Continuous-review, lost-sales inventory models with Poisson demand, a fixed lead time and no fixed order cost [An article from: European Journal of Operational Research]
Book Details
Author(s)R.M. Hill
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000PAUS7A
ISBN-13978B000PAUS71
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This digital document is a journal article from European Journal of Operational Research, published by Elsevier in 2007. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
This paper considers continuous-review lost-sales inventory models with no fixed order cost and a Poisson demand process. There is a holding cost per unit per unit time and a lost sales cost per unit. The objective is to minimise the long run total cost. Base stock policies are, in general, sub-optimal under lost sales. The optimal policy would have to take full account of the remaining lead times on all the orders currently outstanding and such a policy would be too complex to analyse, let alone implement. This paper considers policies which make use of the observation that, for lost sales models, base stock policies can be improved by imposing a delay between the placement of successive orders. The performance of these policies is compared with that of the corresponding base stock policy and also with the policy of ordering at fixed and regular intervals of time.
Description:
This paper considers continuous-review lost-sales inventory models with no fixed order cost and a Poisson demand process. There is a holding cost per unit per unit time and a lost sales cost per unit. The objective is to minimise the long run total cost. Base stock policies are, in general, sub-optimal under lost sales. The optimal policy would have to take full account of the remaining lead times on all the orders currently outstanding and such a policy would be too complex to analyse, let alone implement. This paper considers policies which make use of the observation that, for lost sales models, base stock policies can be improved by imposing a delay between the placement of successive orders. The performance of these policies is compared with that of the corresponding base stock policy and also with the policy of ordering at fixed and regular intervals of time.
