“Made in America” has been a government policy, a political slogan and a marketing strategy throughout US history. Going as far back as the Revolutionary War, the Homespun Movement encouraged colonists to make their own blankets and clothing in symbolic resistance to British economic control.
So it should be no surprise that this deeply rooted tradition is once again gaining momentum in a bipartisan push to bring manufacturing back to the United States. The goal is to reindustrialise, at least partially, a nation that abandoned the manufacturing sector decades ago. So far, there are concrete signs it is happening and may continue to gain momentum in the years ahead.
“There are some powerful tailwinds at work here,” says Diana Wagner, an equity portfolio manager. “We’ve had 30-plus years of offshoring manufacturing to China, and now those trends are starting to reverse. Given labour and regulatory bottlenecks in the US, I think this re-shoring trend is going to take many years to play out, and that’s why I see it as a tailwind that could be with us for a long time.”
While it may be too optimistic to think the US will regain its former status as a manufacturing powerhouse, here are three areas where progress is being made in the quest to rebuild a long-neglected segment of the domestic economy:
1. Companies are responding to the “carrot & stick” approach
The Trump administration, and the Biden administration before that, have both used a combination of incentives and penalties to encourage companies to invest in new US manufacturing facilities. Taking a “carrot & stick” approach — with tax incentives as a carrot and tariffs as a stick — US political leaders have persuaded some of the biggest companies in the world to invest billions of dollars to boost their manufacturing capabilities inside the United States.
This year alone, US tech giants such as Apple and NVIDIA, as well as businesses such as AstraZeneca, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing and Hyundai, have announced multibillion-dollar plans to establish or expand their US operations making computer chips, pharmaceuticals and automobiles.