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Articles

The Ripple effect in supply chains: trade-off ‘efficiency-flexibility-resilience’ in disruption management

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Pages 2154-2172 | Received 11 Jul 2013, Accepted 10 Oct 2013, Published online: 28 Nov 2013
 

Abstract

This study aims at presenting the Ripple effect in supply chains. It develops different dimensions of the Ripple effect and summarises recent developments in the field of supply chain (SC) disruption management from a multi-disciplinary perspective. It structures and classifies existing research streams and applications areas of different quantitative methods to the Ripple effect analysis as well as identifying gaps in current research and delineating future research avenues. The analysis shows that different frameworks already exist implicitly for tackling the Ripple effect in the SC dynamics, control and disruption management domain. However, quantitative analysis tools are still rarely applied in praxis. We conclude that the Ripple effect can be the phenomenon that is able to consolidate research in SC disruption management and recovery similar to the bullwhip effect regarding demand and lead time fluctuations. This may build the agenda for future research on SC dynamics, control, continuity and disruption management, making supply chains more robust, adaptable and profitable.

Acknowledgement

We would like to thank the anonymous referees for their comments and suggestions which contributed to the progress of this paper invaluably.

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