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Game Theoretic Analysis in Supply Chains

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Title: Game Theoretic Analysis in Supply Chains


1
Game Theoretic Analysis in Supply Chains
  • Yang Sun
  • Dept. of Industrial Engineering
  • Arizona State University

2
Agenda
  • Basic introduction to game theory
  • Basic economic models (market games)
  • Supply chain model Competitive newsvendors
  • Capacity allocation game with non-competitive
    buyers
  • Capacity allocation game with competitive buyers

3
Game Theory
  • Definition Game theory is a branch of applied
    mathematics that studies interaction among a
    group of rational agents who behave
    strategically.
  • Key Concepts
  • Group
  • Interaction
  • Strategic
  • Rational

4
A Brief Game Theory History
  • Early works James Waldegraves, Antoine Augustin
    Cournot, Francis Ysidro Edgeworth, Emile Borel in
    1700s and 1800s
  • 1928-1944 John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern
    published a series of papers and was credited as
    the fathers of modern game theory. Their work is
    culminated in the 1944 book The Theory of Games
    and Economic Behavior.
  • 1950 Discussion and experimentation on the
    Prisoners dilemma at the RAND Corp.
  • 1950 John Nashs dissertation on non-cooperative
    games
  • Advisor Albert W. Tucker
  • Contained the definition and properties of an
    optimum strategy that would later be called the
    Nash Equilibrium.
  • Led to three important journal articles.
  • 1950s Games of imperfect information (Kuhn
    1953) cooperative games (Aumann 1959) game
    theory experienced a flurry of activity including
    its first applications in philosophy and
    political science.
  • 1960s Reinhard Seltens work on subgame perfect
    equilibria and John Harsanyis work on compete
    information and Bayesian games.
  • 1970s and 1980s Works on evolutionary strategy
    and its applications in biology correlated
    equilibrium trembling hand equilibrium common
    knowledge sequential equilibrium extensive
    games repeated games extensive Bayesian games
    a lot of applications.
  • 1994 Nash, Selten, and Harsanyi won the Nobel
    prize in Economics.
  • 2005 Thomas Schelling (works on evolutionary
    game theory) and Robert Aumann (works on common
    knowledge) won the Nobel prize.

5
Games and Strategies
  • Static Game
  • Dynamic Game
  • Non-cooperative game
  • Cooperative game
  • Pure Strategies
  • Mixed Strategies
  • Two ways of formalizing a game
  • The extensive form
  • The normal form
  • Players
  • Strategies
  • Payoffs
  • (See examples)

6
Examples
1
R
L
2
l
l
r
r
3 1
1 0
2 -1
2 0
Source Tirole, Jean, 1988, The Theory of
Industrial Organization, MIT Press
7
Examples (contd)
P2
P1
P2
P1
Source Tirole, Jean, 1988, The Theory of
Industrial Organization, MIT Press
8
The Prisoners Dilemma
  • (D, D) is the dominant strategy equilibrium.
  • Si is a dominant strategy if Ui(Si, S-i)
    gtUi(Si, S-i) for all Si, S-i
  • i.e., the dominant strategy is independent of
    others strategies.
  • A dominant equilibrium is a Nash equilibrium.

9
Nash Equilibrium
  • A strategy vector S(S1, S2,, Sn) is a Nash
    Equilibrium if for all i,
  • Ui(Si, S-i) gtUi(Si, S-i) for all Si
  • The concept was originally shown in the Cournot
    duopoly game (we will talk about this later).
  • Nash showed for the first time in his
    dissertation, Non-cooperative games (1950), that
    Nash equilibria exist for finite games with any
    number of players. Until Nash, this had only been
    proved for 2-player zero-sum games by von Neumann
    and Morgenstern (1944)

10
Other Important Concepts
  • Sub-game perfect Nash equilibrium
  • Complete Information and Common Knowledge
  • Mixed Strategy equilibrium
  • Bayesian equilibrium
  • Note that not all games have an equilibrium.
  • Many games have multiple equilibria.
  • Some games have equilibria that are not good.

11
An Economic Example
  • Consider a monopoly who is the only one in the
    market that sells a particular product and there
    is no viable substitute goods.
  • The price is set by market and is a function of
    the total sales quantity
  • e.g. p D q, where D is a constant.
  • The production cost is also a function of the
    quantity.
  • e.g. C(q) cq, where c is a constant.
  • The monopoly solves the following optimization
    problem to determine the optimal sales quantity
    that maximize his profit.
  • The first-order condition yields

12
The Market Game
  • Assume two firms selling the same product. There
    are barriers to enter the market, so the two
    firms form a duopoly (oligopoly).
  • The market price is a function of the total sales
    quantity.
  • Payoffs (profits) to the two players are then

13
Nash Equilibrium
  • Nash Equilibrium is characterized by solving a
    system of best responses that translates into the
    system of first-order conditions
  • This is the classic Cournot duopoly model.
  • Are the firms more profitable?

14
Oligopoly Models
  • Collusion Model
  • Stackelberg Model
  • Cournot Model
  • N-Firm Nash Cournot
  • N? 8 Perfect Competition
  • Recommended Readings
  • Mas-Colell, Whinston, and Green, 2000,
    Microeconomic Theory
  • Varian, 1992, Microeconomic Analysis
  • Tirole, 1988, The Theory of Industrial
    Organization
  • Osborne and Rubinstein, A Course in Game Theory

15
A Supply Chain Example
  • Consider the classic newsvendor model
  • Each newsvendor buys Q units of a single product
    at the beginning of a single selling season.
  • Demand during the season is a random variable D
    with distribution function FD and density
    function fD.
  • Each unit is purchased for c and sold on the
    market for r gt c
  • In the absence of competition, each newsvendor
    solves the following optimization problem
  • with the unique solution

16
Competitive Newsvendors
  • Assume two newsvendors selling the same product.
    If retailer i is out of stock, all unsatisfied
    customers will try to buy at retailer j instead
    (competing on product availability).
  • Retailer is total demand is Di (Dj Qj).
    Payoffs to the two players are then
  • First-order conditions are
  • See Cachon and Netessine (2004) and Lippman and
    McCardle (1997) for competitive newsvendors.
  • Cachon, G. and S. Netessine. 2004. Game theory in
    Supply Chain Analysis. in Handbook of
    Quantitative Supply Chain Analysis Modeling in
    the eBusiness Era. edited by David Simchi-Levi,
    S. David Wu and Zuo-Jun (Max) Shen. Kluwer.
  • Lippman, S. and K. McCardle. 1997. The
    competitive newsboy. Operations Research. 45(1)
    54-65

17
Nash Equilibrium
  • Nash Equilibrium is characterized by solving a
    system of best responses that translates into the
    system of first-order conditions
  • The slope of the best response functions are
    negative, i.e., each players best response is
    monotonically decreasing in the other players
    strategy. (This makes intuitive sense)

18
Nash Equilibrium (contd)
  • The two best response functions form a best
    response mapping R2?R2 (or in the more general
    case Rn?Rn). One way to think about a Nash
    Equilibrium is a fixed point on the best response
    mapping R2?R2.

19
Nash Equilibrium (contd)
  • There exists at least one pure strategy Nash
    Equilibrium under the following conditions
  • For each player the strategy space is compact and
    convex and the payoff function is continuous and
    quasi-concave with respect to each players own
    strategy.
  • However, demonstrating uniqueness is generally
    much harder than demonstrating existence of
    equilibrium.

20
The Allocation Game
  • Consider a simple supply chain in which a single
    supplier sells to several downstream buyers.
  • The buyers are local monopolies (e.g., retailers,
    auto dealers of the same brand) that do not
    compete with each other for customers.
  • The supplier has limited (and fixed) capacity and
    sells the product at a fixed wholesale price.
  • If buyer orders exceed available capacity (demand
    is high), the supplier needs to allocate his
    restrictive capacity among buyers.
  • The allocation policy is publicly known
    (announced).
  • How will the choice of allocation policy impact
    buyer behavior and supply chain performance?

21
Recommended readings
  • Lee, H.L., V. Padmanabhan and S. Whang. 1997.
    Information distortion in a supply chain the
    Bullwhip effect. Management Science. 43(4)
    546-558
  • The allocation game is a major cause of the
    Bullwhip Effect.
  • Cachon, G. and M. Lariviere. 1999a. Capacity
    choice and allocation strategic behavior and
    supply chain performance. Management Science.
    45(8) 1091-1108
  • Cachon, G. and M. Lariviere. 1999b. Capacity
    allocation using past sales when to
    turn-and-earn. Management Science, 45(5)
    685-703. 
  • Cachon, G. and M. Lariviere. 1999c. An
    equilibrium analysis of linear and proportional
    allocation of scarce capacity. IIE Transactions.
    31(9) 835-850
  • Semiconductor Manufacturing Case
  • Mallik, S. and P.T. Harker. 2004. Coordinating
    supply chains with competition capacity
    allocation in semiconductor manufacturing.
    European Journal of Operational Research. 159(2)
    330-347
  • Karabuk, S. and S. D. Wu. 2005. Incentive schemes
    for semiconductor capacity allocation a game
    theoretic analysis. Production and Operations
    Management. 14(2) 175188.

22
Uniform (fixed) allocation policy
  • Under uniform (fixed) allocation, buyer i is
    allocated
  • where K is the fixed capacity xi retailer is
    order quantity.
  • Assume market price p D q (downward sloping
    linear demand)
  • Independent of K, each buyer orders the local
    monopoly quantity
  • It is straightforward to show that, under fixed
    allocation, the unique Nash equilibrium has each
    buyer selling minqi, K/2.

23
Linear allocation
Further, assume that buyer i orders xil if he
faces low demand situation and xih if he faces
high demand situation. There are some cases in
which identifying pure strategy Nash equilibria
is simple. For example, if Kgt2xih, each buyer
could order xi and be assured of receiving xi. A
buyer could never do better, so this is a unique
Nash Equilibrium. If Kltxih, neither buyer facing
high demand is ever satisfied. To secured the
full capacity, each buyer will try to order K
more that the other buyer. Hence the game reduces
to who can name the largest number and
naturally there is no Nash equilibrium. If
Kltxil, the buyer facing low demand with the
smaller order always receives less than his order
quantity so always has an incentive to raise his
order, thereby destroying any possible
equilibrium. See Cachon and Lariviere (1999c)
for other cases.
24
Proportional allocation
  • ai(xi,xj) minxi, xi/(xixj)K
  • As with linear allocation, there are some cases
    that no equilibrium exists. Symmetric equilibria
    are possible for some cases. See Cachon and
    Lariviere (1999c) for details.
  • With any equilibrium under linear or proportional
    allocation, the suppliers expected sales are
    declining in her capacity.
  • The supply chain must balance two objectives (1)
    increase the suppliers profit by increasing the
    capacity utilization and (2) increase the
    buyers profit by ensuring that the allotment
    closely matches the buyers true needs. Uniform
    allocation suppresses order inflation, so it
    performs well for the 2nd goal, but may perform
    poorly for the 1st goal. Inflation-inducting
    allocation policies (linear or proportional)
    perform the 1st goal well, and also the 2nd goal
    reasonably well when the order inflation is
    moderate and orderly, i.e., when there exists an
    equilibrium.

25
Prioritized allocation
  • The Suppliers Decision
  • Assume , it is straightforward to show
    that

26
Now assume that the buyers do compete for
customers (Cournot competition)
  • Assume downward sloping linear demand
  • The buyers decisions
  • Nash Equilibrium
  • The Nash equilibrium has buyer i selling
  • and buyer j selling
  • (Case 0)

27
What if the suppliers capacity K is explicit
knowledge?
  • Case 1 (loose supply)
  • According to the previous slide, the NE has both
    buyers selling their Cournot quantities.
  • Case 2 (tight supply)
  • The dominant equilibrium has buyer i selling
  • minK , (Dhi-ci)/2 and buyer j selling 0
  • under prioritized allocation. (still assume
    )

28
The supply chain can be more profitable when
keeping K inexplicit
  • Assume
  • it can be shown that the supplier is better off
    in Case 0 than in Case 2 ( ) if
    the supply is tight.
  • In addition, if implies ,
  • it can be shown that the Case 0 overall profit
  • is greater than the Case 2
  • overall profit
  • while

29
Multi-period model
  • Regular allocation mechanisms.
  • Allocation using past sales
  • The supplier reserves some capacity for the buyer
    who was the sales leader in the previous period.
  • See Cachon and Lariviere (1999b) for details.
  • Case A Period 1 Demand Low Period 2 Demand High
  • Is it beneficial for the buyers to carry
    inventory over the first period?
  • Case B Period 1 Demand Low Period 2 Demand Low
  • Is it beneficial for the buyers to allow
    backorders in the first period?

30
Another ExampleTwo-Period Allocation, Case A
  • Buyers second-period decisions are

Buyers optimal stock level are
given that the first-period allotment is
sufficient to cover s and her first-period sales
quantity.
Further, it can be shown that the marginal
increase in profit from increasing sales in the
second period is greater than the marginal cost
of holding inventory and buyer i would like to
stock a sufficient amount in the first period to
increase second-period sales under the following
condition
31
If uniform allocation is used
  • In period k, buyer i is allocated
  • minxki , K/2(K/2 xkj)
  • Suppose q1isi(K/2) gt K/2 (very tight supply),
  • the supplier will sell K in each period, and
    buyer i will sell min(2K-(D2-D1)hi)/4 ,K/2 in
    the first period. Sales can be sacrificed in the
    first period so that inventory can be carried
    into the second period, in which the marginal
    value of selling a unity is higher, since in the
    second period neither buyer has an advantage of
    receiving more that K/2 units under an uniform
    allocation mechanism.
  • Suppose q2igtK/2gtq1isi(K/2), (moderately tight
    supply)
  • buyer i will order q1isi(K/2) in the first
    period and sell K/2si(K/2) in the second period.
    Some of the suppliers capacity might be left
    idle in the first period. The uniform allocation
    may harm the suppliers profitability since it
    will not induce over-ordering from the buyers.

32
Conclusion
  • Game theoretic models are descriptive models that
    study strategic behaviors of players in a game
    setting.
  • In the capacity allocation game, it is important
    for the supplier to choose an appropriate
    allocation mechanism/policy that increases not
    only her capacity utilization but also the supply
    chain profitability and to derive conditions
    under which the policy performs well.
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