After reading the
“Time to rethink offshoring?” and “Supply Chain for iPhone Highlights Costs in
China” articles for Week 5, I began to question the widely held assumption that
the costs of production in China are much lower than those in the United States
– costs that are low enough to justify developing a supply chain that spans
across the globe. Instead, what these articles pointed out is that the
conditions that first attracted organizations to China are now changing – labor
costs are increasing greatly which is negatively affecting the bottom line of
companies who rely on labor from this country. Since the “Time to rethink
offshoring?” article pointed out that their may be numerous factors that may
actually make production in China more expensive that domestic production, I
was interested in exploring this idea to see whether the cost differential
actually pushed a significant number of companies to re-locate production
efforts.
In an article
titled “Coming Home” that was published in The
Economist in January 2013, the author writes about a small 2005 startup
called ET Water that analyzed the cost of production in America versus that of
China by taking into consideration shipping and customs fees as well as labor
costs. Ultimately, production in California would only be 10% more expensive
than production in China and this calculation is unable to take into account
other non-quantifiable benefits that may come from “re-shoring.”
Though the
article cites that less than 100 U.S. companies have made this move, the author
makes the case that many more companies are preparing to follow suit. He cites
labor costs as a major reason specified by companies who have made the decision
to bring some operations back to America.
The following is an excerpt from the article that details
this possible future “re-shoring” shift:
“In a survey of
American manufacturing companies by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) in April
2012, 37% of those with annual sales above $1 billion said they were planning
or actively considering shifting production facilities from China to America.
Of the very biggest firms, with sales above $10 billion, 48% came out as
reshorers. The most common reason given was higher Chinese labour costs. The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology looked at 108 American manufacturing
firms with multinational operations last summer. It found that 14% of them had
firm plans to bring some manufacturing back to America and one-third were
actively considering such a move. A study last year by the Hackett Group, a
Florida-based firm that advises companies on offshoring and outsourcing,
produced similar results. It expects the outflow of manufacturing from high- to
low-cost countries to slow over the next two years and the reshoring to double
over the previous two years. “The offshoring of manufacturing is now rapidly
moving towards equilibrium [zero net offshoring],” says Michel Janssen, the
firm’s head of research.”
The article closes with a very interesting point – that corporations may
be more able to re-locate production back to America due to the increased use
of technologies and other innovations that reduce the need for human capital in
the production process. By utilizing machines that can complete work in a more
standardized fashion and do not require that employers pay for benefits or face
rising wages, introducing more capital into the production process may be an
additional alternative to solving the issue of rising labor costs.
What toll would this sort of shift to more
capital-intensive production have on the labor market in this industry? Would
employees be forced to take lower wages in the face of lower demand for their
skills? Would the trade-offs between human and machine labor be worth the
switch?
Source: Coming Home (2013,
January 19). The Economist. Retrieved
from http://www.economist.com/news/special-report/21569570-growing-number-american-companies-are-moving-their-manufacturing-back-united
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