Inventories, Stockouts, and Production Smoothing

Working Paper: NBER ID: w1563

Authors: Andrew B. Abel

Abstract: If stock-outs are ignored and if demand shocks are additive, then optimal behavior requires that the marginal cost of production (MC) be equated with the expected marginal revenue of increasing expected sales by one unit (EMR). However,with more general demand shocks (and still ignoring stock-outs), the excess of MC over EMP has the same signas the covariance of the slope of the demand curve and the marginal valuation of inventory. The equality of EMR and MC is also broken by taking account of stock-outs, even if demand shocks are additive. If there is a production lag, then taking account of stock-outs implies that optimal behavior will be characterized by production smoothing even if the cost of production is linear. Two alternative definitions of production smoothing are presented and optimal behavior in the presence of stock-outs displays each type of smoothing.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: No JEL codes provided


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
marginal cost (MC) (D40)production smoothing (L23)
production smoothing (L23)expected marginal revenue (EMR) (C51)
stockouts (L81)marginal cost (MC) > expected marginal revenue (EMR) (D40)
additive demand shocks (E39)equality of MC and EMR (C30)
stockouts (L81)production smoothing (L23)

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