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Strategic Sourcing Decision for a Retailer
A large supermarket chain is considering two strategies for sourcing its fresh salmon. Strategy A involves continuing to buy from 15 different small-scale fisheries, each providing a fraction of the total need. Strategy B involves consolidating all purchases into a single, long-term contract with one massive aquaculture company that can supply the chain's entire demand. From a pure cost-reduction perspective based on negotiating leverage, which strategy should the supermarket chain choose? Justify your answer and identify the main trade-off involved in your chosen strategy.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
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Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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A small dairy farm traditionally sells its milk to a variety of local shops and restaurants. A large, national supermarket chain opens nearby and offers to purchase the farm's entire milk production each month, guaranteeing a buyer for all of its output. Considering the dynamics of this new relationship, what is the most likely long-term impact on the farm's ability to set its own prices?
Negotiating Power in the Food Supply Chain
Supplier-Retailer Price Discrepancy
Retailer Leverage and Supplier Viability
If a fruit supplier decides to stop selling its entire output to a single large supermarket chain and instead sells smaller quantities to numerous independent local stores, the supplier's average cost per unit sold will necessarily decrease.
A major national supermarket chain decides to centralize its purchasing for all fresh fish. It establishes a contract to buy the entire output from two massive commercial fishing companies, discontinuing its previous agreements with dozens of smaller, independent fishing boats. Match each market participant to the most likely economic consequence they will face due to this change.
Strategic Sourcing Decision for a Retailer
When a national supermarket chain becomes the sole buyer for a significant portion of a vegetable farm's total output, the retailer gains substantial leverage. This leverage, which allows the retailer to demand and receive lower prices for the produce, is known as ________ power.
A large national supermarket chain enters a market previously served by many small, independent grocers who bought from numerous local farms. Arrange the following events in the logical order that demonstrates how the large retailer establishes and then exercises its bargaining power over a specific farm.
Stakeholder Analysis of Retailer Bargaining Power