, and subcontracting (recourse actions made after demand is known). We present an integrated scenario-based mathematical modeling and solution framework. For a single-product environment, we examine properties of total profit as a function of demand and the long-term capacity z. We investigate two measures of risk (profit variance and mean downside risk) and their corresponding profit-risk frontiers. Computational experiments are used to illustrate parameter sensitivity results obtained from the model.
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