1. Introduction
The high-carbon economy, dominated by fossil fuels, leads to serious environmental problems around the world, especially air pollution. China is a prime example. The Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD 2013) of the World Health Organization (WHO) forecasts that air pollution will lead to 1.3 million premature deaths and more than 27 million years of life lost each year at the beginning of 2030 in China [
1]. Under such a harsh environment, many customers’ preference has turned to ‘low-carbon’ products. For example, the general public prefers organic food, green furnishings, and products from companies with favorable images. A study carried out by European Commission in 2008 shows that 75% of Europeans are ready to buy costlier green products, compared to 31% in 2005, and 72% of consumers support “carbon labels” [
2]. In this context, there is a growing number of suppliers participating in carbon emission reduction, energy efficiency improvement, and green materials usage.
Over the past few years, substantial effort by responsible firms has been made to reduce carbon emissions. Some firms optimize their operation process to improve energy efficiency [
3,
4,
5], and some invest in cleaner technologies to achieve low-carbon manufacturing [
6,
7,
8]. In practice, Walmart designs and opens low-carbon supermarkets [
9]; Siemens supports its supplier to reduce energy consumption [
10]; H&M adopts new technologies and launches the green label products [
11]; Quanyou Household, a Chinese company which received the “International Green Design Award” in 2012, invests in environmentally friendly materials and equipment to reduce carbon emissions, and produces sustainable products [
12]. Recent research focuses on the emission reduction decision and inventory policy. For instance, Benjaafar et al. [
13] integrated the carbon emission concerns into the simple supply chain system for the first time and found that inventory optimization can remarkably reduce emissions without considerably increasing cost. Chen et al. [
14] derived a condition under which a change in replenishment quantity can significantly reduce emissions without obviously increasing costs and interval range, in which the decrement of emissions is more than the increment of costs. Toptal et al. [
15] found that carbon emission reduction investment, additional to reducing emissions as per regulations, further reduce carbon emissions while reducing costs. Żuchowski [
16] put forward sustainable solutions to reduce emissions, consequently, in the long run, leading to a “green” warehouse. Chen et al. [
17] analysed the impact of emission reduction investment on the warehouse management decisions and performances.
In addition, considering the emission reduction decision driven by consumer’s low-carbon preference has gradually become a hotspot, for example, it has been found [
18,
19,
20,
21,
22] that the higher the consumer’s low-carbon preference, the more the consumers were willing to pay for eco-friendly products. As a result, the supplier is willing to win customers by reducing emissions. Other studies [
12,
23,
24,
25] also argued that the emission reduction decision is driven by consumer’s low-carbon preference. Swami and Shah [
26] argued that the ratio of the optimal emission reduction efforts put in by the manufacturer and the retailer is equal to the ratio of their emission reduction sensitivity ratios and emission reduction cost ratios. Du et al. [
27] found that the channel profit as well as emission reduction increases in consumer’s low-carbon preference simultaneously in particular cases. Dong et al. [
11] examined the emission reduction level of the manufacturer and order quantity of the retailer and found that the order quantity may be increasing in the wholesale price due to the effect of low-carbon emission consideration.
However, most of these studies with effort-dependent demand are based on the assumption of rational agents. In reality, especially in complex and uncertain environments, decision makers tend to believe that their information or their estimates are more accurate than they actually are, namely that they are overconfident [
28]. People, even experts, are prevalently overconfident in their estimations of random outcomes [
29,
30]. Hambrick [
31] suggested that the behavioural characteristics of decision makers matter for organizational performance, thereby extending to operational activities such as inventory and ordering decisions. Other studies [
32,
33,
34,
35,
36] have also confirmed that overconfidence is one of the most consistent, powerful, and widespread behavioural characteristics of decision makers in situations characterized by random outcome, both in field studies and controlled experiments. In field studies, Croson et al. [
34] showed that overconfidence leads the newsvendor to place suboptimal orders and earn lower profits than well-calibrated newsvendors; Bendoly et al. [
33] argued that overconfidence may lead purchasing managers to under-estimate the variance of demand or of lead-time, thus inducing them to hold too little safety stock. In controlled experiments, Ancarani et al. [
32] evidenced that overconfidence leads to worse performance in inventory management; by contrast, Li et al. [
37] found that overconfidence can potentially be a positive force. We extend these studies by incorporating the notion of overconfidence as a cognitive bias into a low-carbon supply chain system and find that, contrary to intuitive reasoning, the retailer’s performance is independent of his overconfidence.
As reviewed above, the existing literature have primarily examined joint decisions on carbon emission reduction and inventory management driven by consumer’s low-carbon preference. However, the research regarding how the consumer’s low-carbon preference and overconfidence of decision makers simultaneously affect emission reduction is never seen, which is very important for solving the operation decision problems, i.e., the impacts of supply chain agents’ deviation from rationality in decision on low-carbon operation. In this paper, hereby, we focus on joint decisions on carbon emission reduction and inventory replenishment with overconfidence and low-carbon preference. Under the condition of effort-dependent demand, such overconfidence may significantly affect emission reduction decision and the performance of all parties. Therefore, we incorporate both overconfidence of decision makers and consumer’s low-carbon preference into the general newsvendor model under four different scenarios: integrated SC (supply chain), decentralized SC, decentralized SC with an overconfident supplier, and decentralized SC with an overconfident retailer. In the extended cases, we further take various carbon policies into account when the supplier faces overconfidence. In particular, we provide insights to three important SC issues:
How does overconfidence affect emission reduction and replenishment decisions when consumer’s low-carbon preference is taken into account?
Could the supplier’s overconfidence hurt self-profit, and retailer’s?
How do various carbon policies affect the optimal decisions and further affect carbon emissions of the supply chain?
The differences between our work and the work in related literature are:
We simultaneously integrate the consumer’s low-carbon preference and overconfidence of decision makers into the joint decisions process of carbon emission reduction and inventory replenishment, and thus explore the deviation from supply chain operation caused by both.
With demand sensitive to emission and following normal distribution, we analytically explore the effects of overconfidence on the unbiased equilibrium results, including supplier’s overconfidence that biases the demand scale and retailer’s overconfidence that biases the random demand variance, but not it’s mean.
Contrary to commonly held beliefs, this result implies that the retailer’s performance is independent of the degree of his overconfidence.
The rest of this paper is organized as follows.
Section 2 examines problem characteristics, formulates the game-theoretical models, and derives optimal solutions for four decision scenarios.
Section 3 compares the equilibrium results among different settings and provides managerial insights.
Section 4 extends the model of Scenario 3 with various carbon policies.
Section 5 presents numerical analyses to further give more management insights.
Section 6 concludes the study. Some proofs are relegated to the “
Appendix”.
2. Problem Characteristics and Model Formulation
2.1. Problem Characteristics and Assumptions
In this paper, we consider a two-stage supply chain system composed of one supplier and one retailer. The supplier (denoted as s) provides a type of product in a make-to-order setting and sells them to customers in the end market by the aid of a retailer (denoted as r). The supplier is the main carbon emitter who contributes to the carbon footprint of the final product. Under the environmental support restrictions, the supplier invests in green technology to reduce carbon emissions during production and operation. In general, an increase in carbon reduction investment can effectively reduce the unit product carbon emissions, and in turn, for the customers with low-carbon preference, an increase in the level of carbon emission reduction effort can result in greater market demand. However, the level of emission reduction cannot increase infinitely and should be determined by the firms themselves. Hence, it is reasonable to assume that market demand is affected by both retail price and the level of emission reduction . We address two types of overconfidence: one is that the supplier overestimates the impacts of his emission reduction efforts on product demand, overconfidence factor is ; the other one is that the retailer underestimates the variability of the stochastic demand, overconfidence factor is . We capture the impacts of supplier’s overconfidence, retailer’s overconfidence, and consumer’s low-carbon preference on the supplier’s emission reduction efforts, retailer’s replenishment quantity, and profitability of supply chain players.
The following assumptions are considered in developing our mathematical models:
Assumption 1. The level of emission reduction satisfies and , i.e., the higher the carbon reduction investment, the more effort the supplier exerts, but marginal investment has diminishing return in efforts.
Assumption 2. Similar to the way as in [
38,
39],
we assume that both product wholesale price and retail price are constant in order to concentrate on the key problem, and set . Assumption 3. One party of the supply chain is fully rational if the other is overconfident, i.e., when , and when . and are exogenous parameters.
Assumption 4. The retailer faces stochastic demand for product, is a random factor following a normal distribution, a mean value of , a standard deviation value of , and in the range of , . The probability density function (PDF) and cumulative distribution function (CDF) of are and , respectively.
2.2. Model Formulation and Solution
In this section, we will first determine the demand function with consumer’s preference to low carbon and the investment cost function with emission reduction efforts, then characterize the supplier’s overconfidence and retailer’s overconfidence.
Supposing the market demand function the retailer faced follows an additive form defined as , and is the determined part of the demand function as the mean demand, coefficient reflects the consumer’s sensitiveness and preference level on low-carbon emission, and denotes the effort level of emission reduction. is the random part of the demand function as a random variable.
When consumers have low-carbon preference, the market demand of a product increases with supplier’s carbon emission reduction investment. Similar to the literature [
8], we assume that supplier’s emission reduction investment cost
is a concave increasing function regarding the emission reduction level
, as shown in
Figure 1. Constrained by the current technological level of carbon reduction, it is believed that the supplier cannot get carbon emission free by reducing all of his emissions, therefore the emission reduction level should satisfy
,
. Therefore, we denote the carbon reduction investment as a quadratic function of the emission reduction level, i.e.,
.
With an overconfident supplier–rational retailer, the supplier overestimates the impacts of his emission reduction efforts on market demand. The overestimated demand function can be expressed as , where larger implies more overconfidence. . The PDF and CDF of are and , respectively. With a rational supplier–overconfident retailer, the retailer underestimates the variability of the stochastic demand. The underestimated demand function can be expressed as , , where smaller implies more overconfidence. The PDF and CDF of are and , respectively.
Considering all the model assumptions, the supplier’s, retailer’s, and the overall supply chain’s profit functions are given as:
2.2.1. Scenario 1: Centralized Model
In this section, we consider a centralized system, where a central decision maker (the supplier, the retailer, or a third party) wishes to seek the optimal decision set (the effort level of emission reduction and replenishment quantity) of perfect equilibria of the whole supply chain.
Note that Equation (3) is similar to the classic newsvendor model, so we can easily obtain optimal effort level of emission reduction and replenishment quantity.
2.2.2. Scenario 2: Decentralized Model
In a decentralized supply chain system, the supplier moves first and decides the effort level of emission reduction to maximize his own profit based on the demand information. Then the retailer moves sequentially on the basis of the supplier's decision, will decide whether to accept or not, make plans on replenishment, and place orders to the supplier so as to maximize his profit. This is a typical complete information dynamic game in which the supplier acts as a Stackelberg leader and the retailer acts as a follower.
We employ the standard backward induction to solve the dynamic game described above. In the second game step, we solve the retailer’s expected profit function under the condition that the supplier’s emission reduction efforts are given. We obtain the optimal response function of the replenishment quantity by maximizing Equation (1).
Substituting Equation (6) into Equation (2), we get the optimal emission reduction efforts in the decentralized decision by the first- and second-order conditions.
Substituting Equation (7) into Equation (6) yields the optimal replenishment quantity in the decentralized decision.
① Scenario 3: When the supplier is overconfident of future demand
With an overconfident supplier–rational retailer, the demand function is
. According to the stocking factor method proposed by [
40], we similarly define a auxiliary variable
, represented stocking factor, as
Faced with Equation (1), the retailer’s expected profit function can be changed equivalently to
On the basis of Equation (10), the optimal response function of the replenishment quantity is
Similarly, substituting Equation (11) into Equation (2), we get the optimal emission reduction efforts denoted as
In fact, Equation (11) is a mathematical projection, not the actual response function of the retailer. Due to the assumption that the retailer is the follower and fully rational, when the supplier is overconfident, the actual response function of the retailer should be
according to Equation (6). Therefore, the optimal replenishment quantity is
② Scenario 4: When the retailer is overconfident of future demand
With a rational supplier–overconfident retailer, the demand function is
. Similarly, Equation (1) takes the following form
Faced with Equation (14), the optimal response function of the replenishment quantity is
Similarly, substituting Equation (15) into Equation (2), we get the optimal emission reduction efforts denoted as
Substituting Equation (16) into Equation (15) yields the optimal replenishment quantity denoted as
3. Game Equilibrium Analysis
Here, we compare the equilibrium results derived in the previous section and summarize the key findings and insights on the research.
Proposition 1. If , then ; if , then is always true.
Proof. From Equations (5) and (12), we can obtain , so has a threshold , i.e., when , and when . From Equations (5) and (7), we get , and incorporating the assumption , we find . Similarly, from Equations (7) and (12), we get , and incorporating the assumption and , we find . According to Equations (7) and (16), we obtain when .
This completes the proof. ☐
Proposition 1 shows that supplier’s overconfidence prompts the supplier to exert more effort on emission reduction, i.e., . According to the expression , is increasing in , and when increase to a certain threshold, emission reduction effort even exceeds that of the centralized decision, i.e., . There is no effect of the supplier’s emission reduction effort from retailer’s confidence in a rational supplier–overconfident retailer decentralized scenario, due to the assumption that the supplier is the leader and fully rational. Thus, the optimal emission reduction effort is the same as the case of decentralized model with a rational supplier–rational retailer, i.e., .
Proposition 2. (i) In the decentralized model with an overconfident supplier–rational retailer, the optimal replenishment quantity rises as supplier’s overconfidence factor increases and . (ii) In the decentralized model with a rational supplier–overconfident retailer, when , the optimal replenishment quantity rises as retailer’s overconfidence factor falls and . However, when , the optimal replenishment quantity falls as decreases and .
From Proposition 1, we know that supplier’s emission reduction effort rises as his overconfidence factor
increases in the decentralized decision with an overconfident supplier–rational retailer, which further adds demand. In the absence of emission-reduction cost sharing, the retailer would choose a higher replenishment quantity to gain more profits, thus we have
; under decentralized decision with a rational supplier–overconfident retailer, the smaller
(
), the smaller the variability of the stochastic demand, according to the “
“ criterion of normal distribution, which corresponds to a smaller feasible interval of demand and greater probability of the random variable being equal to the mean
, as shown in
Figure 2. The ratio
is called the critical fractile. When
, i.e.,
, the market is in a low-profit condition, retailer’s replenishment quantity rises as
falls and
corresponding to
or
in
Figure 2; when
, i.e.,
, the market is in a high-profit condition, retailer’s replenishment quantity falls as
decreases and
corresponding to
or
in
Figure 2. This means that the smaller
, the more eager the retailer is to get his replenishment quantity clear to the expected demand, in order to hedge the risk from underestimating of demand fluctuation.
Proposition 3. In the decentralized model with an overconfident supplier–rational retailer, the retailer’s profit increases and the supplier’s profit decreases with supplier’s overconfidence factor .
When the supplier is overconfident of future demand, he will overestimate the effects of his emission-reduction efforts on product demand. According to Proposition 1, increasing in will stimulate the supplier to exert more emission-reduction efforts, which further results in a carbon emission reduction overinvestment, as a result, the supplier’s profit will be hurt by his own overconfidence eventually. However, it is good for the retailer, as the retailer does not need to bear the emission reduction investment cost but benefits from the expansion effect of low-carbon products on market demand. In reality, the retailer is more likely to seek an overconfident supplier or mislead the supplier’s cognition through distorting the demand information to achieve his free-riding.
Proposition 4. In the decentralized model with a rational supplier–overconfident retailer, the supplier’s profit increases at for , and decreases at for , however, the retailer’s profit is independent of his overconfidence factor .
Proof. Substituting Equations (16) and (17) into Equation (2), we can obtain
Due to , we have , where . According to the properties of the CDF, we know that when , so and the supplier’s profit increases at , similarly, when , so and the supplier’s profit decreases at .
Substituting Equations (16) and (17) into Equation (1), we can obtain
where , so and the retailer’s profit is independent of his overconfidence factor .
This completes the proof. ☐
When the retailer is overconfident of future demand, he will underestimate the variability of the stochastic demand. According to Proposition 2, when , the retailer will make his replenishment quantity increase as rises, which may make the supplier’s profit rise with the wholesale price and marginal production cost being constant; however, when , the retailer will make his replenishment quantity decrease as rises, which may make the supplier’s profit decline.
The retailer’s profit has no relation with his overconfidence factor
, whether it is increasing or decreasing. The reason to this phenomenon may be: initial replenishment quantity from a rational retailer, due to his replenishment experience and information forecast, is already quite close to the actual market demand, however, an overconfident retailer tends to make replenishment quantity over-increased (
) or over-decreased (
) with respect to the overconfidence factor changing. When the replenishment quantity after increasing is more than the actual demand, the sale revenue, ordering cost, and holding cost increase, and the shortage cost decreases; when the replenishment quantity after decreasing is less than the actual demand, the sale revenue, ordering cost and holding cost decrease, and the shortage cost increases. The neutralization of revenues and costs results in that the retailer’s profit is independent of his overconfidence factor. What we find here is entirely different from those results in [
32,
35,
36,
37], which further enriches the related research involving overconfidence and low-carbon supply chain.
4. The Extension on Incorporating Different Carbon Emission Policies in the Modelling
Based on the above analysis, we can see consumer’s low-carbon preference give impetus to the supplier’s emission reduction efforts, while carbon emission policies of the government also have developed into important external motives for the development of low-carbon supply chain. Therefore, it is crucial to consider how the government participates in the game. On the basis of Scenario 3, in this section, we extend the proposed model to include three carbon policies: tax, cap-and-trade and hybrid carbon policies.
In the following, the subscript shows that the variable is under Scenario 3, where for tax policy; for cap-and-trade policy; for hybrid carbon policy.
4.1. Tax Policy
Under the carbon tax policy, the supplier is charged for his carbon emissions through taxes, which motivates the supplier to enhance emission reduction to further reduce the carbon tax penalty. This, in turn, implies that reducing in per unit emissions requires a certain amount of technical investment. Obviously, the supplier needs to make a trade-off between the tax rate and the investment cost to determine the carbon emission reduction effort level (as shown in
Figure 3).
Given the tax rate
, we can rewrite the profit function (2) of the upstream supplier with the initial carbon emissions amount
and emission-reduction efficiency
as
As to the case without carbon policy and emission reduction investment, it is easy to obtain the retailer’s replenishment quantity as follows.
The difference of carbon emissions between the low-carbon supply chain and the traditional supply chain can be defined as
, where
represents the supplier’s carbon emissions in the low-carbon supply chain and
represents the supplier’s carbon emissions in the traditional supply chain. Then, we can calculate and obtain
as
The following proposition can be obtained.
Proposition 5. (i) ; (ii) if and , then .
Proposition 5(i) indicates that the retailer always orders more in the low-carbon supply chain than in the traditional supply chain. The result in part (ii) of Proposition 5 is surprising: when is relatively high and is relatively low, the low-carbon supply chain under the optimal strategy will be no longer “low-carbon”. This demonstrates that for the pollution industries, the carbon tax policy may be invalid if environmental technology is not efficient enough to reduce carbon emissions.
4.2. Cap-and-Trade Policy
Under the cap-and-trade policy, the government allocates the supplier an initial carbon emission cap
, and the supplier invests in green technology to reduce carbon emissions subject to the limited carbon quota. After the emissions reduction, the supplier will buy or sell emission permits at carbon price
per unit of emission via a carbon trading market. The supplier’s trading willingness in the carbon market will depend on carbon price
, that is, the supplier’s total cost after the transaction should be less than the pre-transaction one (see
Figure 4).
We can rewrite the profit function of the upstream supplier as
To further discuss the government allocates an emission cap based on the output of the enterprise, that is, the enterprise with higher output can get a larger cap and that with lower output can get a smaller cap. We can substitute for to make further analysis, where represents the carbon quota per unit of product allocated by the government.
Then, the supplier’s profit function can be changed equivalently to
Proposition 6. The government allocates an emission cap according to the output brings higher supplier’s emission reduction level than according to the total cap, i.e., , and the difference between them is always positively influenced by both per-unit product allocation quota and carbon price .
Proof. According Equations (21) and (22), similar to the proof for Proposition 5, we can solve the optimization problem faced by the supplier respectively, and when
, the optimal effort level of emission reduction can be obtained as
Thus, it is easy to get .
This completes the proof. ☐
Proposition 6 shows that when the government allocates an emission cap based on the output, the supplier’s emission reduction level rises as increases and falls as decreases. That is, the supplier should develop different emission reduction strategies for different allocation policies of carbon quota set by the government in order to gain more market share.
4.3. The Analysis under the Joint Carbon Tax and Cap-and-Trade Policy
With a carbon tax policy, the firm’s carbon emissions reduction is affected by interactions between the tax rate and marginal costs of emission reduction. When the tax rate is lower while the marginal costs of emission reduction is higher, the effect of emissions reduction under the carbon tax policy will be worse, then a higher carbon price can be imposed by the market to achieve emission reduction. It is the same case with cap-and-trade policy. Based on the analysis, we investigate the joint carbon tax and cap-and-trade policy (see
Figure 5).
Based on Equations (18) and (21), under the joint carbon tax and cap-and-trade policy, the optimal problem faced by the upstream supplier with policy parameters
,
,
can be expressed as
Proposition 7. Under the joint carbon tax and cap-and-trade policy, relationship between the carbon tax and the carbon price is complementary.
From the external policy standpoint, the carbon tax and carbon price are determined by the government regulation and carbon trading market respectively, therefore, the joint carbon tax and cap-and-trade policy is a mechanism of the government regulation and carbon trading market working together. As a result, relationship between the carbon tax and the carbon price is complementary, that is the lower the carbon price decided by the market is, the higher the tax rate imposed by the government is. With the rise of carbon price, intervention from the government experiences a gradual decline; similarly, with a relaxed tax rate, the carbon trading market will play a much larger role in reducing emissions.
6. Conclusions
The paper develops models and game-theoretically analyzes low-carbon operations under four different scenarios (integrated SC, decentralized SC, decentralized SC with an overconfident supplier, and decentralized SC with an overconfident retailer). We characterize respectively supplier’s overconfidence and retailer’s overconfidence, and examine how overconfidence and consumer’s low-carbon preference impact the performances of each SC player and the whole SC.
The research makes several key contributions. First, unlike previous studies, we prove that the supplier’s overconfidence can mitigate double marginalization but hurt self-profit, while the retailer’s overconfidence can be an irrelevant factor for self-profit. Second, our research findings have some interesting managerial insights. For instance, the retailer aiming at short-term trading should actively seek an overconfident supplier, while the supplier should actively seek a rational retailer for whom the critical fractile is more than 0.5, whereas for an overconfident retailer, the critical fractile is less than or equal to 0.5. Finally, our simulation results also provide important policy implications. For example, cap-and-trade policy is superior to tax policy under the same conditions; the joint carbon tax and cap-and-trade policy works best for emission-reduction amount or emission-reduction efficiency; the government (the carbon trading market) should tighten the carbon constraint for the clean industry and relax the carbon constraint for the dirty industry.
Further studies may consider the wholesale price as an endogenous variable, which changes with emission reduction level of the supplier, and concentrate on the case that the supplier’s and the retailer’s overconfidence are asymmetric.