Channel Performance under Consignment Contract with Revenue Sharing
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Under a consignment contract with revenue sharing, a supplier decides on
the retail price and delivery quantity for his product, and retains ownership
of the goods; for each item sold, the retailer deducts a percentage from the
selling price and remits the balance to the supplier. In this paper we show
that, under such a contract, both the overall channel performance and the
performance of individual firms depend critically on demand price elasticity
and on the retailer’s share of channel cost. In particular, the (expected)
channel profit loss, compared with that of a centralized system, increases with
demand price elasticity and decreases with retailer’s cost share, while the
profit share extracted by the retailer decreases with price elasticity and
increases with retailer’s cost share. With an iso-price-elastic
demand model, we show that the channel profit loss cannot exceed 26.4%, and
that the retailer’s profit share cannot be below 50%. When price elasticity is
low, or when the retailer’s cost share approaches 100%, or both, the retailer
can extract nearly all the channel profit that is almost equal to the
centralized channel profit.