Multinational corporations are increasingly restructuring global supply chains as geopolitical tensions and economic risks prompt companies to diversify manufacturing beyond China.
The shift, commonly referred to as the “China+1” strategy, reflects efforts by companies to reduce supply chain vulnerabilities while maintaining access to global markets.
The strategy gained momentum following disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, rising trade tensions, and intensifying technological competition between the United States and China.
Governments are also playing a major role in reshaping supply chains. Countries including the United States, India, Vietnam, and Mexico are implementing industrial policies designed to attract manufacturing investment and reduce dependence on single-country supply networks.
Technology competition is another key factor. China has invested heavily in strategic technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and biotechnology, with government-backed investment estimated to exceed $900 billion over the past decade, highlighting the scale of global technological competition, according to a report published by the Council on Foreign Relations.
As companies reassess supply chain resilience, manufacturing investments are increasingly spreading across multiple regions, particularly Southeast Asia and Latin America.
For investors, the reconfiguration of global supply chains represents a structural transformation in international trade and industrial production that could shape global economic dynamics for decades.
Sources
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Council on Foreign Relations
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Brookings Institution
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Global trade policy reports






