1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility...

33
1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy some future demand.

Transcript of 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility...

Page 1: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

1

Inventory Theory – Part IIQuantity Discounts

Constrained Inventory ManagementSingle Facility EOQ

A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy some future demand.

Page 2: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

2

Check it out!

The Engineering Manager’s and Management Scientist’s

Handy-Dandy Cheat Sheet for

Deterministic Continuous Review Inventory Models

This assignment is easy with the cheat sheet

Page 3: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

3

Quantity Discounts

• All Units Discounts: the discount is applied to ALL of the units in the order.

• Incremental Discounts: the discount is applied only to the number of units above the breakpoint.

Page 4: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

4

All Units Discount

Page 5: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

5

A Really nice property of the all unit discount solution

• For all units discounts, the optimal will occur at the bottom of one of the cost curves or at a breakpoint. (It is generally at a breakpoint).

• Compare the cost at the largest (Q) realizable EOQ and all of the breakpoints succeeding it.

Page 6: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

6

An Example

.30 0 500

( ) .29 500 1,000

.28 1,000

Q for Q

C Q Q for Q

Q for Q

Assume D = 600 per year, K = $8, and I = .20

(0)

0

(1)

1

(2)

2

2 (2)(8)(600)400

(0.2)(0.30)

2 (2)(8)(600)406

(0.2)(0.29)

2 (2)(8)(600)414

(0.2)(0.28)

KDQ

Ic

KDQ

Ic

KDQ

Ic

Page 7: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

7

ALL Units Discount

Q

TC(Q)

500 1000

TC0(Q)

TC1(Q)

TC2(Q)

400

Page 8: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

8

The Example Continued

0

1 0

2 0

(600)(8)( ) 600 .2

2 2

(400) $204 .30

( ) (500) $198.10 .29

(1,000) $200.80 .28

j j j j

o

DK Q QTC Q Dc Ic c c

Q Q

TC for c

TC Q TC for c

TC for c

I choose Q = 500.

Page 9: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

9

Incremental Discount

Page 10: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

10

Not so nice properties of the incremental discounting solution

• Minimum cost point will never occur at a breakpoint

• If the EOQ for an interval is in the interval, it still may not be optimal

• Must compute the EOQ for each price break– if it falls within the interval, compute the

average cost– pick the best

Page 11: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

11

Incremental Discounting

( ) ( )( )

2

C Q kD C Q QG Q D I

Q Q Q

Average annual inventory cost

C(Q) is the cumulative cost to purchase Q units

Page 12: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

12

Incremental Discounting Example

( ) ( )( )

2

C Q kD C Q QG Q D I

Q Q Q

Minimize average annual cost

0

8 600.30 .30( ) 600 .20

2

8 600600 .30 (.20)(.30) / 2

Q Q QG Q

Q Q Q

QQ

(0)

0

2 (2)(8)(600)400

(0.2)(0.30)

KDQ

Ic

.30 for 0 500

( ) 150 .29( 500) 5 .29 for 500 100

295 .28( 1000) 15 .28 for 1000

Q Q

C Q Q Q Q

Q Q Q

C(Q) / Q is averageunit cost

Page 13: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

13

Incremental Discounting Example

( ) ( )( )

2

C Q kD C Q QG Q D I

Q Q Q

1

8 600( ) 600 .29 5 / .20 .29 5 /

2

QG Q Q Q

Q

(1)

1

2 (2)(13)(600)519

(0.2)(0.29)

KDQ

Ic

.30 for 0 500

( ) 150 .29( 500) 5 .29 for 500 100

295 .28( 1000) 15 .28 for 1000

Q Q

C Q Q Q Q

Q Q Q

Page 14: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

14

Incremental Discounting Example.30 for 0 500

( ) 150 .29( 500) 5 .29 for 500 100

295 .28( 1000) 15 .28 for 1000

Q Q

C Q Q Q Q

Q Q Q

( ) ( )( )

2

C Q kD C Q QG Q D I

Q Q Q

2

8 600( ) 600 .28 15 / .20 .28 15 /

2

QG Q Q Q

Q

(2)

2

2 (2)(23)(600)702

(0.2)(0.28)

KDQ

Ic Not realizable

Page 15: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

15

Incremental Discounting( ) ( )

( )2

C Q kD C Q QG Q D I

Q Q Q

Page 16: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

16

Incremental Discounting Example

(0)

0

(1)

1

(2)

2

2 (2)(8)(600)400

(0.2)(0.30)

2 (2)(13)(600)519

(0.2)(0.29)

2 (2)(23)(600)702

(0.2)(0.28)

KDQ

Ic

KDQ

Ic

KDQ

Ic

Not realizable

( ) ( )( )

2

C Q kD C Q QATC Q D I

Q Q Q

Minimize average annual cost

G0(400) = $204.00G1(519) = $204.58

.30 for 0 500

( ) 150 .29( 500) 5 .29 for 500 100

295 .28( 1000) 15 .28 for 1000

Q Q

C Q Q Q Q

Q Q Q

Page 17: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

17

Resource ConstrainedMulti-Item Inventories

Consider an inventory system of n items in which the total amount available to spend is C and items cost respectively c1, c2, . . ., cn. Then this imposes the following constraint on the system:

1 1 2 2 ... n nc Q c Q c Q C

Page 18: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

18

The Model

1

1

( )2

:

nj j j

jj j

n

j jj

K D QT Q Ic

Q

subject to c Q C

Obviously this can be solved using the

generalized Lagrangian approach!

An EMS graduate

Page 19: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

19

Form the Lagrangian

1 1

2

1

( , )2

( , )0 1,2,...,

2

( , )0

j

n nj j j

j j jj jj

j j jj

n

j jj

K D QL Q Ic c Q C

Q

K D IcL Qc for j n

Q Q

L Qc Q C

Q

is called the Lagrangian multiplier

Page 20: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

20

Solve the Lagrangian

2

2

2

2 2;

2 2

j

j

j j jj

j j j jj

j j j j

Ic K Dc

Q

K D K DQ Q

Ic c Ic c

The approach:1. Pick a value for

2. Compute Qj and

3. Repeat 1. and 2. until1

n

j jj

c Q C

1

n

j jj

c Q

Page 21: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

21

What about other constraints?

• Max warehouse space

• Holding costs

• Average Stock on-hand

1

n

j jj

w Q W

1 2

nj

jj

QIc H

1

Stock2

nj

j

Q

I bet you can’t work an example of this

so called generalized Lagrangian approach.

Page 22: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

22

Warehouse space constraint

1 1

2

1

( , )2

( , )0 1,2,...,

2

( , )0

j

n nj j j

j j jj jj

j j jj

n

j jj

K D QL Q Ic w Q W

Q

K D IcL Qw for j n

Q Q

L Qw Q W

Q

Page 23: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

23

Solving…

2

2

2

2 2;

2 2

j

j

j j jj

j j j jj

j j j j

Ic K Dw

Q

K D K DQ Q

Ic w Ic w

Page 24: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

24

Example of the so-called generalized Lagrangian Approach

Unit Cost

Order Cost

Demand rate

Holding cost

Storage space

$/unit ($/order) (Units per day)

($ per unit per day)

(Sq. ft. / unit)

1 2.5 10 20 0.5 4.152 6 23 34 1.2 5.63 10 15 54 2 2.84 11.7 18 67 2.34 3.95 8.9 36 28 1.78 4.76 13.35 45 17 2.67 2.857 15.5 32 47 3.1 5.48 4.75 26 38 0.95 4.19 3.15 9 60 0.63 3.25

Item

Page 25: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

25

Find EOQ for each item independentlyEOQ unconstrn

inv order cost

inv hold cost

Total inv cost

storage

28.28 7.07 7.07107 14.14 117.436.10 21.66 21.661 43.32 202.228.46 28.46 28.4605 56.92 79.732.11 37.56 37.5635 75.13 125.233.65 29.95 29.952 59.90 158.223.94 31.96 31.9574 63.91 68.231.15 48.28 48.2825 96.57 168.245.61 21.66 21.6633 43.33 187.041.40 13.04 13.0422 26.08 134.6

$239.65 $239.65 $479.31 1240.6

Q x sq. ft., / unit

1,000 sq. ft. limitation

Page 26: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

26

Optimal Constrained SolutionEOQ EOQ cost storage

18.51 15.43 76.827.28 45.03 152.825.71 57.22 72.028.51 75.66 111.228.19 60.85 132.522.11 64.12 63.027.53 97.30 148.735.03 44.84 143.630.60 27.29 99.5

$487.73 1000.0

EOQ unconstrn

28.2836.1028.4632.1133.6523.9431.1545.6141.40

$479.31let Excel show the way…

Page 27: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

27

Single Facility Production Model

1. n items to produce2. Dj = constant demand rate for product j3. Pj = constant production rate for product j4. hj = holding cost per unit per unit time for product j5. Kj = fixed setup cost for product j6. sj = setup time for product j (not sequence dependent)7. no stock outs permitted

Determine production lot sizes (Qj) that will minimize relevant costs.

Page 28: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

28

Single Facility Production Model

Let T = cycle time in which one lot of each productis produced.

Then Qj = DjT in order to meet demands

And G(Qj) = Kj Dj / Qj + (1 - Dj/Pj) hj Qj /2

Note that 1

1n

j

j j

D

P

Page 29: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

29

1 1

1

(1 / )( )

2

(1 / )

2

n nj j j j j j

jj j j

nj j j j j

j

K D D P h QG Q

Q

K D P h D T

T

Total relevant costs:

21

1

1

(1 / ){}0

2

2

*(1 / )

nj j j j j

j

n

jj

n

j j j jj

K D P h Dd

dT T

K

Th D D P

P-D -D

Q/P

(P-D) Q/P = (1-D/P) Q

Qj = DjT

Page 30: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

30

T* must include production time + setup time

1 1 1 1

1 1

1min

1

1

1 /

n n n nj j j

j j jj j j jj j j

n nj

jj jj

n

jjn

j jj

Q D T DT S S S T

P P P

DT S

P

S

T TD P

SolutionSet T = Maximum{T*,Tmin}

Page 31: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

31

The Inevitable Example

Product 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 sum

Demand rate Dj (units/yr) 200 300 150 400 1000 250 2000 4300Prod Rate Pj (units/yr) 4000 4000 1500 2000 8000 2500 20000 42000Holding cost hj ($/item/yr) 2 3 4 2.5 3 1 5 20.5

Adj holding cost h'j ($/item/yr) 1.9 2.775 3.6 2 2.625 0.9 4.5 18.3

Setup time sj (yr) 0.004 0.008 0.002 0.008 0.004 0.002 0.008 0.036Set-up Cost (Kj) 20 40 10 40 20 10 40 180

Dj / Pj 0.05 0.075 0.1 0.2 0.125 0.1 0.1 0.75

(1-D/P) h1

1

2

*(1 / )

n

jj

n

j j j jj

K

Th D D P

to Excel and beyond…

Page 32: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

32

Single Facility Production ModelSome final thoughts

1

1n

j

j j

D

P

is the fraction of time the

facility is not producing1.

2. If products are made on different facilitiesThen use independent lot models.

3. If setup times or setup costs depend upon therotation order, then have a more difficultsequencing problem.

Page 33: 1 Inventory Theory – Part II Quantity Discounts Constrained Inventory Management Single Facility EOQ A quantity of commodity held for some time to satisfy.

33

EOQ Homework

I always work extra problems – not only the ones that are assigned!

Text Chapter 4: 4,8,10,12,13,14,17,20,21,2224,26,27,28,29,30,33,35,40 + Handout