Here's a "grassroots" initiative bringing manufacturing back to the USA from Asia, https://reshorenow.org/ It was started by Harry Moser, the third generation of his family involved in USA manufacturing--primarily the Singer Sewing Machine Company... at one time a huge New Jersey factory of 5 million square feet. His main tool is free-to-use software, the
Total Cost of Ownership Estimator
Most companies make sourcing decisions based solely on price, oftentimes resulting in a 20 to 30 percent miscalculation of actual offshoring costs. The Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Estimator is a free online tool that helps companies account for all relevant factors — overhead, balance sheet, risks, corporate strategy and other external and internal business considerations — to determine the true total cost of ownership. Using this information, companies can better evaluate sourcing, identify alternatives and even make a case when selling against offshore competitors. See Impact of Using TCO Instead of Price for further explanation.
The message makes sense to this AC, don't worry about national politics, work the cost numbers in detail and let the numbers guide purchasing decisions. He reports that many, many purchasing managers never look beyond the simple price quote--of course that will be cheaper from off-shore. The reality is that when all the relevant factors are included, in many cases it's actually cheaper to buy locally.
For a somewhat independent assessment, the Association for Manufacturing Technology (AMT) summarizes the Reshoring Initiative year-end report from 2024 here, https://www.amtonline.org/article/reshoring-initiative-annual-report-287-000-jobs-announced with a Figure 2 caption, "Reshoring Initiative Library: The cumulative number of jobs brought back since 2010 is nearing two million (Figure 2) - about 40% of what we lost to offshoring."
(Score: 4, Interesting) by gnuman on Wednesday November 26, @01:51PM
Tariffs make "on-shoring" actually less likely, unless you only sell internally. If you want to sell outside of US, well, probably not a good idea to "on-shore" any of that production into US.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/mrbeast-goes-mainstream-inside-jimmy-100000809.html [yahoo.com]
Let's just say, small business manufacturers can't meet Trump and give him a new watch or gold bar to get a carve out. So, if you are producing something in US for US-only, maybe it's good to "on-shore" (if you can find workers). But if you are "on shoring" to export to the world? The numbers don't lie.