January 30, 2024
January 29, 2025
As tensions between China and the United States continue to rise, and due to many geopolitical and economical issues, like warfare, COVID, inflation, and lack of commodities, American companies are having a hard time relying on their goods to be shipped from overseas, especially from China, causing buyers to reevaluate their sourcing.
In the face of these major challenges, Mexico remains one of the top trade U.S. partners. This represents a huge opportunity for American companies, especially since Mexico is starting to replace China as a source of different supplies and has many competitive advantages such as a similar time zone, work culture, and geographical location. This is in turn made easier with the USMCA agreement. These key factors are strengthening the relationship between the U.S. and Mexico, positioning cross-border trade as a true game-changer for many companies.
"Mexico became America’s largest trade partner in 2019, a position they will not give up in our lifetimes." – Peter Zeihan.
Therefore, we can say that nearshoring is a great opportunity to increase business strength, particularly in the post-COVID-19 world.
Nearshoring means outsourcing manufacturing to a nearby country or transferring manufacturing processes to a closer geographic location, in which the company can benefit from geographic, time zone, cultural, linguistic, economic, political, or historical proximity or similarity. However, it can also refer to the process of offloading responsibilities and jobs to countries near the company’s geographic location.
There are other similar words, like reshoring and offshoring, but they essentially mean different things. To know the difference between nearshoring, reshoring, and offshoring, click here.
The rise of nearshoring in Mexico has been steadily increasing over the past decade for several reasons. Firstly, ongoing trade conflicts between the U.S. and China have caused uncertainty when it comes to the cost and quality of production, in addition to concerns regarding intellectual property protection.
Secondly, when the world was shut down due to the Covid-19 pandemic, it illustrated just how risky it was to have such a heavy reliance on a weakening supply chain. And thirdly, more North American manufacturers are taking a regionalized approach to their strategies due to the provisions outlined in the USMCA, which was officially effective on July 1st, 2020.
When compared to offshoring, which relocates factories from costly countries to lower-cost regions to produce goods or services, nearshoring allows operations to be in closer proximity to where the goods or services will ultimately be sold.
Even before COVID hit, according to Kearney’s 2019 Reshoring Index, Mexico increased exports to the U.S. by $28 billion in 2018, which equaled a 10 percent growth rate over the year previous and was documented as the fastest growth experienced in the past seven years. This occurred at the same time manufacturing imports from China registered a sharp decline, as a result of the major disruption caused by the U.S./China trade conflict.
The last few years have seen an upward trend, in which long-term workers are retiring and millennials don't seem to be interested in working in factories, causing labor expenses to go up. U.S. companies still depend substantially on manpower to provide the products that their customers want, and this might cause some issues. One of the most cost-effective solutions nowadays is increasing the amount of work done in Mexico; in other words, Nearshoring to Mexico.
This has become a popular topic for many companies because of the benefits they can get: the shorter travel distance to Mexican plants is one of the most important advantages of manufacturing in Mexico, particularly for businesses with headquarters in the United States or Canada, as well as reducing the number of corporate travels, and so on. Let’s take a look at some other key benefits that Mexico can provide for U.S. companies::
U.S. manufacturers, both big and small, are welcome in Mexico. Nevertheless, here are some of the biggest American businesses operating in Mexico today.
The residual effects of the pandemic have brought the long-ignored issue of supply chains to the forefront, as congestion and price surges caused havoc not only to the companies involved in trade but to the end consumers. Bringing manufacturers closer to users will not solve all problems, but we believe it will bring some relief. Nearshoring is attractive right now for myriad reasons. With investments flowing in and increased attention from all sides, there is also an opportunity for digitally native disruptors in this sector to help spur a new chapter for U.S.-Mexico economic integration. If that happens, it could bring massive benefits to companies and consumers on both sides of the border and beyond.
Are you considering nearshoring in your supply chain strategy?