The Economist - USA (2019-07-13)

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TheEconomistJuly 13th 2019 3

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omlinton, chiefprocurementandsupply-chainofficer at
Flex,anAmericancontract-manufacturinggiant,hashisfin-
geronThePulse.Thatisthenameofhisfirm’swhizzycommand
centreinCalifornia,whichisevocativeofa Pentagonwarroom.
ThekitallowshimtomonitorFlex’s16,000suppliersand100-plus
factories, producing everything from automotive systems to
cloud-computingkitforover1,000customersworldwide.MrLin-
tonisoneoftheacknowledgedkingsofthesupplychain—the
mechanismattheheartofglobalisationofthepastfewdecades by
whichrawmaterials,partsandcomponentsareexchangedacross
multiplenationalboundariesbeforebeingincorporatedintofin-
ishedgoods.Askhimaboutthefuture,however,andheanswers
ominously:“We’reheadingintoa post-globalworld.”
Afewyearsagothatwouldhavebeena hereticalthought.The
combinationof theinformation-technology revolution,which
madecommunicationsaffordableandreliable,andtheentryof
Chinaintotheworldeconomy,whichprovidedbountifulcheapla-
bour,hadtransformedmanufacturingintoa globalenterprise.In
hisbook“TheGreatConvergence”,RichardBaldwinarguesthatthe
resultingblendofWesternindustrialknow-howandAsianmanu-
facturingmusclefuelledthehyper-globalisationofsupplychains.
From 1990 to2010,tradeboomedthankstotariffcuts,cheaper
communicationsandlower-costtransport.


Theoecd, a think-tankforadvancedeconomies,reckonsthat
70%ofglobaltradenowinvolvesglobalvaluechains(gvcs).The
increaseintheircomplexityisillustratedbythegrowthinthe
shareofforeignvalueaddedtoa country’sexports.Thisshotup
frombelow20%in 1990 tonearly30%in2011.
Westernretailersdevelopednetworksofinexpensivesuppli-
ers,especiallyinChina,sothattheyinturncoulddeliver“every-
daylowprices”toconsumersbackhome.Multinationalcorpora-
tions (mncs) that once kept manufacturing close to home
stretchedsupplychainsthinastheychasedcheaplabourand
economiesofscaleontheothersideoftheworld.Assumingglo-
balisationtobeirreversible,firmsembracedsuchpracticesaslean
inventorymanagementandjust-in-timedeliverythatpursuedef-
ficiencyandcostcontrolwhilemakinglittleprovisionforrisk.
Butnowtherearesignsthatthegoldenageofglobalisationmay
beover,andthegreatconvergenceisgivingwaytoa slowunravel-
lingofthosesupplychains.Globaltradegrowthhasfallenfrom
5.5%in 2017 to2.1%thisyear,bytheoecd’s reckoning.Globalregu-
latoryharmonisationhasgivenwaytolocalapproaches,suchas
Europe’sdata-privacylaws.Cross-borderinvestmentdroppedbya
fifthlastyear.Soaringwagesandenvironmentalcostsareleading
toa declineinthe“cheapChina”sourcingmodel.
TheimmediatethreatcomesfromPresidentDonaldTrump’s

A slow unravelling


Special report


Supply chains are undergoing their most dramatic transformation in decades.
This will be wrenching for many firms, argues Vijay Vaitheeswaran


Global supply chains


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