Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
A Note on Ending Inventory Valuation in Multiperiod Production Scheduling
In a recent paper, Fisher et al. (2001) present a method tomitigate end-effects in lot sizing by including a valuation term for end-of-horizon inventory in the objective function of the short-horizon model. Computational tests show that the proposed method outperforms the Wagner-Whitin algorithm and the Silver-Meal heuristic, under several demand patterns, within a rolling horizon framework. We replicate the computational tests also including a straightforward method that assumes the same knowledge about future demand as the ending inventory valuation method. Our results indicate that the superior performance reported by Fisher et al. is to a large extent due to the fact that their method assumes that quite accurate knowledge about future demand is available, whereas the traditional methods do not use any information about demand beyond the short model horizon. Moreover, when quite accurate knowledge about future demand is indeed available, our results suggest that for some demand patterns, ending inventory valuation is not the most effective way to use this knowledge. Furthermore, we point out a minor mistake in the results reported by Fisher et al.
A Note on Ending Inventory Valuation in Multiperiod Production Scheduling
In a recent paper, Fisher et al. (2001) present a method tomitigate end-effects in lot sizing by including a valuation term for end-of-horizon inventory in the objective function of the short-horizon model. Computational tests show that the proposed method outperforms the Wagner-Whitin algorithm and the Silver-Meal heuristic, under several demand patterns, within a rolling horizon framework. We replicate the computational tests also including a straightforward method that assumes the same knowledge about future demand as the ending inventory valuation method. Our results indicate that the superior performance reported by Fisher et al. is to a large extent due to the fact that their method assumes that quite accurate knowledge about future demand is available, whereas the traditional methods do not use any information about demand beyond the short model horizon. Moreover, when quite accurate knowledge about future demand is indeed available, our results suggest that for some demand patterns, ending inventory valuation is not the most effective way to use this knowledge. Furthermore, we point out a minor mistake in the results reported by Fisher et al.
A Note on Ending Inventory Valuation in Multiperiod Production Scheduling
van den Heuvel, Wilco (Autor:in) / Wagelmans, Albert P.M. (Autor:in)
01.01.2002
RePEc:dgr:uvatin:20020067
Paper
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Multiperiod Highway Improvement and Construction Scheduling: Model Development and Application
British Library Online Contents | 1998
|Multiperiod Highway Improvement and Construction Scheduling: Model Development and Application
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1998
|Multiperiod Network Improvement Model
British Library Online Contents | 1994
|Multiperiod design optimization with SQP decomposition
TIBKAT | 1992
|Europeans’ willingness to pay for ending homelessness: A contingent valuation study
BASE | 2020
|