Perspectives

Time to consider supply chain reshoring?

It may lower supply chain risks and up supply chain resilience

Complex supply chains that have long been financially worthwhile for many organizations are today getting a hard look. Rising global wages, lingering impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, and higher sustainability expectations are among the factors pushing leaders to consider supply chain reshoring or nearshoring. Who should be considering this closer-to-customers strategy and what questions should they be asking?

The changing supply chain landscape

In just a few years since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the factors that drive corporate supply chain decisions have dramatically shifted. For decades, the default view favored globalization—the creation of increasingly complex supply relationships spanning the globe to tap lower labor costs and other competitive advantages. This has given way to a new decision landscape that puts a higher value on supply chain resilience, reflects ongoing changes in production and transportation costs, and in some cases dictates a closer-to-customers strategy. 

What has caused this shift? Some of the trends affecting supply chain decisions developed over years, including the gradual erosion of manufacturing cost advantages in Asia due to rising wages there and the leveling effect of more sophisticated automation. Other issues arrived suddenly, as the pandemic created or exposed supply challenges and fragility. First in 2020, measures to slow the spread of the virus led to factory and port shutdowns that rattled global commerce. Then in 2021, transportation bottlenecks and supply shortages frustrated efforts to meet resurgent demand.

The situation leads companies to weigh whether they could benefit from supply chain reshoring, bringing production to a home country or point of customer demand, or nearshoring, which brings production closer to the home country or domestic market. 

The constantly shifting calculus around supply chain reshoring presents companies with the opportunity to unlock significant value, reduce key risks, and better reflect the values of their customers. But the decisions required are complex, and they will vary industry by industry, company by company. 

 

What’s driving supply chain disruption?

Before tackling the analysis of total costs involved in a supply chain reshoring decision, it’s important to consider the full range of factors that may come into play. The drivers of supply chain disruptions seem to fall into three broad groups: quantitative, qualitative, and risk-related. 

  • Quantitative drivers include labor costs; transportation costs; lead time; working capital requirements; taxes and duties; and defect rates. These factors are controllable, and they certainly can be measured. They will likely have a meaningful impact on cost of goods sold, which will help determine profitability. 
  • Qualitative drivers include intellectual property management; environmental, social and governance (ESG) improvement; cross-functional complexity; and brand reputation. These factors are controllable, but they may be difficult for a company to measure in an objective way. While direct impact on profitability may be more difficult to establish, these factors can be highly relevant to an organization’s global competitiveness. 
  • Risks can include regulatory changes; geopolitical developments; natural disasters; and financial and economic volatility. These are issues mostly out of a company’s control and difficult to quantify. They may nonetheless have a significant effect on a company’s business continuity and competitiveness. 
Supply chain reshoring

Reshoring’s potential, industry by industry

Deloitte has analyzed the total cost, across several industries, to manufacture products and bring them to US markets. We compared labor and transportation expenses for Chinese-sourced goods against a reshoring scenario for the years 2016 to 2021.

In three of the four categories we examined—machinery, consumer appliances, and furniture—soaring transportation costs in 2021 suddenly made the supply chain reshoring option attractive. In our analysis, only the apparel and fashion category still favored Chinese suppliers in 2021, reflecting the relatively low cost of transporting a large volume of clothing across the oceans.

While transportation pricing has normalized since 2021, as ports cleared their backlogs, the potential volatility in transportation costs can no longer be ignored. Our analysis also reflects the change in the delta of labor costs between China and the United States, a trend that is occurring in other Asian countries, though slightly more slowly.

Each of the industries we examined has its own dynamics affecting supply chain economics.

  • Consumer appliances — An elevated level of automation is shrinking the labor cost gap between China and the United States, and the transportation cost impact on this category is intermediate. These products are near a tipping point that favors reshoring, and rising productivity in US manufacturing may become the deciding factor.
  • Machinery — Manufacturing automation and design advances are reducing the labor cost differential. Also, US production may deliver quality advantages. Transportation costs are high, and containerized transportation limits can affect design and modularity for some types of heavy machinery. Supply chain reshoring is a reality in the sector. 
  • Furniture — The labor cost differential for production in Asia is still significant, and for modular or user-assembled furniture, transportation costs may not offset that advantage. For higher-end furniture, transportation costs favor reshoring. 
  • Apparel and fashion — The labor cost difference between China and the United States is very high, and transportation costs are low, meaning low-cost products have no reason to reshore.

Recent Deloitte research on the future of the freight industry suggested that supply chain reshoring and nearshoring may redraw the transportation map. Executives with transportation and manufacturing companies surveyed for this report expect 20% or more of freight originating from Asia to shift to the Americas by 2025. 

Labor cost changes are part of the picture, along with volatility in goods transportation costs, which caught global companies off guard in 2022 and may be harder to predict. Working capital considerations can also bolster the case for reshoring or nearshoring, as a fully loaded container represents frozen money while in transit or stuck in a port. The ESG considerations that might drive supply chain decisions include reductions in carbon dioxide emissions from manufacturing or greater oversight of labor and environmental risks. 

As global manufacturers rethink their supply chain decisions, pursuing reshoring and nearshoring strategies, we may be entering a new era characterized by regionalization—reshoring and nearshoring—as a complement to globalization, boosted by Western policies. Regionalization may not be a universal trend, but clearly some companies are bringing manufacturing and procurement closer to markets that dominate their sales.

 

Is reshoring the right decision?

Maintaining a global presence while also restructuring to optimize operations and reduce supply chain risks may be harder today than it has been at any other time in the past several decades. Some companies may choose to gain strategic and cost advantages by moving all or part or their capabilities back to the West, reversing earlier offshoring decisions. But this is not a simple change and will not be straightforward to execute.

As a framework for examining the need to reassess existing supply relationships, the following questions are clearly relevant: 

  • How long and complex is my global supply chain (geographically and logistically)?
  • What competitive advantages or disadvantages does my supply chain confer in the marketplace? 
  • How does the total cost of goods sold change by shrinking the supply chain closer to the end consumer? 
  • How is my supply chain a result of price elasticity, and how does customer price elasticity impact decisions? 
  • What are the supply chain risks, and how can I control or mitigate them? 
  • Is there unpredictability in my supply chain that could affect business continuity? 
  • What’s the impact of regulations or the potential arc of future regulations (e.g., EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism [CBAM], Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive [CSRD])?

The answers to these questions may well signal that supply chain risk is just beneath the surface, and that in turn may shape divestiture and acquisition strategy in coming years. Supply chain reshoring or nearshoring options that seemed uneconomical in prior years may actually be opportunities today. 

 

 

 

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