Line-of-credit payment scheme and its impact on the retailer's ordering policy with inventory-level-dependent demand
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1793113
DOI10.1155/2016/4027454zbMath1400.90005OpenAlexW2521628379WikidataQ59131229 ScholiaQ59131229MaRDI QIDQ1793113
Feng Lin, Tao Jia, Nengmin Wang, Zhengwen He
Publication date: 12 October 2018
Published in: Mathematical Problems in Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/4027454
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Optimal credit period and lot size for deteriorating items with expiration dates under two-level trade credit financing
- The EOQ with defective items and partially permissible delay in payments linked to order quantity derived algebraically
- A two-warehouse inventory model for deteriorating items under conditionally permissible delay in payment
- An inventory model for deteriorating items under stock-dependent demand and two-level trade credit
- Inventory models with inventory-level-dependent demand: A comprehensive review and unifying theory
- Economic design of an inventory policy for non-instantaneous deteriorating items under permissible delay in payments
- Economic order quantity under conditionally permissible delay in payments
- The optimal pricing and ordering policy for an integrated inventory model when trade credit linked to order quantity
- An economic order quantity model for deteriorating items with partially permissible delay in payments linked to order quantity
- Optimal ordering policies for perishable multi-item under stock-dependent demand and two-level trade credit
- Retailer's decision for ordering and credit policies for deteriorating items when a supplier offers order-linked credit period or cash discount
- An EPQ inventory model with allowable shortages for deteriorating items under trade credit policy
- A two-echelon inventory model for a deteriorating item with stock-dependent demand, partial backlogging and capacity constraints
- Supply chain model with price- and trade credit-sensitive demand under two-level permissible delay in payments
- “Stack Them High, Let ’em Fly”: Lot-Sizing Policies When Inventories Stimulate Demand
- Economic Order Quantity under Conditions of Permissible Delay in Payments
- A Deterministic Inventory System with an Inventory-Level-Dependent Demand Rate
- An ordering policy for deteriorating items with allowable shortage and permissible delay in payment
- Three stage trade credit policy in a three-layer supply chain–a production-inventory model
- An EPQ model for deteriorating items with inventory-level-dependent demand and permissible delay in payments
This page was built for publication: Line-of-credit payment scheme and its impact on the retailer's ordering policy with inventory-level-dependent demand