Globalization - The World is Flat, Except When It Isn't

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The World Is Flat, Except When It Isn’t The Yin and Yang of Globalization and Deglobalization By James A. Tompkins, Ph.D., Chairman, Tompkins Ventures October 2023

Executive Summary Humans have engaged in commerce for millennia. From the first moment Uruk exchanged a hunk of charred meat for extra-sharp spears from Grok, living standards have improved when people specialize in producing goods and services and trade the surplus. That trade has grown from areas that encompass villages to regions to nations to the entire planet. Early evidence of international trade dates to the Sumerians in the third and fourth millenniums B.C., with routes ranging from Pakistan to the Persian Gulf to west of the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers.1 By the 1980s, academics started applying the term “globalization” to the growing integration of economies around the world. 2 Increasingly, globalization referred to single-sourced, low-cost supply chains that relied heavily on China for raw materials, parts and/or finished goods. The Great Recession of 2007-2009 and snarled pandemic supply chains gave the term globalization a bad name. Now, tariffs, trade wars, shooting wars and political and consumer pressure are forcing enterprises to reorient production and supply away from China and other nations viewed as unfriendly. This “deglobalization,” I would argue, is happening at the same time as further globalization – the integration of economies continues, albeit in different regions and at different speeds. This simultaneous yin and yang of globalization/deglobalization results in even more disruption in an age where disruption is the new normal. To succeed in this new arena for 2024 and beyond, leaders will have to:   

Redesign global supply chains. This goes beyond final assembly to your entire global network – sourcing, production, suppliers, distribution. Deploy optionality as never before, considering multiple alternate production, logistics and transportation solutions. Examine the potential to develop nearshoring logistics hubs, such as the Dominican Republic for the Western Hemisphere.

Many executives never gave their supply chains a second thought until the pandemic. They might consider leaving China a supply chain redesign. That is a short-term


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