BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20260201T105953EST-38301VVxnM@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20260201T155953Z DESCRIPTION:Nicholas C. Petruzzi\n\nWisconsin School of Business\, Universi ty of Wisconsin-Madiso\n\nDiscretionary Sell-by Dates and their Implicatio ns for Food Waste and Availability\n\nDate: Friday\, January 23\, 2026\n Ti me: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM\n Location: Bronfman Building\, Room 310\n\n\nAbstr act\n\nDespite their widespread use\, date labels on food products are lar gely unregulated in the United States. As a result\, manufacturers have br oad discretion on both the type of label to use\, if any\, and the date to affix to the label. One such label\, sell-by dates\, are designed primari ly to provide inventory rotation guidance to retailers. This guidance is e specially important to retailers that face uncertain demand for a perishab le product. But this raises an important question: under what conditions s hould manufacturers choose shorter versus longer sell-by dates\, and how d o these decisions affect food waste and food availability? To address this question\, we analyze a Stackelberg game between one manufacturer and one retailer of a perishable product\, where consumer demand for the product is uncertain. The manufacturer leads by setting not only the sell-by date for the product\, but also a credit to reimburse the retailer for each uni t of the product that does not sell by the chosen date. The retailer then responds by choosing its base stock level for dynamically replenishing its inventory of the product. We show that manufacturers favor shorter sell-b y dates if margins are higher\, because higher order volumes outweigh the cost of increased waste\, whereas they favor longer sell-by dates if margi ns are lower\, to reduce safety stock costs. As a result\, we also find th at that shorter sell-by dates can lead to the triple-negative externality in which product availability for consumers decreases at the same time tha t product waste for retailers increases and profit for the supply chain de creases. Our findings therefore suggest that manufacturer discretion over date labels can simultaneously result in undesirable economic\, social\, a nd environmental outcomes. Policymakers can address this problem by standa rdizing date labels to eliminate discretionary labeling practices or by im plementing disposal fees as a Pagouvian tax on manufacturers.\n DTSTART:20260123T160000Z DTEND:20260123T170000Z LOCATION:Room 310\, Donald E. Armstrong Building\, CA\, QC\, Montreal\, H3A 3L1\, 3420 rue McTavish SUMMARY:Management Science Research Centre (MSRC) Seminar: Nicholas C. Petr uzzi URL:/desautels/channels/event/management-science-resea rch-centre-msrc-seminar-nicholas-c-petruzzi-370423 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR