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Business Administration
QUESTION #9607
Question 1
A company's supply chain uses the Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) model. If annual demand doubles while holding cost per unit remains constant and ordering cost remains constant, how does the optimal order quantity change, and what inventory management principle does this illustrate?
Correct Answer Explanation
EOQ = √(2DS/H) where D=demand, S=ordering cost, H=holding cost. If D doubles: new EOQ = √(2×2D×S/H) = √2 × √(2DS/H) = √2 × original EOQ ≈ 1.414 × original EOQ. This square root relationship is fundamental — it means that as demand scales, inventory does not scale proportionally (sub-linear scaling), which is the mathematical basis for inventory risk pooling and the efficiency gains from demand aggregation in supply chain network design.
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