EBK PRACTICAL MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
EBK PRACTICAL MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780100655065
Author: ALBRIGHT
Publisher: YUZU
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Chapter 12, Problem 28P

a)

Summary Introduction

To explain: The way (1), (2), and (3) changes as the setup cost ‘k’ decreases by 10%.

Inventory and supply chain models:

The functions of inventory and supply chain are one of the most important business decision areas for an organization. The first important aspect of these concepts is to have adequate inventory on hand. The second important aspect is to carry a little amount of inventory as possible.

a)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

The economic order quantity (EOQ) is given by the formula:

Q=2×k×Dhwhere:'k' is the setup cost.'D' is the demand.'h' is the holding cost.                                                                    (1)

The EOQ formula is substituted in the expression for annual holding cost and annual ordering cost to get the following result:

HC+OC=2×k×D×h                                                                         (2)

The time between orders is given by:

QD=2×kD×h                                                                                              (3)

The values of (1), (2), and (3) are multiplied by 0.9. Hence, the values change in such a way when the setup cost ‘k’ decreases by 10%.

b)

Summary Introduction

To explain: The way (1), (2), and (3) changes if the annual demand doubles.

b)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

The economic order quantity (EOQ) is given by the formula:

Q=2×k×Dhwhere:'k' is the setup cost.'D' is the demand.'h' is the holding cost.                                                                     (1)

The EOQ formula is substituted in the expression for annual holding cost and annual ordering cost to get the following result:

HC+OC=2×k×D×h                                                                        (2)

The time between orders is given by:

QD=2×kD×h                                                                                              (3)

The values of (1), (2), and (3) are multiplied by 2. Hence, the values change in such a way when the annual demand doubles.

c)

Summary Introduction

To explain: The way (1), (2), and (3) changes if the cost of capital increases by 10%.

c)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

The economic order quantity (EOQ) is given by the formula:

Q=2×k×Dhwhere:'k' is the setup cost.'D' is the demand.'h' is the holding cost.                                                                    (1)

The EOQ formula is substituted in the expression for annual holding cost and annual ordering cost to get the following result:

HC+OC=2×k×D×h                                                                        (2)

The time between orders is given by:

QD=2×kD×h                                                                                              (3)

Since h=ic (1) is multiplied by 11.1.

Equation (2) is multiplied by 1.1.

Equation (3) is multiplied by 11.1.

Hence, the values change in such a way when the cost of capital increases by 10%.

d)

Summary Introduction

To explain: The way (1), (2), and (3) changes as the changes of setup cost decreasing by 10%, doubling of annual demand, the increase in the cost of capital by 10% happen simultaneously.

d)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

The economic order quantity (EOQ) is given by the formula:

Q=2×k×Dhwhere:'k' is the setup cost.'D' is the demand.'h' is the holding cost.                                                                     (1)

The EOQ formula is substituted in the expression for annual holding cost and annual ordering cost to get the following result:

HC+OC=2×k×D×h                                                                         (2)

The time between orders is given by:

QD=2×kD×h                                                                                              (3)

Equation (1) is multiplied by 2.

Equation (2) is multiplied by 1.98.

Equation (3) is multiplied by 12.

Hence, the above changes happen due to the simultaneous changes in the various values.

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Students have asked these similar questions
United Airlines has an agreement to buy jet fuel from Exxon. The goal is to minimize total cost (i.e., ordering cost + holding cost). The annual demand for fuel is 201,000 barrels. Exxon charges United $3740 to process each order. United incurs a holding cost of $20 per barrel. When purchasing using the EOQ (from last question), what is the order cycle time (days between orders) for United? Note: round your answer to the nearest 1 decimal place. For example, answer like 12.3 Answer: Check
An item has normally distributed demand with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 50. They order a week with one week lead time. Backorders are allowed. A) With an order-up-to level of 300, on-hand inventory of 200, and on-order inventory of 60, how much will be ordered this week? B) What is the standard deviation of demand over 2 weeks?
Even if we have substantial uncertainty in the parameters in the EOQ-model, it is still quite a useful model. Why?
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