供应链中信息获取的透明度

Tian Li, Shilu Tong, Hongtao Zhang
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引用次数: 45

摘要

一家公司雇佣顾问来获取需求信息。信息获取的结果可能是成功的,因为企业对市场需求了解得很多,从而变得“知情”;也可能是不成功的,因为它对市场需求了解得很少,因此仍然“不知情”。在结果变得清晰之后,企业知道自己的信息状态,是否知情,以及知情后的信息内容。客户公司通常要求严格保密,禁止咨询顾问对信息获取进行任何披露,认为更大的信息优势肯定会对自己有利。因此,任何第三方都不知道信息内容和信息状态。但公司是否应该一直如此在意严格的保密?如果公司的信息状态,而不是信息内容,为其合伙人或其他公司所知,这是否有益?我们在双层供应链的背景下研究这个问题。制造商向零售商提供一份产品供应合同清单,零售商在一个随机需求且已知连续分布的市场上销售产品。零售商雇佣顾问来获取需求信息,但结果并不确定。在概率为t的情况下,零售商对市场需求知情,在概率为1 - t的情况下,零售商仍然不知情,其中,概率t可以看作是零售商的信息获取能力。研究发现,当零售商的信息获取能力较弱且市场变异性为中等时,披露其信息状态有利于零售商。我们的调查表明,遵循严格的保密政策可能会失去一些好处,但改用部分保密政策可能会恢复这些好处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transparency of Information Acquisition in a Supply Chain
A firm hires a consultant to acquire demand information. The outcome of information acquisition may turn out to be successful such that the firm learns much about the market demand, thus becoming “informed,” or unsuccessful such that it learns very little about the market demand, thus remaining “uninformed.” After the outcome becomes clear, the firm knows its information status, informed or uninformed, and the information content if informed. The client firm usually requires strict confidentiality that forbids the consultant to make any disclosure about the information acquisition, believing that greater informational advantage will surely be to its own benefits. As a result, neither the information content nor the information status is known to any third party. But should the firm always care so much about strict confidentiality? Will it be beneficial if the firm's information status, but not the information content, is known to its partners or any other firms? We investigate this issue in the context of a two-tier supply chain. A manufacturer offers a menu of contracts for supplying a product to a retailer who sells it in a market with random demand that has a known continuous distribution. The retailer hires a consultant to acquire demand information, with uncertain outcome. With probability t , the retailer becomes informed about the market demand, and with probability 1 − t , he remains uninformed, where the probability t can be regarded as representing the retailer's information acquisition capability. We find that disclosing its information status benefits the retailer if its information acquisition capability is less than stellar and the market variability is intermediate. Our investigation shows that there are benefits that are foregone by following strict confidentiality but can potentially be recovered by switching to a policy of partial confidentiality.
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