4.6 Article

Recovering Global Supply Chains from Sourcing Interruptions: The Role of Sourcing Strategy

Journal

Publisher

INFORMS
DOI: 10.1287/msom.2021.0967

Keywords

supply chain; sourcing interruption; supplier diversi fication; long-term relationships; empirical analysis; time to recovery

Funding

  1. Wharton Global Initiatives

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This study investigates the impact of different supply chain strategies on the recovery ability of supply chains from sourcing interruptions. The results show that supplier diversification is associated with slower recovery, while the use of long-term relationships is linked to faster recovery.
Problem definition: Fast recovery from sourcing interruptions is a key objective for global supply chains and for business continuity professionals. In this paper, we study the impact of different supply chain strategies-supplier diversification and the use of long-term relationships-on the ability of a supply chain to recover from sourcing interruptions. Academic/practical relevance: Improving supply chains' recovery ability has been an important focus area for both practitioners and academics. Collectively, available anecdotal evidence and theoretical analyses provide ambiguous recommendations driven by competing effects of different sourcing strategies. Our paper provides the first rigorous and large-scale empirical evidence relating the use of different supply chain strategies to the ability of a supply chain to recover from supply interruptions. Methodology: We develop a compound estimator of a supply chain's recovery rate that can be constructed using limited available data (only the time series of firms' actual sourcing behavior). Using more than two and half million import manifests, we extract firms' maritime sourcing transactions and use this data to estimate recovery rates of different firm-category supply chains of publicly traded U.S. firms. Results: We find that supplier diversification is associated with slower recovery from sourcing interruptions, whereas the use of long-term relationships is associated with faster recovery. A one standard deviation decrease in the former is associated with a 16% faster recovery, and a like increase in the latter is associated with a 20% faster recovery. Managerial implications: Our paper brings important empirical evidence to the hitherto theoretical debate on the impact of sourcing strategies on faster recovery in supply chains. We therefore provide actionable advice on supply chain design for faster recovery.

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