TY - GEN
T1 - Mechanism design for capacity allocation with price competition
AU - Furuhata, Masabumi
AU - Perrussel, Laurent
AU - Zhang, Dongmo
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Studies on mechanism design mostly focus on a single market where sellers and buyers trade. This paper examines the problem of mechanism design for capacity allocation in two connected markets where a supplier allocates products to a set of retailers and the retailers resale the products to end-users in price competition. We consider the problems of how allocation mechanisms in the upstream market determine the behaviors of markets in the downstream market and how pricing policy in the downstream market influences the properties of allocation mechanisms. We classify an effective range of capacity that influences pricing strategies in the downstream market according to allocated quantities. Within the effective capacity range, we show that the retailers tend to inflate orders under proportional allocation, but submit truthful orders under uniform allocation. We observe that heterogeneous allocations results in greater total retailer profit which is a unique phenomenon in our model. The results would be applied to the design and analysis of Business-to-Business (B2B) marketplaces and supply chain management.
AB - Studies on mechanism design mostly focus on a single market where sellers and buyers trade. This paper examines the problem of mechanism design for capacity allocation in two connected markets where a supplier allocates products to a set of retailers and the retailers resale the products to end-users in price competition. We consider the problems of how allocation mechanisms in the upstream market determine the behaviors of markets in the downstream market and how pricing policy in the downstream market influences the properties of allocation mechanisms. We classify an effective range of capacity that influences pricing strategies in the downstream market according to allocated quantities. Within the effective capacity range, we show that the retailers tend to inflate orders under proportional allocation, but submit truthful orders under uniform allocation. We observe that heterogeneous allocations results in greater total retailer profit which is a unique phenomenon in our model. The results would be applied to the design and analysis of Business-to-Business (B2B) marketplaces and supply chain management.
KW - Allocation mechanism design
KW - Oligopoly
KW - Supply chain management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=65449121117&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/1409540.1409598
DO - 10.1145/1409540.1409598
M3 - Conference Paper
AN - SCOPUS:65449121117
SN - 9781605580753
T3 - ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
BT - ICEC'08
T2 - 10th International Conference on Electronic Commerce 2008, ICEC'08
Y2 - 19 August 2008 through 22 August 2008
ER -