Leaving the world's factory: relocating global supply chains out of China: Theoretical Perspectives and Empirical Evidence

Arnold Schuh, Daniela Huber

Publication: Chapter in book/Conference proceedingChapter in edited volume

Abstract

The US-China trade war and the Covid-19 pandemic have shattered China’s central position in global supply chains and stimulated the debate on global supply chain relocations out of China. This study focuses on the impact of these two crises on relocation decisions, the underlying strategic considerations and preferred relocation destinations. Our two-layered research approach consists of the analysis of business surveys and corporate relocation cases. The findings show that global supply chain relocations out of China are not a big wave yet and when they happen, only parts of the Chinese supply base are affected. We can distinguish four main responses, namely a broad geographic diversification, “China +1”, increased localisation and decoupling or the split by final markets. Furthermore, we identified Southeast Asia, in particular Vietnam, as preferred relocation destination. Re- and nearshoring play a minor role among Western MNCs so far.
Translated title of the contributionRückzug von der Fabrik der Welt: Die Verlagerung von globalen Lieferketten aus China heraus
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationResearch Handbook on Foreign Exit, Relocation and Re-Entry
Subtitle of host publicationTheoretical Perspectives and Empirical Evidence
EditorsJorma Larimo, Pratik Arte, Carlos Sousa, Pervez Ghauri, Jose Mata
Place of PublicationCheltenham
PublisherEdward Elgar Publishing
ChapterIII/12
Pages259-291
Number of pages33
ISBN (Electronic)9781800887145
ISBN (Print)9781800887138
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Keywords

  • China, global supply chains, relocation, geopolitical risk

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