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Risk Management - Supply Chains moving towards Reshoring

So far, it is impossible to quantify the complications of COVID-19. From the standardisation of remo...

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Posted by Dave Food on Oct 1, 2020 6:49:02 PM
Dave Food

So far, it is impossible to quantify the complications of COVID-19. From the standardisation of remote-work to the countless renovations in health care, and the way people and industries operate evermore changing in different ways. Catastrophic consequences on Health, Economy, Education and above all in our life, will last for years, and normalisation of such implications must be related to a profound transformation in all areas of our communities and businesses.

Industries operations outcomes taking place across global trade and the Supply Chains (SCs,) are moving towards Reshoring. 

What is Reshoring or onshoring?

Bringing imported goods or materials back to local production is what define the term Reshoring or Onshoring, nor depending on international transactions or remote shipment to get the necessary resources for manufacturing.

Latest studies register a record amount of imports mainly from low-cost trading suppliers far-away in Asia, meaning they then were not interested in Reshoring. However, things have changed as a consequence of the pandemic.

Due to the sudden travelling restrictions, the prevalent shortage of goods and medical supplies, and the change of customer’s behaviour, suppliers worldwide were in great stress; therefore, Reshoring is currently a significant priority for SC experts and some of the largest manufacturers.

 Moreover, the escalating number of deaths made several businesses feel that prompt Reshoring would protect lives, and place inland manufacturing as imperative to our public health, our national security, and the Economy.

The impact of globalisation

 The globalisation of SC has been increasing for years; manufacturers around the world grew gradually much more dependent on remote suppliers to fulfil goods. Like this pandemic, the banking crisis years ago or the escalation of cybercrime over the past years, plus the slow-unpredictable shift of overseas delivery, greatly disrupting the globalisation of SCs. These dependences unlocked unparalleled risks, pros and cons like:

PROS:

·       Offshoring has regularly exposed some risks for manufacturers.

·       The building of intercontinental associations.

·       Trade deals have significantly diminished both labour and wholesale costs.

·       High unemployment levels have significantly decreased.

·       The holding of factory workers labouring mainly at emerging economies.

·       Global SCs can help to mitigate more localised risks. 

CONS:

·       Price determines the imports of remote goods.

·       Asian factories hiring illegal component and suppliers,

·       The end products that are different from agreed-samples or presenting low quality.

·       Intellectual property theft.

·       Lack of sensitivity to problems from remote associates.

The virus has driven corporations and consumers likewise to weigh up local suppliers as necessary, regardless of higher costs in several cases. Some Economists consider that Reshoring will be focal for the recovery, restructuring the SC and strengthening security, bringing manufacturing back, and would create millions of re-designed jobs back to the workforce.

But Reshoring is not that simple. The cost should have to be considered in the first place if your company wants to engage in Reshoring efforts, as wide-ranging trade agreements, renewal of facilities and teams, and other issues will raise the cost. 

Reshoring also risks the benefits presented by international SCs:

  • Access to low-cost production, goods and raw materials that could be out of stock at home.
  • The wide-ranging of suppliers and with them the functional manufacturing expertise, innovation and most expansive collection of researching.
  • Factors like lower transportation rates and faster inventory chances can counterbalance higher-labour costs to make Reshoring not as much of high-priced in general. 
  • Massive Reshoring of pharmaceuticals and medical supplies alone could potentially create more than one million new jobs and inject billions to your Economy,
  • Keeping shelves supplied and placing families in need back to work.
  • Reshoring might be challenging unless you have access to skilled-suppliers with enough capacity to meet your demands closer to home.
  • Decades of outsourcing might have deepened out local expertise and capacity, which could take time to restore.
  • A cyber-attack causing severe disruption to local SCs is a further example of how Reshoring could increase the risk for businesses, as compared with reliance on global SCs involving countries which were not affected.

·       Take into account key legal-contractual point necessary when terminating a contract.

 Of course, should businesses successes on restructuring SCs along domestic lines, Reshoring would eventually develop a healthier-more-capable manufacturing base. Ultimately, this would create a broader cornerstone of skilled-better-paid jobs, which is no doubt a Government goal when advocating for Reshoring in general. In short to medium-term; however, companies should bear in mind whether they have the time to wait for such benefits to come about.

Innovative tracking technology

 

If you decide to move around your business operations towards Reshoring, inventory management and SC tools will be essential for a successful outcome. Innovation brings new solutions to the foreground by supporting the organisation in its Reshoring attempts. These tools encompass new tracking and authentication innovations, which make visibility within the SC more accurate than before. 

When boosting traceability up at any industry, an organisation can improve processes to build up consumer’s trust, whilst speeding up your production and delivery; cutting-edge tracking tools can help put a stop to counterfeits, stolen goods and mismanaging of customer data.

CONCLUSIONS: some economies are starting over slower than some of its worldwide competitors, underlining the fact that domestic SCs can be just as exposed to crises such as their global counterparts. However, completely reshoring SCs might also overlook or even exacerbate other risks.

Businesses may therefore agree that rather than a full-scale reshoring, it is preferable to focus on other mitigations such as simplifying and shortening SCs or looking at options for “just in case” sources of supply.

However, we have to mention that Reshoring could be not necessary or the best option for you; all depends on your business requirements. Consider Reshoring as a significant discussion among your board to be prepared for your post-crisis SC; for many organisations, it might be neither workable nor attractive.

Would Reshoring be an option for your company to recover after the pandemic?

 

 

Prophetic Technology

 

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