English

A Counterintuitive Example in Inventory Management

Optimization and Control 2017-02-06 v1

Abstract

The paper \cite{helm:17} studies an inventory management problem under a long-term average cost criterion using weak convergence methods applied to average expected occupation and average expected ordering measures. Under the natural condition of inf-compactness of the holding cost rate function, the average expected occupation measures are seen to be tight and hence have weak limits. However inf-compactness is not a natural assumption to impose on the ordering cost function. For example, the cost function composed of a fixed cost plus proportional (to the size of the order) cost is not inf-compact. Intuitively, it would seem that imposing a requirement that the long-term average cost be finite ought to imply tightness of the average expected ordering measures; a lack of tightness should mean that the inventory process spends large amounts of time in regions that have arbitrarily large holding costs resulting in an infinite long-term average cost. This paper demonstrates that this intuition is incorrect by identifying a model and an ordering policy for which the resulting inventory process has a finite long-term average cost, tightness of the average expected occupation measures but which lacks tightness of the average expected ordering measures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1702.01046,
  title  = {A Counterintuitive Example in Inventory Management},
  author = {Kurt L. Helmes and Richard H. Stockbridge and Chao Zhu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1702.01046},
  year   = {2017}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T18:08:43.637Z