
De-Globalization and Supply Chain Regionalization
Description
Global trade networks are undergoing a historic structural reset as geopolitical realignment, industrial policy, and technological sovereignty reshape supply chain design. The report analyzes the reconfiguration from hyperglobalization to “resilient regionalization,” emphasizing reshoring, nearshoring, and automation as tools for economic self-reliance. It forecasts that up to 23% of global manufacturing value chains could relocate closer to consumption markets by 2035.
Quantitative modeling reveals rising investment in regional corridors such as USMCA, ASEAN, and EU internal production ecosystems, alongside parallel declines in trans-Pacific dependencies. The analysis also identifies industry exposure in electronics, automotive, and energy equipment as key stress points in a decoupling world.
Draws on IMF trade flow data, World Bank FDI trends, and UNCTAD regional investment statistics to evaluate de-globalization trajectories. Includes detailed analysis of IRA (U.S.), EU Chips Act, and China Dual Circulation Policy, comparing capital mobility, cost inflation, and supply resilience. Models resilience scoring for manufacturing clusters using cost-efficiency and redundancy metrics.
Table of Contents
25 Pages
- 1. Executive Summary: The Resilience Imperative
- 2. The Geoeconomic Paradigm Shift (2025–2035)
- 3. Industrial Policy and Economic Nationalism
- 4. Trade Fragmentation Metrics and Corridor Volatility
- 5. Reshoring, Nearshoring, and Rightshoring Strategy
- 6. Sectoral Exposure and Resilience Modeling
- 7. Strategic Recommendations
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