Manufacturing jobs in US continue to move offshore despite “reshoring” hype

Tuesday, 16 December 2014 01:48:27 (GMT+3)   |   San Diego
       

Chicago-based global strategy and management consulting firm A.T. Kearney released Monday its 2014 Reshoring Index, the first in a series of studies looking objectively at the rate and pace of the return of manufacturing operations to the US In this inaugural Index, manufactured goods flows are tracked over a 10-year period to show the change in ratio between US manufacturing imports and gross output during that time period. The index is actually expected to show a year-over-year decline, lower by 20 basis points from 2013, as offshoring to foreign manufacturing markets outpaces reshoring.

Patrick Van den Bossche, A.T. Kearney partner and leader of the firm’s Americas Strategic Operations Practice and co-author of the Index, notes, “Our goal was to find out for ourselves whether companies are indeed leaning toward reshoring operations, and if so, what are the motivators driving them. We’ve been following these questions with interest since 2010, and have a growing database of 700+ reshoring cases across all industries.”

“While the so-called reshoring trend has helped improve the mood of US manufacturing since the Recession, the reality is that the import value of manufactured goods into the US from 14 low-cost Asian countries has grown at an average of 8 percent per year in the last five years,” added Pramod Gupta, A.T. Kearney principal and study co-author. “The 2014 Reshoring Index is not only an indicator of US manufacturing capital flows, but also how the US stacks up in terms of attractiveness as a source of manufactured products versus countries like China, Bangladesh, and Cambodia.”

Key highlights include:

  • The top three reshoring industries, as measured by the number of cases in A.T. Kearney’s database, are electrical equipment, appliance and component manufacturing, with 15 percent of the cases; transportation equipment manufacturing, with 15 percent; and apparel manufacturing, which previously had not been expected  ever to come back, with 12 percent.
  • Improvement in delivery time led the reasons executives gave in favor of reshoring, with quality improvement a close second and followed by brand/image.
  • While there has been an overall lift in US manufacturing for five straight years since 2009, imports of offshored manufactured goods into the US have increased at a faster rate than any return of manufacturing operations to our soil and, for the 14 top offshoring locations combined, amounted to $630 billion in 2013.

Those 14 top offshoring locations (China, Taiwan, Malaysia, India, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore, Philippines, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, and Cambodia) are also included in the study, along with a tracking of the year-over-year change in Manufacturing Import Ratio from 2004 through 2014.


Similar articles

PMI in Mexico up 0.7 percent in March

03 Apr | Steel News

New orders for US manufacturing goods up 1.4 percent in February

03 Apr | Steel News

US manufacturing PMI shows expansion for first time in 16 months

01 Apr | Steel News

New orders for US manufactured goods down 3.6 percent in January

05 Mar | Steel News

US manufacturing PMI declines to 47.8 percent in February

01 Mar | Steel News

New orders for US manufactured goods up 0.2 percent in December

02 Feb | Steel News

US manufacturing PMI edges up 2 percentage points in January

01 Feb | Steel News

New orders for US manufactured goods up 2.6 percent in November

05 Jan | Steel News

US manufacturing industry contracts again in December

03 Jan | Steel News

New orders for US manufactured goods down 3.6 percent in October

04 Dec | Steel News