运筹与管理 ›› 2025, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (2): 140-145.DOI: 10.12005/orms.2025.0054

• 理论分析与方法探讨 • 上一篇    下一篇

风险规避对供应链社会责任分担策略的影响

聂佳佳1,2, 蒋晨1, 赖雪梅1,2   

  1. 1.西南交通大学经济管理学院,四川成都 610031;
    2.服务科学与创新四川省重点实验室,四川成都 610031
  • 收稿日期:2018-03-11 出版日期:2025-02-25 发布日期:2025-06-04
  • 通讯作者: 赖雪梅(1995-),女,四川德阳人,博士,研究方向:供应链管理。Email: laixuemei_19@163.com。
  • 作者简介:聂佳佳(1981-),男,河南许昌人,博士,教授,研究方向:供应链管理
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金资助项目(72071165);西南交通大学智慧物流与供应链管理研究生导师团队项目(YJSY-DSTD201918);四川省社会科学重点研究基地系统科学与企业发展研究中心重点规划项目(Xq18B08);服务科学与创新四川省重点实验室开放课题(KL2203)

Effect of Risk Aversion on Sharing Strategy of Social Responsibility in Supply Chain

NIE Jiajia1,2, JIANG Chen1, LAI Xuemei1,2   

  1. 1. School of Economics and Management, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610031, China;
    2. Service Science and Innovation Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Chengdu 610031, China
  • Received:2018-03-11 Online:2025-02-25 Published:2025-06-04

摘要: 在零售商风险中性及风险规避下,基于博弈论构建了三个模型,分别考虑了无社会责任分担、成本分担与努力分担的情形。通过求解这些模型的均衡解及其对应的收益,进行比较分析后发现:当零售商风险中性时,制造商与零售商都倾向于选择社会责任分担策略,并且努力分担策略总能为他们带来更高的收益。然而在零售商风险规避下,一定条件下当风险规避态度较高时,制造商和零售商均偏好于无社会责任分担策略。风险规避态度较低时,努力分担策略仍然优于成本分担策略。

关键词: 社会责任, 分担策略, 风险规避

Abstract: In recent years, with economic development, social issues such as food safety, product quality, and environmental pollution have frequently occurred, leading to increased attention to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) across all sectors of society. In order to encourage companies to take on CSR and promote social progress, many countries and governments have implemented various policy measures. For instance, in April 2015, Shenzhen introduced the Corporate Social Responsibility Requirements and Corporate Social Responsibility Evaluation Guidelines to standardize CSR norms and guide CSR work. Meanwhile, consumers are increasingly concerned about whether companies are fulfilling their CSR obligations, prompting more businesses to incorporate CSR into their market decision-making processes, aiming to enhance their image and improve profitability. A survey by The Economist revealed that approximately 85% of corporate executives and investors consider CSR an important factor in investment decisions. However, companies undertaking social responsibility in the supply chain face considerable cost pressures. As a result, collaboration between upstream and downstream partners in the supply chain has become a feasible strategy. In practice, many companies proactively shoulder CSR costs for upstream manufacturers or share them in their CSR efforts. For example, FOTILE invests in hiring consulting firms to implement on-site lean improvement projects for strategic suppliers, ensuring product quality and safety. Bayers collaborate with upstream suppliers, such as the Penglai Haorizi Fruit Professional Rural Cooperative, to provide technical guidance and jointly address food safety issues. However, as consumer demand becomes increasingly diversified, companies often struggle to accurately capture market demand, leading them to adopt risk-averse measures when faced with the potential risks of demand uncertainty. A company's risk-averse attitude can significantly impact its market strategies. Clearly, CSR-sharing strategies, as a form of supply chain cooperation, are also influenced by companies' risk-averse attitudes. However, there is limited literature comparing different CSR-sharing strategies in supply chains, and no research has yet considered the impact of corporate risk-aversion on CSR-sharing strategies between companies.
To address these issues, this study considers a supply chain system consisting of a risk-neutral manufacturer and a risk-averse retailer. Two cooperation models for sharing CSR costs and efforts are established, and the influence of the retailer's risk aversion on different cooperation models is analyzed. The study finds that: when the retailer is risk-neutral, CSR-sharing contracts can promote CSR adoption and supply chain optimization, with the cooperative model sharing the manufacturer's CSR efforts being superior to the model sharing CSR costs. However, when the retailer is risk-averse, CSR-sharing contracts may not necessarily lead to supply chain optimization. Under certain conditions, when the risk-aversion attitude is sufficiently high, CSR-sharing cooperation in the supply chain can lower the expected utility for both the manufacturer and retailer, and even reduce the overall CSR efforts within the supply chain. When the risk-aversion attitude is low, the effort-sharing strategy will be still superior to the cost-sharing strategy.
This paper only considers a supply chain system composed of a single manufacturer and a single retailer. Future research could explore situations involving competition among upstream manufacturers. Additionally, further studies could investigate CSR cooperation strategies under information asymmetry in the supply chain.

Key words: social responsibility, sharing strategy, risk aversion

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