Mood swing: Global producers in US hunt for China alternatives

In This Article:

By Timothy Aeppel

(Reuters) - Jason Andringa’s company was part of the stampede of U.S. businesses that built factories in China.

Iowa-based Vermeer, a 4,000-employee maker of industrial and farm machinery, opened a plant there two decades ago—and Andringa, the company’s president and CEO, frequently visited what many be considered the world’s premier fast-growing, future-oriented economy. But the mood of Vermeer and many other global producers has turned sour on China.

"If we didn’t already have a plant in China, we sure wouldn’t start one now," he said.

He has no plan to leave and is pleased with the operation, but said he would not expand there given the tensions in the U.S.-China relationship that seem more likely than not to escalate. He worries it could be increasingly difficult to find employees and receive fair treatment in a country that is mutually antagonistic with the U.S.

The latest example of that hit Tuesday, when the Biden administration said it plans to halt shipments to China of more advanced artificial intelligence chips designed by Nvidia and others. The move is aimed at curbing Beijing's access to cutting-edge technology that could be used in weapons.

Surveys now show U.S. business leaders are eager to cut back their China exposure and are shifting investment to other, friendlier countries. This is a radical shift from the days when offshoring production to China was rewarded by Wall Street and investor calls often highlighted multi-million-dollar expansions in the world’s second-largest economy.

Mexico has surpassed China as the top destination for foreign direct investment by U.S. firms, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, while a survey from the U.S.-China Business Council shows a growing number of U.S. firms pulling back on their China investments.

ACCELERATING EXODUS

Souring trade relations would likely be a key topic if U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet next month during the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in San Francisco. The White House is working to arrange a meeting, though the plans remain unsettled.

The move away from China began on a small scale during the Trump administration’s trade war, as producers shifted supply chains to sidestep the cost of tariffs.

The exodus has intensified as relations between Beijing and Washington have continued to deteriorate under the Biden administration, morphing from a trade battle into a geopolitical struggle over Taiwan and the U.S. downing of China's spy balloon.

After a visit to China in August, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said U.S. companies had complained to her that China has become "uninvestible," due to government actions such as fines and raids that have made it risky to do business in the country.