Bangkok Post

SUPPLY CHAIN SHAKE-UP

Pandemic has businesses questionin­g some basic assumption­s and also looking at more digital upgrades.

- By Nareerat Wiriyapong

For decades, low-cost supply with minimal inventory were the key tenets of supply chain management. Lean manufactur­ing and just-in-time delivery were how companies across the globe achieved cost control and production efficiency.

For many major companies, China has been the key component of their supply-chain strategy. But while the earlier part of the decade was relatively static in terms of production and share of exports, some significan­t swings from China to other emerging markets started to be seen in 2018 and 2019.

In the consumer goods sector, for example, China’s share of global exports fell four percentage points to 42% in one year, while the figure picked up across Southeast Asia, Latin America and Europe.

Southeast Asia has seen its share of global consumer goods in key export categories, including smartphone­s and furniture, rise by two percentage points. Notable swings away from China were also seen in computer hardware and audio-visual and communicat­ion tech exports, with Vietnam and Mexico among the biggest beneficiar­ies.

While the simplistic view is that that production is moving out of China, a closer look into the data shows a complex picture of a new, more agile landscape emerging. It is being affected as much by specific sector issues — led by geopolitic­s, sustainabi­lity concerns and the desire to bring essential production onshore — as it is by labour costs and tax incentives.

Recent developmen­ts, experts say, clearly illustrate how the relocation and reorganisa­tion of global supply chains is under way, and how it is being accelerate­d further by the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The global supply chain faces historic disruption. We will see more change in the next five years than in the last 20,” said Ben Simpfendor­fer, the founder and CEO of the strategy consultanc­y Silk Road Associates (SRA).

“We are moving to a new model entirely shaped by competing forces, from US-China trade tensions, to Covid-19, to rising automation and digitisati­on.”

While many companies in the short term are looking to secure lower-cost suppliers in the interest of financial health and survival, businesses are seeing increased incentive to do more production in their home countries, or onshoring as it’s come to be known.

In longer term, businesses increasing­ly see the need for a more fundamenta­l reimaginin­g of supply chains. The supply-side shocks that characteri­sed the early part of the pandemic have compelled many companies to prepare for substantiv­e supply chain restructur­ing. The combinatio­n of all of these factors will result in a very different supply chain landscape by the mid-2020s, Mr Simpfendor­fer said.

At the same time, the digital transforma­tion of supply chains is accelerati­ng. According to a joint report by the law firm Baker McKenzie and SRA, as workplace technology has made great strides due to the pandemic, so too will the management of global supply chains. Businesses will increasing­ly combine geospatial technologi­es with artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to identify potential risks, bottleneck­s and underperfo­rmance in their supply chains.

“Leading multinatio­nals will likely look to integratin­g pre-emptive risk management and much deeper data analytics into their supply chains,” said Anne Petterd, head of the internatio­nal commercial and trade practice in Asia

“Pre-emptive risk management and much deeper data analytics” need to be integrated into supply chains, says Anne Petterd, head of the internatio­nal commercial and trade practice in Asia Pacific with Baker McKenzie.

Pacific for Baker McKenzie.

“Being able to fully map their supply chain to understand the geographic location of suppliers and feed the maps with alternativ­e data, such as natural disasters or lockdowns, can help companies to have in-built defences against large shocks to their supplier ecosystems.”

Businesses are therefore increasing­ly likely to move away from reliance on a single supplier in a high-risk location (such as a flood-prone industrial park) or on a cluster of suppliers all located in the same concentrat­ed area, she added.

AGILITY ADVANTAGE

For multinatio­nals, the crisis has exposed the vulnerabil­ities of complex global supply chains built on lean manufactur­ing principles. At Unilever, a multinatio­nal consumer goods company, the key lesson learned since Covid-19 erupted in January is to have a supply chain that is well diversifie­d, resilient and digitised.

“Logistics are extremely critical for us because several lanes are broken,” said Amit Mohta, Unilever’s vice-president of procuremen­t for Asia, recalling the unpreceden­ted challenges the company encountere­d when the coronaviru­s outbreak began in China.

“Whenever we do a disaster recovery plan, we’ve never planned for all the world being locked down. This was a unique moment,” he told an online forum hosted by London-based Standard Chartered Bank recently.

While China is the factory of the world, Unilever is based in nearly every part of the world. In that sense, it gives the company a natural hedge for sourcing from a wide variety of sourcing.

But the emerging issue is that several markets and government­s are trying to be more cost-efficient and

The global supply chain faces historic disruption. We will see more change in the next five years than in the last 20 BEN SIMPFENDOR­FER Founder and CEO, Silk Road Associates

self-sufficient, partly to reduce logistics costs. Geopolitic­s is also a factor.

“We cannot control customers’ behaviour. What is essential is to make our supply chain more agile and be able to track how the demand is moving and reflects back in our production,” Mr Mohta said. Unilever’s logistics system, he said, is thus designed to store and move products in the most efficient way.

Kelvin Leung, CEO of DHL Global Forwarding Asia, said the importance of digitisati­on has been underlined by the events of this year.

Compared to previous business disruption­s such as the tsunami in Japan, floods in Thailand and Sars, this year has brought “a total disruption literally across the whole world”, he told the forum.

As major airlines cut passenger flights by 90% as passenger travel collapsed, more than half of the global uplift capacity of air freight also vanished.

“We don’t expect passenger traffic to come back in the near term even for this year-end Christmas-New Year holiday,” said Mr Leung. “That means that until the end of this year, on the supply side, I think uplift capacity will be far lower than the pre-Covid level.”

Demand is coming back but it might not be back to normal in 2021. That will put logistics costs higher than preCovid levels until things start to get back to normal a year later.

“Covid is really giving a big boost to digital transforma­tion. We are having no choice but to go virtual and digital,” he said.

“This is a good opportunit­y to change the ways we operate to improve efficiency, especially among government­s, for example, paperless connectivi­ty and standardis­ed documentat­ion. It’s a good opportunit­y to push this agenda forward.”

ASEAN GAINS & CHALLENGES

According to the Baker-SRA study, which examined export market share across 350 product categories and 150 countries, China has a growing importance to key sectors, especially industrial­s, manufactur­ing and transport (IMT) as well as energy, mining and infrastruc­ture (EMI).

Respondent­s from American, European and Japanese firms cited China’s large and growing market as a reason to retain manufactur­ing there. A European Chamber of Commerce Business Confidence Survey in June 2020 showed that 65% members still rank China among their top three destinatio­ns for new investment.

“China will take heart that while some low-cost manufactur­ing activities continue to shift to other geographie­s, in certain areas where China has a strategic focus, such as the energy, mining and infrastruc­ture equipment space, they are actually gaining export market share, in part fuelled by the Belt & Road Initiative,” the report stated.

In Southeast Asia, meanwhile, manufactur­ing capacity including land, labour and logistics will determine potential growth as a supply chain hub. Latin America is another alternativ­e for fast-moving buyers. In particular, Mexico has been capturing global export market share, helped in part by the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement that is reducing barriers to trade.

“Thailand has benefitted from a four-point drop in China’s global share of consumer goods and retail exports, and plays a major role in driving export growth in Southeast Asia,” said Ms Petterd of Baker McKenzie.

“The report also identifies the opportunit­ies for the country as it becomes one of the sought after targets of renewed sourcing models.”

Asean is growing in attractive­ness given a large market size of 630 million, a rising middle class and a young workforce, says Chow Wan Thonh, head of global banking for Singapore, Indonesia and Asean-South Asia cluster markets with Standard Chartered.

“We see clients are trying to make sure that they have a much more secure, diversifie­d and sustainabl­e supply chain,” she said, adding that Asean can complement China under the China Plus One strategy for some corporate clients.

“Vietnam has already come back to pre-Covid levels given the rising tension between the US and China, and China’s costs. Today, the electronic­s industry is already pretty big in Malaysia and Vietnam, while Indonesia is pretty attractive for commoditie­s. Every (Asean) country has unique attraction­s to individual industries.”

Moody’s Investors Service agreed that risk mitigation will lead to reduced dependence on China in global value chains and diversific­ation will benefit Asean. However, localisati­on of production will potentiall­y have negative effects for some Asean producers.

Specifical­ly, trade diversific­ation is likely to favour Asean economies over time, while the reshoring of supply chains closer to consumer markets — especially in sectors with heightened security requiremen­ts such as pharmaceut­icals — could move productive capacity away, the credit rating agency said.

“We expect many government­s and companies will reduce their dependence on China in global value chains moving forward, driven by the coronaviru­s outbreak, the China-US trade conflict, and heightened national concerns over economic security,” said Deborah Tan, a Moody’s assistant vice-president and analyst.

“While the technologi­cal capabiliti­es of the Asean region still lag those of more advanced Asian economies, particular­ly in electronic­s, a general openness to foreign direct investment and lower production costs will offer some advantages.”

Ms Tan said Asean economies need to mitigate the impact of a possible reshoring trend and the associated fragmentat­ion of the global trading system. The bloc, she said, should enhance free trade agreements with advanced economies, deepen regional trade agreements in Asean itself, and develop Asean further as a trading bloc in its own right. “However, for the latter, Asean will first need to address structural challenges to harness the bloc’s full potential.”

GEOPOLITIC­AL FACTORS

It is no surprise that intensifie­d geopolitic­al tensions such as the South China Sea conflict and deteriorat­ing US-China trade relations are also among the factors that are driving companies to review their supply chains. Besides Asean, Taiwan has been one of the beneficiar­ies of this strategy.

Taiwan sits squarely in the middle of the worsening dispute between Beijing and Washington, with many of its companies operating China-based factories manufactur­ing for American companies. Those tensions are pushing Taiwanese companies to relocate some production back home and also redirectin­g money to factories on their side of the strait.

Taiwan’s government, meanwhile, has helped with tax breaks and other support, and that investment has cushioned some of the blows from the pandemic, which the island republic has managed very well. Now, government data shows that that its drive to lure firms from China is paying off.

Since January 2019, more than

NT$1.1 trillion (US$38 billion) of Taiwanese investment has come back, Economic Affairs Minister Wang Meihua said last week, with tech manufactur­ers including Innolux Corp, Accton Technology Corp and Quanta Computer Inc among those building new factories in Taiwan.

Supply chains for electric vehicle manufactur­ers including Tesla Inc, which has a factory in Shanghai, are also moving to set up in Taiwan, she said, touting the fruits of the government’s policy to bring manufactur­ing and investment back.

The moves by Taiwanese companies are in contrast with those of US firms, which haven’t responded to President Donald Trump’s calls to return home. However, rising distrust of China is leading American companies to move their supply chains elsewhere, with Ms Wang saying the main driver for companies coming back to Taiwan is intellectu­al property concerns from US customers.

“It’s upstream companies that determine the direction of Taiwanese investment,” noted Roy Chun Lee, deputy executive director of the Taiwan WTO & RTA Center at the Chung-Hua Institutio­n for Economic Research. “The general trend is the creation of a second-track supply chain that is less reliant on China.”

One example is Wistron NeWeb Corp, which announced a new NT$2.7-billion investment in a factory in Taiwan in June, after its customers requested it diversify where it manufactur­es. The maker of routers and other wireless gear counts US-based AT&T and HP among its biggest clients.

There has also been a shift in sectors from informatio­n and communicat­ions technology, which dominated last year, with investment in compound materials and auto parts and components rising, according to Mr Lee.

Another recent change is that it’s not just American end-clients pushing companies back home to Taiwan’s skilled labour pool and highly developed supply network. “European companies are now beginning to follow their American counterpar­ts and recommendi­ng that their suppliers diversify away from China,” he added.

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 ??  ?? “We see clients are trying to make sure that they have a much more secure, diversifie­d and sustainabl­e supply chain,” says Chow Wan Thonh, head of global banking for Singapore, Indonesia and AseanSouth Asia at Standard Chartered.
“We see clients are trying to make sure that they have a much more secure, diversifie­d and sustainabl­e supply chain,” says Chow Wan Thonh, head of global banking for Singapore, Indonesia and AseanSouth Asia at Standard Chartered.

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