Academic Journal

Inventory and Global Sourcing: The Moderating Role of a Supply Chain Management Executives

Journal of Operations Management Rohan D'Lima John-Patrick Paraskevas Adams Steven Thomas Corsi

Journal Details

Journal of Operations Management

Keywords
Supply Chain
Journal Article, Academic Journal

Overview

We investigate the relationship between global sourcing and inventory investment with a focus on the moderating impact of a Supply Chain Management Executive (SCME) on that relationship. Due to the increased uncertainties and shipment lot sizes associated with sourcing from international locations, firms sourcing from foreign markets are seen to have higher inventory investment. This problem is expected to be compounded when a firm buys from multiple countries. Our theory driven hypotheses suggests that firms with a designated SCME are able to counter the negative impacts of global sourcing and, in turn, are able to have lower inventory investments vis-a-vis their counterparts without a designated SCME. Estimating an econometric model using data collected from multiple sources we support our hypotheses that global sourcing intensive firms with a SCME have lower inventory levels than their counterparts without a designated SCME. This is a significant contribution to the growing stream of literature exploring the impact the SCME’s.