Centralization versus Decentralization: Risk Pooling, Risk Diversification, and Supply Chain Disruptions

31 Pages Posted: 3 Apr 2008 Last revised: 19 Jun 2014

See all articles by Amanda J. Schmitt

Amanda J. Schmitt

MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics

Siyuan Sun

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research

Lawrence V. Snyder

Lehigh University - Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering

Zuo-Jun Max Shen

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Industrial Engineering & Operations Research (IEOR)

Date Written: June 17, 2014

Abstract

We investigate optimal system design in a multi-location system in which supply is subject to disruptions. We examine the expected costs and cost variances of the system in both a centralized and a decentralized inventory system. We show that, when demand is deterministic and supply may be disrupted, using a decentralized inventory design reduces cost variance through the risk diversification effect, and therefore a decentralized inventory system is optimal. This is in contrast to the classical result that when supply is deterministic and demand is stochastic, centralization is optimal due to the risk-pooling effect. When both supply may be disrupted and demand is stochastic, we demonstrate that a risk-averse firm should typically choose a decentralized inventory system design.

Keywords: supply disruptions, inventory management, risk diversification

Suggested Citation

Schmitt, Amanda J. and Sun, Siyuan and Snyder, Lawrence V. and Shen, Zuo-Jun Max, Centralization versus Decentralization: Risk Pooling, Risk Diversification, and Supply Chain Disruptions (June 17, 2014). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1115392 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1115392

Amanda J. Schmitt (Contact Author)

MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics ( email )

77 Massachusetts Ave., E40
Cambridge, MA 02139
United States

Siyuan Sun

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research ( email )

4141 Etcheverry Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-1777
United States

Lawrence V. Snyder

Lehigh University - Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering ( email )

Harold S. Mohler Laboratory
200 West Packer Avenue
Bethlehem, PA 18015-1582
United States

Zuo-Jun Max Shen

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Industrial Engineering & Operations Research (IEOR) ( email )

IEOR Department
4135 Etcheverry Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
1,425
Abstract Views
8,202
Rank
25,361
PlumX Metrics