This article develops a supply chain coordination model with a single-vendor and a singlebuyer.
The vendor manufactures the product in lots and delivers to the buyer in equal
shipments. The vendor’s production process is not perfectly reliable. During a production run,
the process may shift from an in-control state to an out-of-control state at any random time and
produces some defective items. The buyer whose demand is assumed to be a linear function of
the on-hand inventory performs a screening process immediately after each replenishment.
Moreover, the buyer’s inventory is deteriorated at a constant rate over time. The vendor-buyer
coordination policy is determined by minimizing the average cost of the supply chain. It is
observed from the numerical study that channel coordination earns significant cost savings over
the non-coordinated policy.
The vendor manufactures the product in lots and delivers to the buyer in equal
shipments. The vendor’s production process is not perfectly reliable. During a production run,
the process may shift from an in-control state to an out-of-control state at any random time and
produces some defective items. The buyer whose demand is assumed to be a linear function of
the on-hand inventory performs a screening process immediately after each replenishment.
Moreover, the buyer’s inventory is deteriorated at a constant rate over time. The vendor-buyer
coordination policy is determined by minimizing the average cost of the supply chain. It is
observed from the numerical study that channel coordination earns significant cost savings over
the non-coordinated policy.