Problem 8-8 Plan production for a four-month period: February through May. For February and March, you...
Plan production for a four-month period: February through May. For February and March, you should produce to exact demand forecast. For April and May, you should use overtime and inventory with a stable workforce; stable means that the number of workers needed for March will be held constant through May. However, government constraints put a maximum of 5,000 hours of overtime labor per month in April and May (zero overtime in February and March). If demand exceeds supply, then backorders...
Plan production for a four-month period: February through May. For February and March, you should produce to exact demand forecast. For April and May, you should use overtime and inventory with a stable workforce; stable means that the number of workers needed for March will be held constant through May. However, government constraints put a maximum of 5,000 hours of overtime labor per month in April and May (zero overtime in February and March). If demand exceeds supply, then backorders...
Plan production for the next year. The demand forecast is: spring, 19,500; summer, 9,400; fall, 15,000; winter, 18,800. At the beginning of spring, you have 66 workers and 990 units in inventory. The union contract specifies that you may lay off workers only once a year, at the beginning of summer. Also, you may hire new workers only at the end of summer to begin regular work in the fall. The number of workers laid off at the beginning of...
Problem 8-7 Develop a production plan and calculate the annual cost for a firm whose demand forecast is fall, 10,700; winter, 8,300; spring, 6,900; summer, 12,700. Inventory at the beginning of fall is 535 units. At the beginning of fall you currently have 35 workers, but you plan to hire temporary workers at the beginning of summer and lay them off at the end of summer. In addition, you have negotiated with the union an option to use the regular...
Develop a production plan and calculate the annual cost for a firm whose demand forecast is fall, 11,000; winter, 7,700; spring, 6,700; summer, 13,000. Inventory at the beginning of fall is 550 units. At the beginning of fall you currently have 30 workers, but you plan to hire temporary workers at the beginning of summer and lay them off at the end of summer. In addition, you have negotiated with the union an option to use the regular workforce on...
Develop a production plan and calculate the annual cost for a firm whose demand forecast is fall, 10,500; winter, 8,000; spring, 7,000; summer, 12,500. Inventory at the beginning of fall is 525 units. At the beginning of fall you currently have 35 workers, but you plan to hire temporary workers at the beginning of summer and lay them off at the end of summer. In addition, you have negotiated with the union an option to use the regular workforce on...
Problem 8-14 (Algo) Develop a production schedule to produce the exact production requirements by varying the workforce size for the following problem. The monthly forecasts for Product X for January, February, and March are 1,010, 1,540, and 1,180, respectively. Safety stock policy recommends that half of the forecast for that month be defined as safety stock. There are 22 working days in January, 19 in February and 21 in March. Beginning inventory is 530 units. Manufacturing cost is $180 per...
A manufacturer wants to develop a production plan for the month of February through June. The forecasted demand for those months are 2500, 3700, 3900, 5000, and 2000 units, respectively. The regular-time production capacity in February and March are 3000 units and 2500 units, respectively. The overtime production capacity in February and March are 600 units and 500 units, respectively. The regular production cost is $30 per unit and the overtime production cost is $45 per unit. The cost of...
Refrigeration Corp. needs an aggregate plan for January through June for its refrigerator production. The company has developed the following data: a) Plan A: Vary the workforce so that production meets the forecasted demand (maintain inventory at 250 units). Bell had eight employees on staff in December. Part-time labor is available. Complete the following table (enter your responses as whole numbers). Costs Holding cost $8/ refrigerator/ month Subcontracting $80/ refrigerator Regular-time labor $12/ hour Overtime labor $18/ hour for hours...
Develop a production schedule to produce the exact production requirements by varying the workforce size for the following problem The monthly forecasts for Product X for January February, and March 1010, 1510 and 1180 respectively. Safety stock policy recommends that half of the forecast for that month be defined as safety stock. There are 22 working days in January, 19 in February, and 21 in March. Beginning inventory is 530 units Manufacturing cost is $180 por unit, storage cost is...