TY - JOUR
T1 - Economic, Environmental, and Social Impact of Remanufacturing in a Competitive Setting
AU - Raz, Gal
AU - Ovchinnikov, Anton
AU - Blass, Vered
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1988-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2017/11
Y1 - 2017/11
N2 - This paper studies the environmental and social trade-offs of remanufacturing for product+service firms under competition. We use an analytical model and a behavioral study that together incorporate demand cannibalization from multiple customer segments across the competing firms' product lines. We measure firms' profits, consumer surpluses, environmental impacts, and environmental costs along the products lifecycles in the resultant equilibria with and without remanufacturing. We show that competition intensifies the tension between increased profit and worsened environmental impact from market expansions caused by remanufacturing identified by prior research in the case of monopoly. However, bringing in the social dimension leads to an overall positive assessment: remanufacturing creates additional consumer surplus, which compensates for the cost of the environmental impact. In other words, we found strong support that remanufacturing is beneficial for the society.
AB - This paper studies the environmental and social trade-offs of remanufacturing for product+service firms under competition. We use an analytical model and a behavioral study that together incorporate demand cannibalization from multiple customer segments across the competing firms' product lines. We measure firms' profits, consumer surpluses, environmental impacts, and environmental costs along the products lifecycles in the resultant equilibria with and without remanufacturing. We show that competition intensifies the tension between increased profit and worsened environmental impact from market expansions caused by remanufacturing identified by prior research in the case of monopoly. However, bringing in the social dimension leads to an overall positive assessment: remanufacturing creates additional consumer surplus, which compensates for the cost of the environmental impact. In other words, we found strong support that remanufacturing is beneficial for the society.
KW - Demand cannibalization
KW - externalities
KW - product+service firms
KW - product-line competition
KW - remanufacturing
KW - social value
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85028936961&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TEM.2017.2714698
DO - 10.1109/TEM.2017.2714698
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AN - SCOPUS:85028936961
SN - 0018-9391
VL - 64
SP - 476
EP - 490
JO - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
JF - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
IS - 4
M1 - 7979591
ER -