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India seen as major beneficiary as supply chains migrate from China
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IANS | 14 Jun, 2023
More global companies are taking supply chain diversification seriously.
Companies are increasingly highlighting the benefits of
'friend-shoring' their supply chains in order to better insulate from
geopolitical challenges.
"We see India, Mexico and
Southeast Asia as best positioned for this transition. India and Mexico
are two economies that stand to benefit from increasingly local supply
chains," Morgan Stanley said in a report.
Morgan Stanley
economists have written extensively on the economic and industrial
benefits that are beginning to accrue in economies where supply chains
are migrating.
"In India we see a tripling of the manufacturing
base by 2031 with its share of GDP rising from about 16 per cent to 21
per cent over the same time horizon. In Mexico, we estimate a potential
net gain of approximately 30 per cent in exports to the US over a period
of five years; this trend appears to be well underway as Mexico-US
trade is now level with China-US trade. The associated rise in
investment and manufacturing could help raise Mexico's potential GDP
from 1.9 per cent to 2.4 per cent, over the next five years, according
to our models," the report said.
Supply chain de-risking will be a
necessary but difficult and expensive process, taking a decade or
longer, featuring more protectionist policies.
Most expected companies to keep a large installed base and presence in China.
At a country level, key net beneficiaries would be India and Mexico, the report said.
While
corporates have largely avoided making any specific geopolitical
distinctions, some of the giant companies have been strategically
rewiring their supply chain investments. Apple's partner Foxconn has
announced plans to invest $700 million in a new plant in India to
diversify away some of the risks arising from US-China tensions. After
completion, the production site is expected to bring in 100k new jobs
compared with the current 200k in the Zhengzhou Plant, Morgan Stanley
said.
More companies are adopting a 'China+1' or even 'China+N'
strategy to expand their production footprints to Southeast Asia, Mexico
and India, and to re-shore where production is particularly
capital-intensive or can be automated, the report said.
Much of
the structural shift in the level of global trade in the 1990s and 2000s
is explicitly linked to the construction of modern China, an event in a
long history that we would consider a one-off and exceptional rather
than a normal trend.
"China entering the global economy is a
historic event that cannot be replicated because neither India,
Indonesia, the Philippines, nor any other emerging market economy has
the same gap to close from a value or volume standpoint that China made
up between 1990 and 2010," the report said.
The de-risking
process from China will progress slowly, and most tech hardware
production that leaves China will flow to Southeast Asia and India, not
North America.
China presently accounts for $4.9 trillion manufacturing GDP out of a total of $14.2 trillion (34 per cent).
Based
on a potential loss of international production and exports, an
estimated $846 billion of manufacturing output could be seen to be at
risk -- the equivalent of 6.0 per cent of the global total.
"Some
countries would see significant growth gains: In principle, we believe
that the countries making 'share gains' would be the US, India (doubling
from 3.1 per cent to 6.2 per cent) and SE Asia -- while EMEA and Japan
maintain their existing share of global manufacturing output. In simple
terms, we have divided up the 'decoupled $846 billion' of China output
and attributed it to different countries based on these shares (e.g.,
India now taking 6 per cent of the $846 billion," the report said.
On
the potential uplift to other countries, in the event that these flows
were to be resettled overnight, from a low base, India would see an 11.8
per cent expansion in its manufacturing base (in one year), it added.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
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82.60 |
UK Pound
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102.90 |
Euro
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92.50
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89.35 |
Japanese
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53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
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