Solution Manual for Operations and Supply Chain Management: The Core, 5th Edition
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Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
CHAPTER 1
OPERATIONS AND SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Discussion Questions
1. Using Exhibit 1.2 as a model, describe the source-make-deliver-return relationships in the
following systems:
a. An airline
Source: Aircraft manufacturer, in-flight food, repair parts, computer systems
Make: Aircraft and flight crew scheduling, ground services provided at airports,
aircraft maintenance and repair
Deliver: Outbound and arriving passenger service, baggage handling
Return: Resolve any post-service issues such as lost or damaged luggage
b. An automobile manufacturer
Source: Suppliers of components and raw materials
Make: Manufacturing of vehicles and components or subassemblies to be sold as
spare parts
Deliver: Delivery to and sales from dealerships, delivery of spare parts to the wholesale
system
Return: Warranty and recall repairs, trade-ins
c. A hospital
Source: Medical supplies, cleaning services, disposal services, food services, qualified
personnel
Make: Inpatient rooms, outpatient clinics, emergency room, operating rooms
Deliver: Scheduling patients, providing treatment, ambulance service, family counseling
Return: Billing errors, follow up visits
d. An insurance company
Source: Supplies needed for the office, underwriters, legal authority to operate
Make: Establish policy guidelines and pricing, field agent/representative and facility
network, develop Internet service capabilities, establish preferred vehicle repair
service network
Deliver: Meet with and advise clients, write policies, process and pay claims
Return: Refund of overpayments
2. Define the service package of your college or university. What is its strongest element? What is
its weakest one?
The categories with examples are:
Supporting facility – location, buildings, labs, parking
Facilitating goods โ class schedules, computers, books, chalk
Explicit services โ classes with qualified instructors, placement offices
Implicit services โ status and reputation (e.g., Ivy League schools)
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Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
At Indiana University and the University of Southern California, among their strongest
elements are their business schools and their Operations Management programs (of course).
Both also have very dedicated alumni networks. A weak element of Indiana University is its
weak football program; for USC, weak elements are on-campus parking and housing.
3. What service industry has impressed you the most with its innovativeness?
Our vote goes to cruise lines which have introduced such onboard innovations as wave
machines for belly boarding and rock climbing walls, as well as all sorts of other amenities to
keep cruisers involved. The industry is doing record business as well.
Some of the standout companies in less innovative industries are Bank of America (has a
formalized research program to try out new customer services/amenities such as video screens
in next to teller lines), Intuit (e.g., putting Quicken money management software online), Ikea,
JetBlue Airlines, and Progressive Insurance (discussed later in the book).
4. What is product-service bundling and what are the benefits to customers?
Product-service bundling is adding value-added services to a firmโs product offerings to create
more value for the customer. This provides benefits in two areas. First, this differentiates the
organization from the competition. Secondly, these services tie customers to the organization
in a positive way. Alternatively, bundling can also involve adding products to a service, for
example, adding the sale of convenience items and snacks at a hotel.
5. What is the difference between a service and a good?
A service is an intangible process (you canโt hold it in your hands), while a good is the physical
output of a process. Some service businesses also provide a physical good as part of the
service, like a restaurant. Also, mots manufacturers of goods provide services for after-sales
support, like computer tech support or automobile warranty service. So while a service and a
good are definitely distinguishable, customers will often encounter both in their experiences
with a company.
6. Some people tend to use the terms effectiveness and efficiency interchangeably, though
weโve seen they are different concepts. But is there any relationship at all between them?
Can a firm be effective but inefficient? Very efficient but essentially ineffective? Both?
Neither?
Firms can be anywhere on these two dimensions. It is possible for a firm to be the best at what
they do in serving their market, but be very wasteful in doing so. Alternatively, a firm could
squeeze every last dollar out of their processes but fail to deliver what the market expects and
desires. Of course, the best firms will provide the goods and services that the market desires,
exactly as the market desires, and do so at a minimum cost. Firms that are both inefficient and
ineffective do not survive for long in any market.
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prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
7. Two of the efficiency ratios mentioned in the chapter are the receivable turnover ratio and the
inventory turnover ratio. While they are two completely separate measures, they are very
similar in one way. What is the common thread between these two?
(There are a number of answers that students may come up with, from simplistic to more
thoughtful. Following is one of the latter.) Both are measuring the average amount of a
valuable asset that is not generating value for the company. Accounts receivable are an asset,
but they do not create value for the firm until the money is received. Reducing the average
amount of accounts receivable frees up that money for use by the company on a recurring
basis. Inventory is another asset, but while inventory is being held by the company it is not
making any money for the firm. Reducing inventory allows the firm to invest the money that
would otherwise be spent on the inventory.
8. Look at the job postings at http://jobs.apics.org and evaluate the opportunities for an OSCM
major with several years of experience.
There are pages and pages of these in the APICS Career Center. Here are some examples:
Purchasing and Planning Manager
Sennheiser New Mexico
Sennheiser is seeking an innovative and enthusiastic individual to manage the purchasing and
planning areas at our Albuquerque manufacturing facility. This key role is responsible for
leading the Purchasing, Planning and Warehouse departments to achieve outstanding results.
You will be charged with ensuring cost effective on-time delivery, as well as building solid
relationships with other internal departments and international sister facilities. You will use
production planning, procurement, inventory and materials management concepts to solve
problems and provide continuous improvement in the supply chain process.
Senior Manager Supply Chain Financer
Pharmavite
This role contributes to Pharmavite’s success by providing decision support to the organization
to drive business growth and improve profitability. Responsible for supporting company
innovation with respect to total delivered cost. Also supports direct sourcing team on reporting
& analyzing purchase price variance and seeking out new cost savings projects. Performs adhoc analysis and/or support cross-functional projects to improve operational efficiencies and
optimize profitability. Also manages the control function around headquarters-based
operations overhead expenditures as well as capital investments.
Medical Device Supply Chain Manager
Cadwell
The Supply Chain Manager provides overall leadership and mentoring for the purchasing,
shipping, and receiving functions for Cadwell Industries, Inc., a leading medical device
manufacturer. This position oversees the organization wide management of strategic sourcing,
procurement, contract negotiations, and evaluation of services while collaborating closely with
staff in Engineering, Marketing, Regulatory, Sales, and Service.
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Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
Production/Operations Planner
CG Industrial Specialties
US – Nationwide
Reporting to the Operations Manager or Branch Manager; this position is responsible for
preparing assembly schedules for shop technicians; coordinate material requirements with
purchasing as well as coordinate shipping / receiving activities with warehouse staff.
9. Recent outsourcing of parts and services that had previously been produced internally is
addressed by which current issue facing operations and supply management today?
The coordination of relationships between mutually supportive but separate organizations.
10. What factors account for the resurgence of interest in OSCM today?
With companies facing competition on a global scale, and ever-advancing manufacturing and
information technologies, firms realize the competitive advantage their OSCM functions can
provide if properly managed. Many have found that the same old way of doing business
leaves them unable to compete successfully. The 2011 tsunami in Japan and the 2015 LA ports
closure have also brought to the forefront how important supply chains are, as well as the
negative economic impact that disruptions in the supply chain can cause.
11. As the field of OSCM has advanced, new concepts have been applied to help companies
compete in a number of ways, including the advertisement of the firmโs products or services.
One recent concept to gain the attention of companies is promoting sustainability. Discuss
how you have seen the idea of sustainability used by companies to advertise their goods or
services.
There of course will be a number of examples that students will bring up, though they may
need some prodding to jog their memories. Some examples to start with might be IBMโs โIโm
an IBMerโ campaign where they advertise how they are โbuilding a smarter planet.โ Bottled
water manufacturers have reduced the amount of plastic used in many of their products, thus
saving production and distribution costs, but also allowing them to advertise how the new
bottles are better for the environment because they result in less waste.
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the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
Objective Questions
1. What are the three elements that require integration to be successful in operations and
supply chain management?
Strategy, Processes, and Analytics
2. Operations and supply chain management is concerned with the design and management of
the entire system that has what function?
Produces a product or delivers a service
3. Consider the following financial data from the past year for Midwest Outdoor Equipment
Corporation.
Gross Income
Total Sales
Total Credit Sales
Net Income
Cost of Goods Sold
Total Assets
Average Inventory
Average Receivables
$25,240,000
24,324,000
18,785,000
2,975,000
12,600,000
10,550,000
2,875,000
3,445,000
a. Compute the receivable turnover ratio.
$18,785,000
= 5.453
$3,445,000
b. Compute the inventory turnover ratio.
$12,600,000
= 4.383
$2,875,000
c. Compute the asset turnover ratio.
$24,324,000
= 2.306
$10,550,000
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the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
4. A manufacturing company has entered into a new contract with a major supplier of raw
materials used in the manufacturing process. Under the new arrangement, called vendor
managed inventory, the supplier manages their raw material inventory inside the
manufacturerโs plant, and only bills the manufacturer when the manufacturer consumes the
raw material. How is this likely to affect the manufacturerโs inventory turnover ratio?
This will reduce the average amount of money the firm has invested in raw material, so the
inventory turnover ratio should increase.
5. What is the name of the process in which one company studies the processes of another firm
in order to identify best practices?
Benchmarking
6. A company has recently implemented an automated online billing and payment processing
system for orders it ships to customers. As a result, it has reduced the average number of
days between billing a customer and receiving payment by 10 days. How will this affect the
receivables turnover ratio?
Quicker payments will reduce the average amount of accounts receivables, so the receivables
turnover ratio will increase.
7. Match the following OSCM job titles with the appropriate duties and responsibilities.
A: Plans and coordinates staff activities such as new product
C Plant manager
development and new facility location
B: Oversees the movement of goods throughout the supply
D Supply chain manager
chain
C: Oversees the workforce and resources required to produce
A Project manager
the firmโs products
Business process
D: Negotiates contracts with vendors and coordinates the flow
E improvement analyst
of material inputs to the production process
E: Applies the tools of lean production to reduce cycle time
and eliminate waste in a process
B Logistics manager
8. What high-level OSCM position manager is responsible for working with the CEO and company
president to determine the companyโs competitive strategy?
Chief Operating Officer
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prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
9. Order the following major concepts that have helped define the OSCM field on a time line.
Use 1 for the earliest to be introduced, and 5 for the most recent.
3 Supply chain management
1 Manufacturing strategy
5 Business analytics
2 Total quality management
4 Electronic commerce
10. Which major OSCM concept can be described as an integrated set of activities designed to
achieve high-volume production using minimal inventories of parts that arrive at workstations
exactly when they are needed?
Just-in-time (JIT) production
11.
leverage the vast amount of data in enterprise resource
planning systems to make decisions related to managing resources.
Business analytics
12. Which current issue in OSCM relates to the ability of a firm to maintain balance in a system,
considering the ongoing economic, employee, and environmental viability of the firm?
Sustainability
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the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 01 – Operations and Supply Chain Management
Analytics Exercise: Comparing Companies Using Wall Street Efficiency Measures
Each student is asked to pick an industry and compare three companies within that industry based on
income per employee, revenue per employee, receivable turnover, inventory turnover, and asset
turnover. The following is typical of what you might obtain:
BP
Shell
ExxonMobil
Oil Industry
Net Income/Employee
315,300
343,533
414,328
289,320
Revenue/Employee
4.6 Mil
5.2 mil
4.7 mil
3 Mil
Receivable Turnover
9.38
6.29
13.17
13.5
Inventory Turnover
11.92
13.59
21.91
15.5
Asset Turnover
1.92
1.36
1.41
1.1
Management Efficiency
Students are then asked to identify which company appears to have the most productive employees.
With this data we see that ExxonMobil does very well in generating $414,328 net income per
employee. Comparing Shell to ExxonMobil we can observe that ExxonMobil appears to be more
efficient since it can generate more net income on lower revenue/employee, at least compared to
Shell. The inventory turnover is highest for ExxonMobil indicating that the company is the most
efficient from an operations and supply chain processes view. ExxonMobil also appears to do a good
job in collecting receivables as well, thus supporting the idea that the company is very efficient. BP
seems to do a little better in asset turnover, which relates to the use of its facility and equipment
assets. But ExxonMobil is very good especially in comparison to the oil industry average.
Overall, ExxonMobil appears to be the most efficient, so the other companies might find it valuable to
benchmark the companyโs processes.
Of course, the data generated by each student will be different and an interesting interchange can be
developed with students each presenting what they found from their research. It is very interesting to
do comparisons across industries; retailers versus oil companies, and computer makes versus software
companies, for example.
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
CHAPTER 2
STRATEGY AND SUSTAINABILITY
Discussion Questions
1. What is meant by a โtriple-bottom-lineโ strategy? Give an example of a company that has
adopted this type of strategy.
A triple-bottom-line strategy places emphasis on a companyโs environmental and social
responsibilities as well as the traditional bottom line of economic prosperity. It recognizes that
the long-term health of the firm is interdependent with the health of the environment and the
betterment of society. There are many examples โ one is Patagonia. For details see their current
sustainability page:
http://www.patagonia.com/home/
2. Find examples where companies have used features related to environmental sustainability to
โwinโ new customers.
Car companies use environmental concerns in marketing ads. The development of hybrid and
flex-fuel cars is one way they have operationalized those concerns. Consumer goods companies
display the โmade with recycled materialโ logo on the packaging. Bottled water manufacturers
are using and advertising bottles made with less plastic.
3. What are the major priorities associated with operations and supply chain strategy? For each
major priority, describe the unique characteristics of the market niche with which it is most
compatible.
โข Cost: In most every industry, there is a market segment that is very price sensitive. Firms that
can supply goods or services at the lowest price will have an advantage there. This requires
extremely efficient operations with a continuous focus on cost minimization. As a result, large
production volumes are often required to successfully compete here.
โข Quality: Similar to the low-cost focused customers, most industries will encounter a market
segment willing to pay more for a higher quality product. Typically these goods and services
will not be commodity products. Customers may focus on design quality (feature sets, materials,
etc.), process quality (fit and finish, reliability, etc.) to differing levels based on the industry.
โข Delivery speed and reliability: When a customer has a dire and need for a good or service,
companies that can deliver the product the fastest have a distinct advantage. In the businessto-business (B2B) market segment, customers depend on stated delivery windows to achieve
reductions in inventory while still meeting strict production windows.
โข Changes in volume: Again, this is often important to be a player in many B2B markets.
Customers need to know their suppliers can rapidly respond to changes in demand so they can
meet the end customer demand swings.
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
โข Flexibility and new product introduction speed: The high-tech industry is a good example where
this is a key competitive advantage. Being able to rapidly respond to advances in technology and
correctly gauge customer expectations is key to competing successfully.
4. Why does the โproperโ operations and supply chain strategy keep changing for companies that
are world-class competitors?
The top three priorities have generally remained the same over time: make it good, make it fast,
and deliver it on time. Others have changed. Part of this may be explained by realizing that world
class organizations have achieved excellence in these three areas and are, therefore, focusing
attention on some of the more minor areas to gain competitive advantage. The changes in the
minor priorities may result from recognizing opportunities or from changes in customer desires or
expectations.
5. What do the expressions โorder winnerโ and โorder qualifierโ mean? What was the order winner
for your last major purchase of a product or service?
Order winners are dimensions that differentiate the product or service or services of one firm from
another. Order qualifiers are dimensions that are used to screen a product or service as a
candidate for purchase. Order qualifiers get a companyโs โfoot in the door.โ Order winners are
what make the sale. Obviously, answers will vary for the order winners from your last purchase.
6. Pick a company that you are familiar with and describe its operations strategy and how it relates
to winning customers. Describe specific activities used by the company that support the strategy
(see Exhibit 2.2 for an example).
Student answers will vary widely based on their experiences and views. It might be helpful for a
classroom exercise to assign certain companies to a number of students/teams and compare their
answers in class.
7. At times in the past, the dollar showed relative weakness with respect to foreign currencies, such
as the yen, euro, and pound. This stimulated exports. Why would long-term reliance on a lower
valued dollar be at best a short-term solution to the competitiveness problem?
This approach is dependent on economic policies of other nations. This is a fragile dependency. A
long-term approach is to increase manufacturing and service industry productivity in order to
regain competitive advantage. At a national level, solutions appear to lie in reversing attitudes.
At a firm level, competitive weapons are consistent quality, high performance, dependable
delivery, competitive pricing, and design flexibility.
8. Identify an operations and supply chain – related “disruption” that recently impacted a company.
What could the company have done to have minimized the impact of this type of disruption prior
to it occurring?
The March 2011 tsunami that struck Japan was geographically concentrated but had global
impact on multiple firms, many of which had no physical presence at all in the affected area.
Examples include firms that had sole source agreements with suppliers in the affected area. The
tsunami left these companies scrambling to find new suppliers to feed into their supply chains.
These firms could have reduced the impact of the tsunami by having a few high-quality,
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
dependable suppliers located in different geographical regions. There are many other examples
that could be taken from this one event. A simple Internet search will provide plenty of material
for discussion. More recently, the L.A. ports work slowdown in early 2015 was a man-made
disruption for many global firms. Both inbound and outbound shipments were affected โ some
delayed and others (U.S. produce exports) were ruined. McDonaldโs resorted to flying over 2
million pounds of frozen French fries into Japan at significant extra cost during this period to keep
restaurants open.
9. What do we mean when we say productivity is a โrelativeโ measure?
For productivity to be meaningful, it must be compared with something else. The comparisons
can be either intra-company as in the case of year-to-year comparisons of the same measure, or
intercompany as in the case of benchmarking. Intercompany comparisons of single factor
productivity measures can be somewhat tenuous due to differences in accounting practices
(especially when comparing with foreign competitors) and the balance of labor to capital
resources. Total factor productivity measures are somewhat more robust for comparison
purposes.
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
Objective Questions
1. Shell Oil Companyโs motto โPeople, Planet and Profitโ is a real-world implementation of what
OSCM concept?
Triple bottom line
2. A firmโs strategy should describe how it intends to create and sustain value for
.
Its current shareholders
3. What is the term used to describe individuals or organizations that are influenced by the actions
of the firm?
Stakeholders
4. How often should a company develop and refine the operations and supply chain strategy.
At least yearly
5. What is the term used to describe product attributes that attract certain customers and can be
used to form the competitive position of a firm?
Competitive dimensions
6. What are the two main competitive dimensions related to product delivery?
Delivery speed and delivery reliability
7. What are the two characteristics of a product or service that define quality?
Design quality and process quality
8. What is the diagram that shows how a companyโs strategy is delivered by a set of supporting
activities called?
Activity-system map
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
9. In implementing supply chain strategy, a firm must minimize its total cost without compromising
the needs of what group of people?
Customers
10. What is defined as the likelihood of disruption that would impact the ability of a company to
continuously supply products or services?
Supply chain risk
11. What are risks caused by natural or manmade disasters, and therefore impossible to reliably
predict called?
Disruption risks
12. Match the following common risks with the appropriate mitigation strategy.
E
D
A
C
B
Country risks
Regulatory risk
Logistics failure
Natural disaster
Major quality failure
A:
B:
C:
D:
E:
Detailed tracking, alternate suppliers
Carefully select and monitor suppliers
Contingency planning, insurance
Good legal advice, compliance
Currency hedging, local sourcing
13. What is the term used to describe the assessment of the probability of a negative event against
the aggregate severity of the related loss?
Risk mapping
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
14. As Operations Manager, you are concerned about being able to meet sales requirements in the
coming months. You have just been given the following production report:
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
Units Produced
2300
1800
2800
3000
Hours per Machine
325
200
400
320
Number of Machines
3
5
4
4
Find the average of the monthly productivity figures (units per machine hour).
To answer this we need to realize that the measure of hours given is per machine, so we have to
multiply that by the number of machines in each period to get the total machine hours in each
period. Those figures are used in the calculations below.
Average productivity: (2300/975 + 1800/1000 + 2800/1600 + 3000/1280)/4
Average productivity (2.36+1.80+1.75+2.34)/4= 2.06 units per machine hour
Note that the average above weights each month the same, although output varies. An
alternative answer would be to compute a weighted average productivity figure that is slightly
different at 2.04 units per machine hour.
15. Sailmaster makes high-performance sails for competitive windsurfers. Below is information
about the inputs and outputs for one model, the Windy 2000.
Units sold
Sale price each
Total labor hours
Wage rate
Total materials
Total energy
1,217
$1,700
46,672
$12/hour
$60,000
$4,000
Calculate the productivity in sales revenue/labor expense.
We have to do some interim calculations here. Sales revenue is calculated by multiplying
units sold by the unit sales price. Labor expense is calculated by multiplying labor hours by
the wage rate.
(1217*1700) / (46672*12) = 3.69
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
16. Live Trap Corporation received the data below for its rodent cage production unit. Find the total
productivity?
Output
Input
50,000 cages
Production time
620 labor hours
Sales price: $3.50 per unit
Wages
$7.50 per hour
Raw materials (total cost)
$30,000
Component parts (total cost)
$15,350
Total productivity could be expressed two ways here based on how you express output: in
units sold, or dollars of sales.
Units sold:
50,000 / ((620 * $7.50) + 30,000 + 15,350) = 1.00 units sold per dollar input
Dollars of sales:
(50000*3.5) / ((620 * $7.50) + 30,000 + 15,350) = 3.5 dollars in sales per dollar input
17. Two types of cars (Deluxe and Limited) were produced by a car manufacturer last year.
Quantities sold, price per unit, and labor hours are given below. What is the labor productivity for
each car? Explain the problem(s) associated with the labor productivity.
Deluxe car
Limited car
Labor, Deluxe
Labor, Limited
QUANTITY
4,000 units sold
6,000 units sold
20,000 hours
30,000 hours
$/UNIT
$8,000/car
$9,500/car
$12/hour
$14/hour
Labor Productivity โ units/hour
Model
Deluxe Car
Output
in Units
4,000
Input
in Labor Hours
20,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
0.20 units/hour
Limited Car
6,000
30,000
0.20 units/hour
Output
in Dollars
4,000($8,000)=
$32,000,000
Input
in Dollars
20,000($12.00)=
$240,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
133.33
6,000($9,500)=
$57,000,000
30,000($14.00)=
$420,000
135.71
Labor Productivity โ dollars
Model
Deluxe Car
Limited Car
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
The labor productivity measure is a conventional measure of productivity. However, as a partial
measure, it may not provide all of the necessary information that is needed. For example, increases in
productivity could result from decreases in quality, and/or increases in material cost.
18. A U.S. manufacturing company operating a subsidiary in an LDC (less-developed country) shows
the following results:
Sales (units)
Labor (hours)
Raw materials (currency)
Capital equipment (hours)
U.S.
100,000
20,000
$20,000
60,000
LDC
20,000
15,000
20,000 (FC)
5,000
a. Calculate partial labor and capital productivity ๏ฌgures for the parent and subsidiary. Do
the results seem misleading?
Labor Productivity
Country
U.S.
Output
in Units
100,000
Input
in Hours
20,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
5.00 units/hour
LDC
20,000
15,000
1.33 units/hour
U.S.
Output
in Units
100,000
Input
in Hours
60,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
1.67 units/hour
LDC
20,000
5,000
4.00 units/hour
Capital Equipment Productivity
Country
Yes. You might expect the capital equipment productivity measure to be higher in the U.S.
than in a LDC. Also, the measures seem contradictory. Each plant appears to be far more
productive than the other on one measure, but much worse on the other.
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Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
b. Compute the multifactor productivity ๏ฌgures for labor and capital together. Do the
results make more sense?
Multifactor โ Labor and Capital Equipment
Country
U.S.
Output
in Units
100,000
Input
in Hours
20,000 + 60,000=
80,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
1.25 units/hour
LDC
20,000
15,000 + 5,000=
20,000
1.00 units/hour
Yes, labor and equipment can be substituted for each other. Therefore, this multifactor
measure is a better indicator of productivity in this instance.
c. Calculate raw material productivity ๏ฌgures (units/$ where $1 = 10 (FC)). Explain why
these ๏ฌgures might be greater in the subsidiary.
Raw Material Productivity
Country
U.S.
Output
in Units
100,000
Input
in Dollars
$20,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
5.00 units/$
LDC
20,000
FC 20,000/$10 =
$2,000
10.00 units/$
The raw material productivity measures might be greater in the LDC due to a reduced cost
paid for raw materials, which is typical of LDCโs, especially if there are local sources for the
raw materials.
19. Various ๏ฌnancial data for the past two years follow. Calculate the total productivity measure and
the partial measures for labor, capital, and raw materials for this company for both years. What
do these measures tell you about this company?
Output:
Input:
Sales
Labor
Raw materials
Energy
Capital
Other
Last Year
$200,000
30,000
35,000
5,000
50,000
2,000
This Year
$220,000
40,000
45,000
6,000
50,000
3,000
02-9
Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
Total Productivity
Year
Output
in Dollars
Input
in Dollars
Productivity
(Output/Input)
Last Year
$200,000
$30,000 + 35,000 +
5,000 + 50,000 + 2,000
= $122,000
1.64
This Year
$220,000
$40,000 + 45,000 +
6,000 + 50,000 +3,000
= $144,000
1.53
Last Year
Output
in Dollars
$200,000
Input
in Dollars
$30,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
6.67
This Year
$220,000
$40,000
5.50
Partial Measure โ Labor
Year
Partial Measure โ Raw Materials
Year
Output
in Dollars
Last Year
$200,000
This Year
$220,000
Input
in Dollars
$35,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
$45,000
4.89
Input
in Dollars
$50,000
Productivity
(Output/Input)
$50,000
4.40
5.71
Partial Measure โ Capital
Year
Output
in Dollars
Last Year
$200,000
This Year
$220,000
4.00
The overall productivity measure is declining, which indicates a possible problem. The partial
measures can be used to indicate cause of the declining productivity. In this case, it is a
combination of declines in both labor and raw material productivity, which were somewhat
offset by an increase in the capital productivity. Further investigation should be undertaken
to explain the drops in both labor and raw material productivity. An increase in the cost of
both of these measures, without an accompanying increase in the selling price might explain
these measures.
02-10
Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
20. An electronics company makes communications devices for military contracts. The company just
completed two contracts. The navy contract was for 2,300 devices and took 25 workers two
weeks (40 hours per week) to complete. The army contract was for 5,500 devices that were
produced by 35 workers in three weeks. On which contract were the workers more productive?
Contract
Output
in Units
Input
in Hours
Productivity
(Output/Input)
Navy
2300
25(2)40 = 2000
1.15
Army
5500
35(3)40 = 4200
1.31
The workers were more productive on the Army contract.
21. A retail store had sales of $45,000 in April and $56,000 in May. The store employs eight full-time
workers who work a 40-hour week. In April the store also had seven part-time workers at 10
hours per week, and in May the store had nine part-timers at 15 hours per week (assume four
weeks in each month). Using sales dollars as the measure of output, what is the percentage
change in productivity from April to May?
Month
Output
in Dollars
April
$45,000
May
$56,000
Input
in Hours
(8(40)+7(10))*4 =
1560
Productivity
(Output/Input)
1820
30.77
Percentage Change
28.85
(30.77-28.85)/28.85 = 6.66% increase
22. A parcel delivery company delivered 103,000 packages last year, when its average employment
was 84 drivers. This year the ๏ฌrm handled 112,000 deliveries with 96 drivers. What was the
percentage change in productivity over the past year?
Year
Output
in Packages
Input
in Drivers
Productivity
(Output/Input)
Last
103,000
84
1226.2
This
112,000
96
1166.7
02-11
Percentage Change
(1166.7 -1226.2)/1226.2 = – 4.85% (decrease)
Chapter 02 – Strategy and Sustainability
23. A fast-food restaurant serves hamburgers, cheeseburgers, and chicken sandwiches. The
restaurant counts a cheeseburger as equivalent to 1.25 hamburgers and chicken sandwiches as
0.8 hamburger. Current employment is ๏ฌve full-time employees who work a 40-hour week. If the
restaurant sold 700 hamburgers, 900 cheeseburgers, and 500 chicken sandwiches in one week,
what is its productivity? What would its productivity have been if it had sold the same number of
sandwiches (2,100), but the mix was 700 of each type?
Part
700 Hamburgers
900 Cheeseburgers (1.25)
500 Chicken Sandwiches (.80)
700 Hamburgers
700 Cheeseburgers (1.25)
700 Chicken Sandwiches (.80)
Output in
Hamburger
Equivalents
Input
in Hours
Productivity
(Output/Input)
2225
200
11.125
2135
200
10.675
02-12
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