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Supply Chain Debt Financing in Competition
Author(s): Qiaohai (Joice) Hu;Ping Su
Source: Journal:Foundations and Trends® in Technology, Information and Operations Management ISSN Print:1571-9545, ISSN Online:1571-9533 Publisher:Now Publishers Volume 10 Number 3-4, Pages: 21 (388-406) DOI: 10.1561/0200000070 Keywords: Supplier financing;Supply chain finance;Cost of capital
Abstract:
The seminal paper of Brander and Lewis (1986) concludes that
debt financing causes two firms that engage in a Cournot game to
behave more aggressively in the product market. However, both
firms are worse off than if they are purely equity financed, resulting
in the so-called prisoner’s dilemma. Incorporating two supply
chain structures, distributional and parallel, we explore the effect
of supply chain upstream structure on the downstream retailers’
strategic use of debt. We find that this prisoner dilemma persists
because the upstream benefits from the intensified downstream
competition. Moreover, the supply expansion effect is more pronounced
in the parallel structure than in the distributional one,
because each dedicated supplier in the parallel structure abets
its retailer to compete more aggressively against the competitor
by lowering its wholesale price. Therefore, the strategic effect of
debt financing not only deters the competitor but also “squeezes”
its supplier. In contrast, the common supplier in the distributional
structure adopts an inertia strategy, keeping the same price
regardless of the downstream’s debt levels because overheated
downstream competition may be detrimental to it.
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