this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2025
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The true believers I’ve seen online are all 100% convinced that the reshoring of manufacturing will happen overnight. As if all the factories are sitting there, just waiting for the lights to turn back on, and that the institutional knowledge needed to run the factories is a given. They treat any questioning of the material barriers to reshoring as a lack of faith in the elbow greasing powers of the American entrepreneurial spirit.
I will say that these are predictions made almost entirely by people who do not work in manufacturing, or if they do work in manufacturing, they have very limited contact with Asia and over-value the overall quality of their production (even if they may have better quality standards in particular products). Anybody I know who actually has experience working with Asia and Asia manufacturing are incredibly pessimistic about the effects of this, because the main reason that things are 'still' in Asia is because there is no work force to sustain American production. It doesn't matter if you reshore it if there is no one to work it.
Oh yeah, it’s either people with no experience romanticizing the mid-20th century “golden” era or it’s boomers that retired from their legacy manufacturing job 15+ years ago and have completely outdated notions of what modern manufacturing is like.