International Financial Networks and Global Supply Chains Jose Cruz Presentation at MKIDS Mini-Workshop September 10, 2003 Virtual Center for Supernetworks.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
UNIT 1 CONCEPT OF MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS (continue)
Advertisements

Introduction to Supply Chain Management
Part One Introduction.
Alexei A. Gaivoronski IIASA, Workshop on Coping with Uncertainty, Stochastic optimization and modeling of network risk and uncertainty:
Towards a spatially and socially explicit Chinese agricultural policy model: A welfare approach M.A. Keyzer Lecture 3 Presentation available:
Dynamics of Supply Chains: A Multilevel Network Perspective on Sustainable Freight Movements Frank Southworth* STELLA Workshop on Globalization, E-Economy.
11/05/99 1 eBusiness Overview. 11/05/99 2 eBusiness - Definition eBusiness is a framework for seamless integration of critical business systems and their.
March 25, 2005 Design for Global Sustainability Spring 2005 UMASS Amherst Operations Research / Management Science Seminar Series Fuminori Toyasaki Virtual.
Supernetworks Qiong June Dong School of Business.
A Heuristic Bidding Strategy for Multiple Heterogeneous Auctions Patricia Anthony & Nicholas R. Jennings Dept. of Electronics and Computer Science University.
Dynamic Spectrum Management: Optimization, game and equilibrium Tom Luo (Yinyu Ye) December 18, WINE 2008.
Welcome to the Supernetwork Computation and Visualization Laboratory!
Supply Chain Design Problem Tuukka Puranen Postgraduate Seminar in Information Technology Wednesday, March 26, 2009.
Statics and Dynamics of Complex Network Systems: Supply Chain Analysis and Financial Networks with Intermediation Ke MKIDS Mini-Workshop September 10,
Marketing Today Evans & Berman Chapter 1.
Mark de Haan Global Production Factoryless Goods Producers (FGPs) 9th AEG Meeting 8-10 September 2014, Washington DC.
Supply Chains and the Environment Fuminori Toyasaki MKIDS Mini-Workshop September 10, 2003 The Virtual Center for Supernetworks.
Outline of Research Activities Dmytro Matsypura Presentation at MKIDS Mini-Workshop September 10, 2003 Virtual Center for Supernetworks.
Emerging Trends in Business. Outsourcing Contracting out of a business function, which was previously performed in-house, to an external provider. Contracting.
Part 1 Marketing Channel Systems. Primer on “The Basics” What is Marketing?
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 11 Business/IT Strategies for Development.
Operations Management Session 25: Supply Chain Coordination.
Supply Chain Management COSC643 E-Commerce Supply Chain Management Sungchul Hong.
Equilibrium problems with equilibrium constraints: A new modelling paradigm for revenue management Houyuan Jiang Danny Ralph Stefan Scholtes The Judge.
Marketing Channel Systems
Managerial Economics Prof. M. El-Sakka CBA. Kuwait University Managerial Economics in a Global Economy Chapter 1 B.
By Saparila Worokinasih
1 California State University, Fullerton Chapter 12 Electronic Commerce and the Strategic Impact of Information Systems.
Distribution Outlook The Impact on Sales of Computer Products Prepared for the Global Technology Distribution Council.
Buying Behavior and the Buying Process  What are the different types of customers?  How do organizations make purchase decisions?  Which factors do.
A Framework for Distributed Model Predictive Control
Copyright © 2004 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. Developed by Cool Pictures and MultiMedia Presentations.
G-commerce Computational economies for resource allocation in computational Grid settings Fundamentals Resources are not free Resources are not free For.
Trust-Aware Optimal Crowdsourcing With Budget Constraint Xiangyang Liu 1, He He 2, and John S. Baras 1 1 Institute for Systems Research and Department.
MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS Mintarti Rahayu Introduction to Managerial Economics.
Federation des Experts Comptables Méditerraneens Bucharest May 2003 Challenges Facing the Profession Information Technology: Enterprise Innovation.
Lead Black Slide Powered by DeSiaMore1. 2 Chapter 12 Electronic Commerce and the Strategic Impact of Information Systems.
PENN S TATE Department of Industrial Engineering 1 Revenue Management in the Context of Dynamic Oligopolistic Competition Terry L. Friesz Reetabrata Mookherjee.
1 Dynamics of Competition Between Incumbent and Emerging Network Technologies Youngmi Jin (Penn) Soumya Sen (Penn) Prof. Roch Guerin (Penn) Prof. Kartik.
Leader-Follower Framework For Control of Energy Services Ali Keyhani Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering The Ohio State University
Chapter 1 Marketing Channel Concepts.
A Study of Central Auction Based Wholesale Electricity Markets S. Ceppi and N. Gatti.
Supernetworks: Paradoxes, Challenges, and New Opportunities Anna Nagurney John F. Smith Memorial Professor The Virtual Center for Supernetworks.
Arben Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Prescriptive Analytics CHAPTER 7 Business Analytics with Shipment Models Business Analytics with Management.
Inventory Management and Risk Pooling (1)
DISTRIBUTION AND NETWORK MODELS (1/2)
Lead Black Slide. © 2001 Business & Information Systems 2/e2 Chapter 12 Electronic Commerce and the Strategic Impact of Information Systems.
Copyright ©2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall.1-1 Course Code MGT 561 Supply Chain Management Book: Supply Chain Management Strategy,
Department of Marketing & Decision Sciences Part 5 – Distribution Wholesaling and Physical Distribution.
BY: A. Mahmood, M. N. Ullah, S. Razzaq, N. Javaid, A. Basit, U. Mustafa, M. Naeem COMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Islamabad, Pakistan.
Introduction to Supply Chain Management Designing & Managing the Supply Chain Chapter 1 Byung-Hyun Ha
Objectives of the Session By the end of this session, it will be hoped to achieve the following objectives;  To understand the nature and scope of managerial.
INTRODUCTION.   Definition of Managerial Economics Application of economic tools and techniques to business and administrative decision-making; another.
DEPARTMENT/SEMESTER ME VII Sem COURSE NAME Operation Research Manav Rachna College of Engg.
Chapter 1 The Nature and Scope of Managerial Economics.
©2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Dynamics of Competition Between Incumbent and Emerging Network Technologies Youngmi Jin (Penn) Soumya Sen (Penn) Prof. Roch Guerin (Penn) Prof. Kartik.
Nature and Scope of Managerial Economics (Chapter 1 Hirschey) INTRODUCTION.
Assignment 1: Case Study 2
Marketing Channel Systems
Marketing Channel Systems
System Control based Renewable Energy Resources in Smart Grid Consumer
SISTEM INFORMASI ENTERPRISE
ISCOM 383 Education for Service-- snaptutorial.com.
ISCOM 383 CART Lessons in Excellence- -iscom383cart.com.
ISCOM 383 Teaching Effectively-- snaptutorial.com.
Research on profit distribution mechanism of industrial innovation platform based on Grey System Theory Wang lei,Tan qingmei Nanjing University of Aeronautics.
Marketing Channel Systems
Operations Management
Presentation transcript:

International Financial Networks and Global Supply Chains Jose Cruz Presentation at MKIDS Mini-Workshop September 10, 2003 Virtual Center for Supernetworks

My Research My general area is complex decision making on network systems with a specific focus on global issues. I am especially interested in international financial networks with intermediaries and electronic transactions, and global supply chain networks. The methodological tools that I utilize are: variational inequalities, dynamical systems, network theory, multicriteria decision-making, and optimization.

Publications Nagurney, A. and J. Cruz (2003), “International Financial Networks with Electronic transactions," in Innovations in Financial and Economic Networks, A. Nagurney, editor, Edward Elgar Publishers, Cheltenham, England. Nagurney, A., J. Cruz and D. Matsypura (2003), “Dynamics of Global Supply Chain Supernetworks," Mathematical and Computer Modelling, 37, Nagurney, A. and J. Cruz, (2002), “International Financial Networks with Intermediation: Modeling, Analysis, and Computations," to appear in Computational Management Science; Nagurney, A., K. Ke, J. Cruz, K. Hancock and F. Southworth (2002), “Dynamics of Supply Chains: A Multilevel (Logistical/Informational/Financial) Network Perspective,” Environment & Planning B, 29,

Publications Nagurney, A., J. Cruz and J. Dong (2003), “Global Supply Chain Networks and Risk Management “; Nagurney, A. and J. Cruz (2003), “ Dynamics of International Financial Networks with Risk Management “; Nagurney, A., J. Cruz, J. Dong and D. Zhang (2003), “Supply Chain Networks, Electronic Commerce, and Supply Side and Demand Side Risk”;

Background for International Financial Networks and Global Supply Chains Advances in telecommunications, including the adoption of the Internet by businesses, consumers, and financial institutions have had an enormous effect on financial services and options available for financial transactions. Distribution channels have been transformed, new types of services and products introduced. Electronic commerce (e-commerce) through the Internet has allowed for new connections not previously possible.

Motivation Growing competition and emphasis on efficiency and cost reduction, as well as the satisfaction of consumer demands, have brought new challenges for businesses in the global marketplace. Business to Business eCommerce is estimated to reach over $3 trillion by the end Business to Consumer transactions are forecasted to soar to $184 billion by 2004.

Background At the same time that businesses increasingly globalized, the world environment has become filled with uncertainty. For example, recently, the threat of illness in the form of SARS (see Engardio et al. (2003)) has disrupted supply chains, as have terrorist threats (cf. Sheffi (2001)). There is an increase need for the development of Optimal Knowledge network.

The approach That we have utilized for the study of International Financial Networks and Global Supply Chains is the concept of Supernetworks; see the book by Nagurney and Dong (2002).

Supernetworks: A New Paradigm

Supernetworks Supernetworks may be comprised of such networks as transportation, telecommunication, logistical, and/or financial networks. They may be multilevel as when they formalize the study of supply chain networks or multitiered as in the case of financial networks with intermediation. Decision-makers may be faced with multiple criteria; thus, the study of supernetworks also includes the study of multicriteria decision- making.

Applications of Supernetworks Telecommuting/Commuting Decision- Making Teleshopping/Shopping Decision-Making Supply Chain Networks with Electronic Commerce Financial Networks with Electronic Transactions.

A Supernetwork Framework for International Financial Networks

The Supernetwork Structure of a Global Supply Chain Networks

The International Financial Networks and Global Supply Chains Models : handles multiple tiers of multicriteria decision- makers on multiple levels of networks in order to represent not only the abstraction of the decisions but also competition, cooperation, and interrelationships; handles as many countries, currencies, source agents/manufactures, intermediaries/ distributors/Retailers, and demand markets as mandated by the specific application; Characteristics of the Models

considers two modes of transactions: physical and electronic; risk will be an explicit criterion to be minimized with appropriate associated weights selected by the decision-makers in order that they may trade-off this criterion versus others; includes uncertainty into the underlying production, demand, and cost functions; predicts not only the equilibrium flows but also the equilibrium prices as as well for the study of the disequilibrium dynamics;

Multicriteria Optimization Problem for Source Agent i in Country l The International Financial Network Model

The Multicriteria Decision- Making Problem for Intermediary j subject to:

The Consumers at the Demand Markets and their Equilibrium Conditions

Variational Inequality Formulation Theorem: The equilibrium conditions governing the international financial network with intermediation are equivalent to the solution of the variational inequality given by: determine (x 1 *; x 2 *;y*; *; * 3 ) K, satisfying:

The Dynamic Adjustment Process Demand Market Price Dynamics We assume that the rate of change of the price, is equal to the difference between the demand for the financial product at the demand market and the amount of the product actually available at that particular market. We assume that the rate of change of the price, is equal to the difference between the demand for the financial product at the demand market and the amount of the product actually available at that particular market.

The Dynamic Adjustment Process The Dynamics of the Financial Products between the Intermediaries and the Demand Markets The rate of change of the financial flow, in turn, is assumed to be equal to the difference between the price the consumers are willing to pay for the financial product at the demand market minus the price charged and the various transaction costs and the weighted marginal risk associated with the transaction.

The Dynamic Adjustment Process The Dynamics of the Prices at the Intermediaries The prices at the intermediaries, whether they are physical or virtual, must reflect supply and demand conditions as well. we propose the following dynamic adjustment for every intermediary j:

The Dynamic Adjustment Process The Dynamics of the Financial Flows from the Source Agents we denote the rate of change of the vector of financial flows from source agent il by x il and noting that the best realizable direction for the financial flows from source agent il must include the constraints, we have that:

The Dynamic Adjustment Process The Projected Dynamical System Consider now a dynamical system in which the demand market prices, the financial flows between intermediaries and the demand markets, the prices at the intermediaries and the financial flows from the source agents evolve according to the rules presented above. then the dynamic model described above can be rewritten as a projected dynamical system defined by the following initial value problem:

Global Supply Chain Network and Risk Management Manufacturers and distributors are multicriteria decision-makers, and concerned with both profit maximization and risk minimization. Retailers, in turn, are faced with random demands for the product.

The Global Supply Chain Network

Multicriteria Decision-Making Problem for a Manufacturer

The Multicriteria Decision- Making Problem for a Distributor

The Retailer Optimization Problem After taking expectation it becomes:

The Equilibrium Conditions of the Global Supply Chain Determine (Q 1 *; Q 2 *;Q3*; *; * 3 )K, satisfying :

Additional Theoretical Results for both Models We have established : Existence of the solution of the VI Uniqueness of the solution of the VI Convergence of the Algorithms

The Algorithms The algorithms that we propose are: The Modified Projection Method (For Global Supply Chain model) Euler-type method, which is induced by the general iterative scheme of Dupuis and Nagurney [1993]. This is discrete time algorithm and serve as approximations to the continuous time trajectories generated by the dynamic models.

The notable feature of these algorithms is that they resolve the VI subproblems into network optimization problems with special structure that can be solved exactly in closed form.

Summary and Conclusions We developed a framework for the modeling, analysis, and computation of solutions to international financial and global supply chains problems in the presence of electronic transactions and risk. The framework makes use of the supernetwork concept. The framework allows for the handling of as many countries, decision-makers and as many currencies as needed.

Future Research Supply Chain Networks Financial Networks Knowledge Supernetworks New TheoryApplicationsComputational Methods Visualization

A Knowledge Supernetwork

conceptualization, modeling, qualitative analysis, and solution of dynamic complex business processes under risk and uncertainty.

Thank you! The full text of the papers can be found under Download Articles at: