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Why Manufacturing Matters & Where Best to Do ItIf this was a volte-face by a major consultancy as some folks have alleged, it's being skillfully done and with some strong reasoning behind it. Manufacturing, says market research firm McKinsey, is essential to a nation or region and its presence or absence can have some significant impact on an economic area. Until I read the McKinsey report, I had been wondering if I wasn't mistaken in disagreeing with the massive, decades-long transfer -- or outsourcing, if you prefer -- of Western production activities to the Far East and Easter Europe. McKinsey gave me back my faith in the efficacy of manufacturing as a critical element of economic development, growth, and sustainability. Yet, it doesn't blindly advocate that manufacturing should be conducted by all economic regions. It, in fact, outlines the critical factors that companies and political leaders should consider before voting on whether or not to establish plants in their locality. You may be similarly convinced if you download the 184-page document and spend as much time poring through its findings, analysis, and conclusions. I am happy, though, to share some of these with you here, peppered with my own assessment of why manufacturing matters, no matter the economic region or nation under focus. First, some bullet points from the McKinsey report highlighting the role manufacturing plays in both developed and developing economic settings.
As important as manufacturing is to all economies, however, it must be emphasized that its significance varies depending on several factors, including the size of the economy, its composition, development level, and future growth strategy. It cannot and shouldn't be assumed that all nations must be involved in all manufacturing activities in order to grow. The reality, according to McKinsey, is that each manufacturing sector has its own requirements, and a nation or region may lack the essential ingredients for achieving success in making a specific set of products. In such instances, being involved in making such products would be counter-productive for the specific economy. McKinsey identified what it described as five segments of global manufacturing: Local markets; Regional processing; Energy/resource-intensive commodities; Technologies/innovators; and Labor-intensive tradables. In order to determine whether or not to participate in any of these manufacturing segments, a country or region must first identify the resources that can help determine success in each of these activity sectors. The next step would be to honestly determine whether it has enough of these resources to be competitive in the chosen manufacturing segment. The "success" factors to be considered include the following -- broken down by manufacturing segment:
These classifications seem to make sense, and company executives as well as economic planners should consider them when deciding where to establish manufacturing plants or build support infrastructure. As with everything, though, this looks good on paper, but companies and nations may still have other reasons for investing in manufacturing segments they are least prepared for due to various factors such as the desire to satisfy local political demands. The McKinsey report also didn't discuss the potential impact of other geo-political issues such as regional turbulence, war, etc. Those may be quite as important as the logical items outlined above. |
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You've heard the saying "the No. 1 supply chain risk is your people." That hasn't always been the case. But today's complex global supply chain requires a new type of multitalented employee. It's one who understands, finance, marketing, economics, is savvy with technology, graceful with relationships and can think analytically.
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