There are a number of drivers behind this trend:
A recent Deloitte survey found that 62% of manufacturers surveyed have started reshoring or nearshoring their production capacities. (The survey included 305 executives at transportation and manufacturing companies in the United States and Europe with annual revenues of more than $500 million.)
Mexico’s recent boom in industrial exports to the U.S. is more evidence that the nearshoring trend is already underway. The U.S. is Mexico’s main trading partner (more than 80% of its exports are headed there) and its exports hit a record $52.3 billion in September, up 25% from 2021.
“Currently, more than 400 North American businesses have the intention of carrying out a relocation process from Asia to Mexico,” Mexican Economy Minister Raquel Buenrostro said at the end of last year. (She’ll work with U.S. officials next year to lure businesses from abroad.)
Currently some of Mexico’s top exports to the U.S. include:
The Biden administration’s Build Back Better initiative has focused on reshoring certain jobs and moving the production of certain products away from China. Three laws were recently passed that incentivize companies to boost reshoring, because they include preferences toward products produced domestically. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors and Science Act (CHIPS) and the Inflation Reduction Act use tax credits and other incentives to encourage companies to reshore or nearshore to countries like Canada or Mexico.
We talked with Ted Murphy, a partner at the law firm of Sidley Austin LLP, about how the world is likely to react to the subsidies and incentives provided by these new laws. You can watch our conversation here.
Doing business internationally has gotten even more challenging the last few years, between supply chain disruptions and other global issues that have businesses rethinking how and where they produce their goods. Though there’s no way to completely eliminate risks when doing business internationally, there are steps you can take to identify potential risks, analyze and evaluate them, and take proper precautions. Download the free whitepaper Evaluating Export Markets: How to Assess Country and Customer Risks to learn about some of the steps you should be taking to ensure you’re making the best decisions when considering new export customers and markets.
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