Inventory management with random supply and imperfect information: A hidden Markov model
In most of the papers on inventory models operating in a random environment, the state of the environment in each period is assumed to be fully observed with perfect information. However, this assumption is not realistic in most real-life situations and we provide a remedy in this paper by assuming that the environment is only partially observed with imperfect information. We accomplish this by analyzing two formulations of single-item models with periodic-review and random supply in a random environment. In the first one, supply is random due to random capacity of production and random availability of transportation. We show that state-dependent base-stock policy is optimal if the capacity and all costs are observed, while demand and availability are unobserved. In the second model, we consider a model with random availability only with fixed-ordering cost. We show that state-dependent (s,S) policy is optimal if the availability process is observable.
Year of publication: |
2011
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Authors: | Arifoglu, Kenan ; Özekici, Süleyman |
Published in: |
International Journal of Production Economics. - Elsevier, ISSN 0925-5273. - Vol. 134.2011, 1, p. 123-137
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Random supply Random environment Imperfect information Base-stock policy Dynamic programming Sufficient statistics POMDP |
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