2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.apm.2016.05.033
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The bullwhip effect in a 3-stage supply chain considering multiple retailers using a moving average method for demand forecasting

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Cited by 31 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Costantino et al [43] thought that information could not be shared is the root cause of the BWE; besides, inaccurate predictions and high-security stocks are factors that produce the BWE. A substantive amount of the literature shows that information sharing among supply chain participants can considerably alleviate the BWE [44,45] because the most crucial reason for the BWE is the existence of uncertain demand and information asymmetry [46]. Tai et al [25] paid much attention to SCC with the BWE and stochastic demand, but they did not consider the environment of DTs.…”
Section: Supply Chain Coordination Considering the Bullwhipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Costantino et al [43] thought that information could not be shared is the root cause of the BWE; besides, inaccurate predictions and high-security stocks are factors that produce the BWE. A substantive amount of the literature shows that information sharing among supply chain participants can considerably alleviate the BWE [44,45] because the most crucial reason for the BWE is the existence of uncertain demand and information asymmetry [46]. Tai et al [25] paid much attention to SCC with the BWE and stochastic demand, but they did not consider the environment of DTs.…”
Section: Supply Chain Coordination Considering the Bullwhipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Instead of the variance ratio of demand to order, the ratio of coefficient of variation is used to measure the bullwhip effect (Trapero and Pedregal, 2016). Later, many other ratios such as inventory to demand, shipment ratio and manufacturing ratio (Khosroshahi et al, 2016;Cannella et al, 2013) were introduced to measure the bullwhip effect. Other methods such as Financial variables on bullwhip effect continues ratio method (Trapero and Pedregal, 2016) and Lyapunov exponent (Makui and Madadi, 2007) are also used to measure the bullwhip effect.…”
Section: Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In supply chain management, a typical approach to demand forecasting involves the use of statistical tools, in the form of exponential smoothing, time series regression and autoregressive and integrated moving average (ARIMA) models (Fildes et al, 2009;Silva Filho et al, 2013;Babai et al, 2013;Khosroshahi et al, 2016;Huber et al, 2017). These models all assume linear relationship between independent and dependent variables, which is not always the case for demand forecasting in retail distribution (Gruen and Corsten, 2007).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%