Distributional and peer-induced fairness in supply chain contract design

Teck Hua Ho, Xuanming Su, Yaozhong Wu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

234 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Members of a supply chain often make profit comparisons. A retailer exhibits peer-induced fairness concerns when his own profit is behind that of a peer retailer interacting with the same supplier. In addition, a retailer exhibits distributional fairness when his supplier's share of total profit is larger than his own. While existing research focuses exclusively on distributional fairness concerns, this study investigates how both types of fairness might interact and influence economic outcomes in a supply chain. We consider a one-supplier and two-retailer supply chain setting, and we show that (i) in the presence of distributional fairness alone, the wholesale price offer is lower than the standard wholesale price offer; (ii) in the presence of both types of fairness, the second wholesale price is higher than the first wholesale price; and (iii) in the presence of both types of fairness, the second retailer makes a lower profit and has a lower share of the total supply chain profit than the first retailer. We run controlled experiments with subjects motivated by substantial monetary incentives and show that subject behaviors are consistent with the model predictions. Structural estimation on the data suggests that peer-induced fairness is more salient than distributional fairness.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)161-175
Number of pages15
JournalProduction and Operations Management
Volume23
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2014
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Management Science and Operations Research
  • Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
  • Management of Technology and Innovation

Keywords

  • behavioral economics
  • behavioral operations management
  • distributional fairness
  • peer-induced fairness
  • supply chain contracting

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