Journal Article10.2139/ssrn.1571095
Remanufacturing
15 Feb 2010
TL;DR: Remanufacturing is a form of recycling that refurbishes used durable goods to a condition comparable to new products. Remanufacturing reduces energy and resource consumption and lowers emissions of pollution.
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Abstract: Remanufacturing is a form of recycling where used durable goods are refurbished to a condition comparable to new products. With reduced energy and resource consumption, remanufactured goods are produced at a fraction of the original cost and with lower emissions of pollution. This paper presents a theoretical model of remanufacturing where a duopoly of original manufacturers produce a component of a final good. The component needing to be replaced creates an aftermarket. An environmental regulation assessing a minimum level of remanufacturability is also introduced. The main results indicate that a social planner could use collusion of the firms on the level of remanufacturability as a substitute for environmental regulation. However, if an environmental regulation is to be implemented, collusion should be repressed since competition supports the public intervention better. One of the results also coincides with the Porter Hypothesis.
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References
Managing New and Remanufactured Products
TL;DR: It is found that if remanufacturing is very profitable, the original-equipment manufacturer may forgo some of the first-period margin by lowering the price and selling additional units to increase the number of cores available for remanufactured in future periods.
Competition in remanufacturing
Pranab Majumder,Harry Groenevelt +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a two-period model of remanufacturing in the face of competition, where an original equipment manufacturer (OEM) competes with a local remanufacturer (L) under many reverse logistics configurations for the returned items.
590
Competition in remanufacturing and the effects of government subsidies
Supriya Mitra,Scott Webster +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effects of government subsidies as a means to promote remanufacturing activity in a two-period model of a manufacturer who makes and sells a new product and a remanufacturer who competes with the manufacturer in the second period.
491
Remanufacturing: The next great opportunity for boosting US productivity
Ron Giutini,Kevin Gaudette +1 more
TL;DR: For example, the authors defined productivity as the ratio of an output to its associated input(s) and showed that increasing manufacturing productivity comes from two primary inputs to the production process: labor and materials.
381
Competitive strategy in remanufacturing and the impact of take-back laws
Scott Webster,Supriya Mitra +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the impact of take-back laws within a manufacturer/remanufacturer competitive framework and find that, in some settings, enactment of collective WEEE takeback will result in higher manufacturer and remanufacturer profits while simultaneously spurring remanufacturing activity and reducing the tax burden on society.
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