Globalisation revised but not reversed by covid
Globalisation revised but not reversed by covid"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
CHICAGO/BRUSSELS: New York-based Delta Children, which makes cribs in China for retailers such as Walmart, briefly studied moving production to the United States as supply shortages caused
by the COVID-19 pandemic added to its hefty bill from U.S. import tariffs. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross predicted in January the pandemic would "help accelerate" this type of
re-shoring of jobs to the United States, while some policymakers even spoke of a wider retreat of globalisation as companies retrenched to deal with severed supply chains. But Delta chief
executive Joe Shamie finally ruled out the move due to higher labour costs and a lack of suppliers. The company still plans to diversify its supply chain - but by moving some production to
South East Asia. "The Made-in-USA tag will work if the products are of the same quality and competitively priced, which is not the case at the moment," Shamie told Reuters. "I
would diversify, not totally leave China." While global trade volumes have inevitably fallen as the world plunged into recession and travel restrictions and social distancing curtailed
the movement of people, the economic ties built up by successive waves of globalisation are proving more resilient than some thought. Trade in goods is set to decline by 9% this year, the
World Trade Organization forecast on Tuesday, less severe than its April prediction of a 13-32% plunge. China's industrial sector is steadily recovering to pre-pandemic levels, with
exports up 9.5% year-on-year in August, their sharpest rise in 18 months. Optimism among German exporters hit a two-year high in September. PROTECTIONIST RHETORIC From Washington to
Wellington, politicians this year have preached self-sufficiency, urging firms to bring production home, particularly of "essential" products. The pandemic has led to a record 235
export restrictions as countries hoarded protective equipment and medical supplies, according to monitoring service Global Trade Alert. The impact of trillions of dollars of subsidies is
still unclear. But despite the drum beat of protectionist rhetoric, there have been far fewer new import tariffs than in the past two peak years, and Pascal Lamy, who led the WTO from 2005
to 2013, believes re-shoring will be marginal. "The reason there will be more talk than walk is simple - it's costly," said Lamy. "Globalisation is efficient and painful.
De-globalisation is inefficient and painful." The only high-profile country to put up funds is Japan, with 220 billion yen ($2.08 billion) earmarked for firms re-shoring production. In
a first round, it paid 57.4 billion yen for 57 projects - less than $10 million per firm. "Senior policymakers have made a whole range of strong statements, but it hasn't reached
a stage yet where there's a lot of money on the table for repatriating factories," said Simon Evenett, Global Trade Alert founder and professor at Switzerland's University of
St Gallen. Even before COVID, a key aim of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff war on Chinese imports from 2018 was to repatriate production. Companies, on the other hand, were drawn
from China to lower costs in Southeast Asia and adopted a "China Plus One" strategy to boost supply diversity. "Whether or not (the pandemic) leads to much more re-shoring
into the U.S. market itself remains to be seen," Michael Froman, U.S. Trade Representative in the Obama administration, told a webinar. JUST-IN-CASE Consultants at McKinsey & Co say
supply chain issues have grabbed the attention of chief executives and board rooms with COVID delivering the biggest and broadest value chain shock in memory, albeit only the latest in a
series of disruptions. Instead of focusing solely on procurement costs, companies are starting to consider stability and resilience. "Supply chains were built to be just-in-time. Going
forward they might be built for 'just-in-case'," said Susan Lund, a McKinsey partner leading research on globalisation and trade. McKinsey estimates 15-25% of world goods
trade could shift location over next five years due to business arguments and non-economic factors such as regulation, compared to 8% during the past five. Patrick Van den Bossche, a partner
at consulting firm Kearney, which produces an annual re-shoring report, said it would at best be some time before the U.S. benefited from the supply chain diversification being forced by
COVID-19 and the trade war. "The big wave, if ever there is to be one, will be at a minimum five to 10 years away because the basic infrastructure to accommodate a big re-shoring wave
is just not there," he said, adding this included sufficient skilled workers and suppliers. Companies which have taken the plunge to shift some manufacturing to the United States in the
past decade include General Electric in Kentucky and Starbucks in Ohio, according to the U.S. Reshoring Institute. However, the WTO said on Tuesday that the share of intermediate goods in
trade had been stable over the first half of 2020, at 52%, suggesting there was no major shift towards re-shoring this year. The U.S. August trade deficit also hit a 14-year high. Last year,
Mexico and low-cost Asian countries were the main beneficiaries of China's falling share of imports into the United States. Despite the pandemic, Vietnam's overall exports rose
4.2% in the first nine months of 2020, with the United States and China its top two markets. Lamy says dealing with COVID-19 and preparing for a future pandemic will inevitably lead to more
focus on protecting consumers, with greater insistence on precaution, safety, more checks and a different view of risk. "The upwards re-pricing of risk will redistribute this
multi-localisation. It's not going to be de-globalisation, it's going to be another version of globalisation. It's a new arrangement," he said. ($1 = 105.6100 yen)
Trending News
Los angeles permit applications for on-location filming post first month-to-month drop since june, filmla saysDespite the pandemic, some 40 feature films began shooting on-location in Greater Los Angeles last month, and 27 unique ...
Here’s why the internet is cancelling freddy birdy after his sexist remarks about deepika padukone - scoopwhoopIn today’s news of unsolicited comments about a woman’s clothing choices, influencer and copywriter Freddy Birdy made a ...
Rancho mirage seniors try to make sense of lossRANCHO MIRAGE -- Their friends were gone, yet they spoke of them as if they were just down the hall or perhaps running l...
Twitter hails this scene between siddhant & ananya from ‘gehraiyaan’ as the ultimate easter egg - scoopwhoopWe had been waiting for _Gehraiyaan__ _ever since we saw the trailer and heard the songs. The film has been creating qui...
Farhan-shibani & 10 other bollywood couples who remarried & gave love another chance - scoopwhoopContrary to popular belief that _shaadi matlab saat janmo ka saath_, sometimes even marriages do run their course. But t...
Latests News
Globalisation revised but not reversed by covidCHICAGO/BRUSSELS: New York-based Delta Children, which makes cribs in China for retailers such as Walmart, briefly studi...
High-dose therapy with stem cell transplantation for mantle cell lymphoma: results and prognostic factors, a single center experienceABSTRACT From 1991 to 1997 18 consecutive patients with well-defined mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) underwent high-dose ther...
404 errorAre Crit’Air vignettes still needed in France after MPs vote to axe low-emission zones? The sticker scheme came into for...
Kate middleton and prince william body language* Duchess of Cambridge and Prince William interview about their relationship * Interview from 2010 - a year before they ...
Duke and duchess of sussex urged to push for better rights for lgbtq+The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are due to begin an extended official visit later this year. Feminist writer Julie Bindel...