报告(讲座)题目:: The Impact of Tariffs and Price Premiums of Locally Manufactured Products on Global Manufacturers' Sourcing Strategies
主讲人:王鑫(西南财经大学工商管理学院)
举办时间:2024年5月24日10:00-11:30
举办地点:A北202 第二会议室
【主讲人简介】:
王鑫,西南财经大学工商管理学院和大数据研究院教授,国家级青年人才。本科毕业于清华大学,博士毕业于卡耐基梅隆大学商学院,获运营管理学博士学位。曾任职于香港科技大学工业工程及决策分析学系。研究方向为全球供应链管理、技术创新和创新商业模式。针对我国企业在国际运营过程中面临的诸多风险和挑战,以数字驱动为指引,从企业创新、拓展市场和增强供应链韧性等方面多角度优化企业竞争策略。在UTD24期刊Management Science和Production and Operations Management发表论文5篇。获教育部高等学校科学研究优秀成果奖(人文社会科学)二等奖、广东省哲学社会科学优秀成果一等奖、INFORMS Technology, Innovation Management and Entrepreneurship Section (TIMES) Best Working Paper Competition一等奖。
【主讲内容简介】:
The past decade has seen significant pressure to return manufacturing to developed countries. Such movements call for import tariffs to be raised and consumers' valuation of products made from locally sourced components increased. These factors are believed to stimulate firms operating in a single market to source components locally. However, it is not clear that they are equally effective for multinational firms that produce and sell products in multiple markets. To enrich the understanding of this issue, we build a game-theoretical model to analyze the sourcing decisions of a global manufacturer that maintains production sites and sells products in both domestic and foreign markets in a competitive environment. The firm can choose either to source components from suppliers located in the same markets as the manufacturing sites to gain tariff savings and a price premium from consumers' higher valuation, or to source all components from a single foreign supplier to obtain a lower sourcing cost. We find that the structure of the global supply chain plays a critical role in the firm's sourcing strategy. Consumers' higher valuation of locally manufactured goods always promotes local sourcing. Raising tariffs, however, might backfire and discourage local sourcing because of the firm's global supply chain structure and the foreign supplier's strategic response to higher tariffs. Finally, local sourcing may reduce the consumer surplus even though consumers place a higher value on locally manufactured goods. This paper sheds light on recent movements to return manufacturing to developed countries and demonstrates the importance of taking the manufacturer's global supply chain structure and vertical interaction with suppliers into account.