英文摘要 |
To stimulate sales and remain competitive, the seller usually offers the buyer a credit period to settle the purchase amount with no interest charges. In addition, the more quantity produced and sold, the cheaper the unit production cost due to the learning-by-experience effect. Therefore, from the seller’s perspective, offering trade credit increases sales volume, resulting in lower unit production cost. On the other hand, granting trade credit increases not only interest loss during credit period but also default risk. However, relatively little attention has been paid to the fact that trade credit increases sales volume and reduces the production cost due to the learning-by-experience effect. In this paper, we develop the seller’s optimal credit period and number of deliveries in an Economic Production Quantity model in which trade credit has positive impacts on sales and learning production cost while it has negative impacts on interest loss and default risk. We then formulate the problem as a mixed integer programming problem, and solve it by computer software. For simplicity, we propose a remarkably good heuristic algorithm. Finally, we use sensitivity analysis to show several managerial insights, and that the learning-by-experience effect can significantly increase the seller’s credit period and total profit. |