Coordination in agri-food supply chains: The role of Geographical Indication certification
研究了地理标志认证如何帮助中小食品供应商与大型零售商协调,通过信号模型和德国476家供应商数据发现,认证使交易概率提高19.9%至42%,中型供应商比微型供应商交易概率高11.7%至26.3%。
We examine the role of Geographical Indication (GI) certification in coordinating small- and medium-sized food suppliers and large-scale retailers in agri-food supply chains , where retailers seek to procure high-quality goods. Our main contributions are twofold. First, using a principal–agent framework with asymmetric information about supplier efficiency in quality production, we develop a signalling model that illustrates how GI certification enhances the coordination effect of procurement contracts by improving the ability of the retailer to identify efficient suppliers and increasing the provision of high-quality goods. The model also yields predictions about the impact of a supplier’s GI certification status and size on the retailer’s expected profits. Second, using a novel dataset from a survey of 476 small- and medium-sized food craft suppliers in Germany, we provide evidence supporting the theoretical model’s predictions regarding the effects of GI certification and supplier size on the retailer’s expected profits. Specifically, we estimate a structural equation model (SEM) that matches the equilibrium equations describing retailer and supplier behaviour in the theoretical model and links the probability of a transaction to a supplier’s GI certification and size. Our findings from instrumental variable (IV) approaches and propensity score matching (PSM) indicate that GI-certified suppliers are 19.9% to 42% more likely to transact with a retailer than non-certified suppliers, and medium-sized suppliers are 11.7% to 26.3% more likely to transact with a retailer than micro- or small-sized suppliers. These results suggest a potential role for GI certification in supplier-retailer coordination.