Six months after the administration’s latest wave of tariffs took effect, the headlines tell an optimistic story. The U.S. trade deficit is narrowing. Tariff revenues have doubled. Companies have announced more than $1.7 trillion in new manufacturing investments, from semiconductor fabs in Texas to EV battery plants in Tennessee.
It looks like progress. Yet, if success is measured by the strength of American manufacturing, the reality is more complicated. Tariffs can shift incentives, but they can’t solve the structural issues that determine where and how products are made.
For decades, globalization built supply chains optimized for cost rather than resilience. Production followed inexpensive labor, solid infrastructure, and efficient logistics; advantages that favored Asia. Reversing that pattern takes more than policy; it requires rebuilding America’s manufacturing muscle from the ground up.
So far, much of the “reshoring boom” exists in planning documents. Some sites are breaking ground, but construction will take years. And even when facilities open, the deeper supplier networks that make local production sustainable take far longer to mature. Without those layers, new U.S. plants risk becoming costly assembly hubs, still dependent on imported components and vulnerable to the same shocks tariffs were meant to guard against.
The three constraints slowing or derailing reshoring
Cost remains the biggest hurdle. U.S. labor averages $25 to $30 an hour compared to roughly $6 to $7 in China. Productivity and energy efficiency narrow the gap, but not enough to offset the difference at scale. Without significant automation, many reshoring projects struggle to make financial sense once startup subsidies and tax incentives run out.
People are the next challenge. About half a million manufacturing jobs remain unfilled because the skills required in modern factories are changing faster than training systems can keep up. Running robotic cells or managing digital twins demands fluency that traditional shop-floor experience doesn’t provide. Until upskilling becomes a coordinated national priority, labor will remain a weak link.
Suppliers are the third hurdle to overcome. Manufacturing doesn’t thrive in isolation; it depends on ecosystems of specialized suppliers that produce the materials, tools, and components feeding every stage of production. Those networks hollowed out over decades of offshoring. Recreating it requires sustained collaboration among companies, regional leaders, and education systems to rebuild both capability and scale.
How to accelerate the shift
These challenges aren’t insurmountable. In fact, they reveal exactly where corporate leaders can act.
Automation remains the most powerful lever, but only when applied holistically. Too many companies still treat it as an add-on, swapping human tasks for robotic ones without rethinking the process itself. The next leap forward will come from redesigning production around automation rather than layering it on top. Tesla’s gigacasting approach is a good example: replacing dozens of welded components with a single piece not only simplifies production but changes the economics of what can be built locally.
Artificial intelligence is also changing factory operations, converting data into real-time decisions that improve scheduling, predict maintenance, and keep quality consistent. These tools don’t replace people; they make them more capable, allowing technicians to work smarter and solve problems faster.
Ultimately, talent is the differentiator. Training teams to code and troubleshoot automated systems could become America’s greatest advantage. In places like Shenzhen, equipment failures are fixed within minutes because expertise sits close to the line. Developing that same reflex here—through apprenticeships and modern vocational programs—is what will turn reshoring from aspiration to reality.
Building supply chains for the future
Even if trade policy shifts, the logic of resilience isn’t going anywhere. The smartest companies already recognize that what’s happening now is less a short-term correction than a structural reset of how global supply chains are designed and managed.
Resilience has moved from cost center to core strategy. After years of disruption—including pandemics, wars, and unexpected natural disasters—leaders are now modeling risk as a constant, not an exception. The result is a new kind of supply chain math: one that factors resilience directly into cost models. That means building in dual and multi-sourcing options, maintaining critical inventory buffers, and creating surge capacity that can absorb disruption without halting production. Efficiency still matters, but durability has become the new measure of performance.
At the same time, geography is being rethought. Producing closer to customers cuts lead times, reduces transport costs, and limits exposure to trade uncertainty. Companies across sectors are looking to nearshoring and regional manufacturing as ways to balance cost and control. It’s a shift that reconnects production with demand, helping manufacturers respond faster and reduce dependence on far-flung networks.
The last piece of the puzzle is agility and the ability to adjust quickly when conditions shift. The most resilient supply chains are the ones that can bend without breaking. They’re designed to adjust fast, using modular systems, flexible automation, and clear visibility into operations. When a port closes, a supplier falters, or politics shift overnight, these networks can pivot without losing momentum.
Tariffs as a missed opportunity
From a policy perspective, tariffs have bought time but not momentum. They’ve raised pressure on global rivals but also driven up costs for U.S. manufacturers that still depend on imported inputs. Protection can look like progress, yet it often blunts the competition that sparks real innovation.
The newest wave of tariffs—spanning everything from pharmaceuticals to heavy trucks—follows the same pattern. It may offer short-term cover, but it won’t build long-term strength. Real renewal will come from smart investments: automation that lifts productivity, workforce training that bridges the gap between people and machines, and supplier ecosystems that anchor value creation at home.
If the goal is lasting industrial renewal, policy alone won’t deliver it. Agility will.
About the author
Kevin O’Marah is co-founder and chief research officer of Zero100. Zero100 is an intelligence company that helps senior business and operations executives make critical supply chain investment decisions by using IP-led research and data and personalized guidance.
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