12.6 The management of inventories Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main objective of inventory management?

A

To achieve maximum profits by maintaining adequate inventory levels for smooth business operations, while minimising the cost of inventory holding.

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2
Q

What is the “Re-order level” (ROL) in inventory management?

A

The level of inventory that must be reached before an order is placed - i.e. it indicates ow much to order and when.

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3
Q

Why must a “buffer” level of inventory be held?

A

Because demand and order lead times vary, and so holding a buffer removes the risk of inventory exhaustion.

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4
Q

What are some techniques that help in efficient inventory management?

A
  • economic order quantity (EOQ)
  • ABC inventory control
  • just-in-time (JIT) systems
  • fixing the inventory levels
  • vital, essential and desirable (VED) analysis
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5
Q

What is the economic order quantity technique (EOQ)?

A

A technique for balancing the total costs of holding and ordering inventory. (i.e. holding costs vs ordering costs)

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6
Q

What are “holding costs” in the economic order quantity technique?

A

The cost of holding X amount of inventory for one year (i.e. holding cost per unit x average inventory)

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7
Q

What are “ordering costs” in the economic order quantity technique?

A

The fixed costs of placing an order, including transportation, inspections etc.

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8
Q

How is What economic order quantity calculated?

A

EOQ = sq root (2cd/h)

where:
d = annual demand
c = ordering cost per order
h = holding cost per unit

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9
Q

When determining the right inventory levels, a business must consider “minimum level”. What is this?

A

The lowest balance that should be maintained at all times.

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10
Q

When determining the right inventory levels, a business must consider “re-order level”. What is this?

A

The level of inventory at which the business should order new supply.

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11
Q

When determining the right inventory levels, a business must consider “maximum level”. What is this?

A

The maximum inventory level that the company can hold at any point in time.

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12
Q

When determining the right inventory levels, a business must consider “danger level”. What is this?

A

The level below “minimum”, after which immediate action must be taken to increase inventory.

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13
Q

What is the just in time (JIT) system of inventory management?

A

A series of manufacturing and supply chain techniques aiming to reduce inventory to the absolute minimum or reducing it all together.

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14
Q

Where, when and by who was the just in time (JIT) system developed?

A

Toyota, Japan, 1960s

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15
Q

What types of waste might just in time (JIT) avoid?

A
  • capital and storage costs
  • materials handling
  • rejects and reworks
  • queues and delays
  • long lead times
  • unnecessary clerical and accounting procedures.
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16
Q

What drawbacks are associated with the just in time (JIT) system?

A
  • price fluctuations of raw materials increase costs (since raw items are not bought in bulk when cheap)
  • not helpful in periods of unexpected demand
  • production highly reliant on suppliers (no buffer_
  • may require heavy technological investment
17
Q

What is ABC inventory control?

A

An analytical approach for classifying inventory items based on their consumption values. i.e. the most costly items are most closely monitored.

18
Q

What are the three categories of item under the ABC system of inventory control?

A

A category - items that require high investment but are needed in small quantities (around 20%, i.e. Pareto principle). Quantities are closely monitored.

B category - medium value, representing around 30%. Not as closely monitored as A.

C category - low value items making up the rest of inventory - it is not usually cost effective to deploy inventory controls on these.

19
Q

What is vital, essential and desirable (VED) analysis?

A

A system to identify the criticality of inventory items that the business cannot operate without.

20
Q

In vital, essential and desirable (VED) analysis, items are classified according to their criticality. What are the three categories?

A

Vital - without these items production will come to a halt (e.g. difficult to obtain items).

Essential - essential spare parts, but non-availability may not adversely affect production (e.g. lead times may be short).

Desirable - items whose stock-out only causes very minor disruption with minimal cost.