Introduction
For
more than two decades, China was the default answer to one of the most
important boardroom questions in business: where should we manufacture at
scale? The answer was compelling for obvious reasons. China offered industrial
depth, supplier density, export infrastructure, labor availability, and
manufacturing speed on a level few countries could match. For many sectors,
from consumer electronics to toys to industrial components, China was not just
a production base; it was the operating system behind global manufacturing.
But
global manufacturing strategy is changing. The shift is not really a story of
companies “leaving China” in dramatic fashion. It is a story of companies
reducing concentration risk. In other words, the strategic question is no
longer whether China remains important. It does. The real question is whether
any serious multinational now wants too much of its production, sourcing, or
assembly tied to one geography. Increasingly, the answer is no. Research
highlighted by CEPR shows that firms exposed to geopolitical risk are
diversifying supply chains away from single-country dependence, often toward
ASEAN, without fully abandoning China.
This
shift is also happening at a time when manufacturing itself is becoming more
distributed, digital, and capital intensive. That broader reset helps explain
why adjacent manufacturing ecosystems are expanding so quickly. For example, TechSci
Research states that the global Electronic Manufacturing Services Market will
grow from USD 630.93 billion in 2025 to USD 1,194.21 billion by 2031, at
a 11.22% CAGR. That kind of scale tells us that global production
networks are not shrinking; they are being reorganized.
This Is Not “China Exit.” It Is “China
Plus Resilience.”
One of
the biggest mistakes in this conversation is to frame diversification as an
anti-China strategy. In reality, for many companies, it is an insurance
strategy. China still offers unmatched industrial capability in many
categories. What has changed is the tolerance for overdependence. Executives
now recognize that a manufacturing footprint built for maximum efficiency can
become fragile when tariffs rise, shipping routes tighten, politics shift, or a
local disruption affects a global product line.
That
is why “China+1” has become such a durable strategic concept. It does not mean
shutting factories in China overnight. It means adding another node, or several
nodes, to reduce exposure. The logic is simple: concentration lowers cost in
stable times, but diversification improves resilience when the world becomes
less predictable. In today’s business environment, resilience has become a
board-level metric, not just an operations issue.
The First Driver: Geopolitical and Trade
Risk
The
first major driver behind diversification is geopolitical risk. The U.S.-China
trade relationship, export controls, tariff policy, and broader de-risking
agendas have made manufacturing location a strategic matter rather than a
purely commercial one. When trade friction affects cost structures, customs
treatment, or regulatory certainty, companies start redesigning supply chains
not because their existing factory suddenly stopped working, but because the
risk-adjusted economics changed.
That
is why actual company moves matter so much. In April 2025, Apple decided to be
aiming for India to make most iPhones sold in the U.S. by the end of 2026. That
does not mean Apple is exiting China. It means Apple is building optionality at
meaningful scale. When a company of Apple’s size adjusts geography, it signals
that diversification is no longer experimental; it is operational.
The
same logic can be seen in capital allocation trends around future-ready
production networks. TechSci Research says the global Advanced Manufacturing Facility Market is projected to grow from USD 352.61 billion in 2025 to USD
627.74 billion by 2031, at a 10.09% CAGR. That growth underlines how much
investment is going into the next generation of production capacity, including
capacity located outside a single-country model.

The Second Driver: Supply Chain Shock
Memory
Companies
rarely redesign supply chains because of theory alone. They move because they
remember disruption. Pandemic shutdowns, port congestion, component shortages,
energy volatility, and shipping delays taught executives a painful lesson: even
highly optimized supply chains can fail if they are geographically
concentrated. Once management teams experience lost sales, delayed launches, or
margin damage caused by one disrupted corridor, diversification stops looking
expensive and starts looking necessary.
This
is where software and visibility become central to the story. A diversified
footprint is harder to manage than a centralized one, which is why companies
are investing in orchestration tools rather than relying on informal
coordination. TechSci Research states that the global Supply Chain Management Software Market will grow from USD 27.17 billion in 2025 to USD
53.57 billion by 2031, at a 11.98% CAGR. That market trajectory fits
neatly with the rise of multi-country production models that require better
forecasting, planning, and control.
In
other words, the world is not simply shifting from one factory to another. It
is shifting from a single-hub logic to a network logic. Companies are no longer
asking only, “Where can we make this cheapest?” They are asking, “Where can we
make this reliably, competitively, and with alternatives if something goes
wrong?”
The Third Driver: New Growth Markets
Want Local Manufacturing
Diversification
is not driven only by risk. It is also driven by demand. Companies increasingly
want manufacturing closer to growth markets, especially in Asia. Local
production can improve lead times, reduce import friction, strengthen
government relationships, and create better alignment with domestic demand.
Google
is a useful example. At its Google for India 2023 event, the company announced
that it would manufacture Pixel smartphones in India, beginning with Pixel 8
production. The move reflects both market opportunity and manufacturing
strategy: India is not just a fallback option; it is becoming a production base
tied to long-term commercial ambition.
LEGO
offers another strong example. In April 2025, the LEGO Group opened a new
factory in Vietnam and also indicated that a regional distribution center in
Dong Nai province was part of its plan to increase flexibility and agility in
its supply chain network. This is a powerful illustration of the new playbook:
companies are not just relocating assembly; they are building manufacturing and
distribution ecosystems closer to regional demand.
Why India, Vietnam, and Southeast Asia
Keep Winning Attention
India
and Vietnam have emerged as two of the clearest beneficiaries of this shift,
though for different reasons. India attracts attention because of its scale,
policy support, domestic market, and growing electronics manufacturing
ecosystem. Vietnam attracts attention because of its export orientation,
manufacturing discipline, proximity to China, and strong role in electronics
and industrial assembly.
Samsung’s
continued commitment to Vietnam shows how this pattern evolves over time.
Samsung Display planned to invest an additional $1.8 billion in
northern Vietnam for OLED manufacturing. That matters because it shows
diversification is not only about low-cost assembly; it increasingly includes
higher-value industrial capacity as well.
The
enabling layer behind these moves is technology. Distributed production
requires more monitoring, sensing, and control than a concentrated system. TechSci
Research says the global Industrial Sensors Market will grow from USD
23.87 billion in 2025 to USD 37.61 billion by 2031, at a 7.87% CAGR.
It is a useful reminder that diversification is not just geographic; it is
digital. Companies need better data if they want to run more locations without
losing quality, timing, or traceability.

The Case for Mexico
For
North America-focused manufacturers, Mexico remains one of the most important
diversification destinations. The nearshoring argument is obvious: shorter
transit times, trade integration, industrial clusters, and stronger
responsiveness to the U.S. market. In 2023, Mexico surpassed China as the
U.S.’s biggest trading partner, according to BCG, reinforcing its strategic
position as a production platform for North America.
But
the Mexico story is not frictionless. The rising labor costs, skilled labor
shortages, and growing pressure on electricity, water, and logistics
infrastructure. That nuance is important. Diversifying beyond China is not as
simple as picking the next cheapest country. Every alternative introduces
trade-offs. Companies are not moving from complexity to simplicity; they are
moving from concentrated complexity to distributed complexity.
That
is one reason why logistics technology is becoming mission critical. TechSci
Research says the global Connected Logistics Market will grow from USD 20.54
billion in 2025 to USD 47.07 billion by 2031, at a 14.82% CAGR. The faster
companies diversify manufacturing geography, the more they need transport
visibility, shipment intelligence, and real-time network coordination.
Cost Is Still Important — but Cost Alone
No Longer Wins
For
years, manufacturing strategy could often be reduced to labor arbitrage. That
formula is no longer enough. Today’s decision model includes tariff exposure,
compliance risk, supplier concentration, time to market, inventory buffers,
policy incentives, and customer expectations. The cheapest factory on paper may
become the most expensive option if it creates too much strategic
vulnerability.
The
toy industry shows this clearly. In March 2025 that MGA Entertainment was
accelerating its shift out of China, targeting 40% of manufacturing in India,
Vietnam, and Indonesia within roughly six months, up from around 10% to 15%,
while Mattel said it planned to reduce its China factory footprint further and
keep any one country below a quarter of its global manufacturing over time.
These are not symbolic moves. They show how companies are redesigning
manufacturing footprints to avoid excessive exposure to one geography.
Inside
the warehouse, the same redesign is visible. More diversified sourcing and
production footprints require stronger inbound coordination, fulfillment logic,
and inventory placement. TechSci Research states that the global Warehouse Management System Market will grow from USD 2.83 billion in 2025 to USD
6.12 billion by 2031, at a 13.72% CAGR. As companies spread
manufacturing across geographies, they also need smarter nodes to absorb that
complexity.
Diversification Also Changes How
Products Are Designed and Made
Another
underappreciated aspect of diversification is that it changes product
engineering. When companies produce in more than one geography, they often
redesign components, suppliers, tooling strategies, and inventory models to
improve transferability between plants. Standardization becomes more valuable.
Modularity becomes more attractive. Local supplier substitution becomes a
strategic capability, not just a procurement exercise.
This
is one reason advanced production methods are gaining attention. TechSci
Research says the global Additive Manufacturing Market will grow from USD
77.10 billion in 2024 to USD 267.24 billion by 2030, at a 23.02% CAGR.
While additive manufacturing is not a universal replacement for scale
production, its growth reflects a broader shift toward flexible manufacturing
methods that can support shorter runs, prototyping, localization, and supply
continuity in distributed networks.

What This Means for the Future of Global
Manufacturing
The
companies winning this transition will not be the ones that simply move fastest
out of China. They will be the ones that build the most intelligent balance
between efficiency and resilience. For some, that will mean China plus India.
For others, China plus Vietnam, Mexico, or Indonesia. For still others, it will
mean a regional hub model supported by digital control towers, multi-sourcing,
and redesigned inventory logic.
The
future therefore looks less like a single global factory and more like a
portfolio of manufacturing bets. China will remain central in many industries,
but it will increasingly sit inside a broader network rather than above it.
That is the real meaning of diversification beyond China: not replacement, but
rebalancing.
Conclusion
Companies
are diversifying manufacturing beyond China because the old model of maximum
concentration no longer matches the realities of modern business. Geopolitical
risk, tariff uncertainty, supply chain disruption, regional demand growth, and
the need for operational resilience have all changed the manufacturing
equation. The shift is strategic, measurable, and already visible in the
decisions of companies such as Apple, Google, Samsung, LEGO, MGA Entertainment,
and Mattel.
The deeper truth is
this: global manufacturing is not becoming less global. It is becoming more
distributed, more technology-led, and more risk-aware. In that world, the
companies that thrive will not be those that bet everything on one country,
however capable it may be. They will be the companies that design manufacturing
networks with flexibility built in from day one.