The moderating impact of supply network topology on the effectiveness of risk management
Authored by Anna Ledwoch, Hakan Yasarcan, Alexandra Brintrup
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpe.2017.12.013
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Pseudocode
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
While supply chain risk management offers a rich toolset for dealing
with risk at the dyadic level, less attention has been given to the
effectiveness of risk management in complex supply networks. We bridge
this gap by building an agent based model to explore the relationship
between topological characteristics of complex supply networks and their
ability to recover through inventory mitigation and contingent
rerouting. We simulate upstream supply networks, where each agent
represents a supplier. Suppliers' connectivity patterns are generated
through random and preferential attachment models. Each supplier manages
its inventory using an anchor-and-adjust ordering policy. We then
randomly disrupt suppliers and observe how different topologies recover
when risk management strategies are applied. Our results show that
topology has a moderating effect on the effectiveness of risk management
strategies. Scale-free supply networks generate lower costs, have higher
fill-rates, and need less inventory to recover when exposed to random
disruptions than random networks. Random networks need significantly
more inventory distributed across the network to achieve the same fill
rates as scale-free networks. Inventory mitigation improves fill-rate
more than contingent rerouting regardless of network topology.
Contingent rerouting is not effective for scale-free networks due to the
low number of alternative suppliers, particularly for short-lasting
disruptions. We also find that applying inventory mitigation to the most
disrupted suppliers is only effective when the network is exposed to
frequent disruptions; and not cost effective otherwise. Our work
contributes to the emerging field of research on the relationship
between complex supply network topology and resilience.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
Scale-Free Networks
Complex adaptive systems
emergence
resilience
perspective
random networks
Strategies
Mitigation
Chain
Supply chain risk management
Complex supply networks
Inventory mitigation
Contingent rerouting
Disruption risk
Inventory model