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Flow of goods form the place of production to the market is the main concern of Supply Chain Management. IF focuses on the flow of goods, knowledge and money across the entire organization, from material suppliers to producers to consumers. Various diverse steps taken by various personnel deal with this exercise of management. Consequently, any step by anyone in the chain, influences the whole system because of being interlinked with each other. Present modest work is a serious endeavour. It focuses on various aspects of Supply Chain Management, as an important discipline of Management. Every
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Business logistics --- Business logistics. --- Supply chain management --- Industrial management --- Logistics
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Closed-loop supply chain activities such as remanufacturing, recycling, dismantling for spare parts, and reverse logistics have helped many companies tap into different revenue streams by finding secondary markets for their products, all while reducing their overall carbon footprint. This book discusses various closed-loop supply chain processes.
Business logistics. --- Business logistics --- Remanufacturing. --- Environmental aspects.
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Some very large multinational transport and logistics firms have emerged to provide integrated transport services to shippers in the globalised economy. Do these firms escape regulatory oversight from national competition authorities because of their sheer scale? Do they pose additional threats to competition when they merge with or acquire other companies in the supply chain? The Round Table brought competition experts together with researchers on maritime shipping, rail freight and logistics to identify critical competition issues and appropriate regulatory responses. An examination of the strategies of transport and logistics companies reveals that vertical integration can yield efficiencies, but usually reflects a need to improve the use of expensive fixed assets rather than control all parts of the supply chain. This usually explains why shipping lines acquire terminal operators. Horizontal acquisitions, where similar companies serving the same market merge, are more likely to raise competition concerns. Problems are particularly prone to arise at bottleneck infrastructure facilities. The Round Table report provides an economic framework for examining competition in global transport and logistics businesses, discusses the adequacy of the remedies available to regulators when competition is threatened, and explores the role of competition authorities and Transport Ministries in ensuring markets are efficient.
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