Here's the thing: reshoring is the buzzword everywhere. The stories? Absolutely real. Companies announcing moves, headlines celebrating domestic production.
But zoom out. Look at the hard numbers across the entire economy.
The reality flips the script. US manufacturing's dependency on China? Higher now than any moment since the 1990s kicked off. Not lower. Higher.
The anecdotes scream one direction. The aggregate data whispers something completely different. That gap matters more than most people realize when you're trying to understand actual supply chain exposure versus the narrative being sold.
The disconnect between what we hear and what the numbers actually show keeps widening.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
22 Likes
Reward
22
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
NFTragedy
· 12-05 15:25
Nah, this data is really insane. The narrative and reality are so different...
View OriginalReply0
TokenTaxonomist
· 12-05 09:06
nah see this is exactly the kind of narrative collapse i've been charting in my spreadsheets for months... statistically speaking, the reshoring thesis is taxonomically incorrect when you actually parse the aggregate supply chain data. china dependency climbing? that's the real tokenomics of geopolitical risk nobody wants to admit
Reply0
0xSleepDeprived
· 12-05 08:59
It’s the same old narrative vs. data trick: the hype around reshoring is intense, but dependence is only deepening—a classic case of a good story but painful numbers.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoDouble-O-Seven
· 12-05 08:56
It's the same old narrative trap—sounds good, but the data tells a different story.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeBeggar
· 12-05 08:48
Same old story—the narrative sounds nice, but the data tells a different story. Reshoring is nothing but a joke, haha.
View OriginalReply0
Fren_Not_Food
· 12-05 08:44
Yeah, this data reversal is pretty intense. After all the talk about reshoring, dependence on China actually hit a new high? The narrative and the numbers are really contradicting each other.
Just dropped fresh data breakdown this Friday.
Here's the thing: reshoring is the buzzword everywhere. The stories? Absolutely real. Companies announcing moves, headlines celebrating domestic production.
But zoom out. Look at the hard numbers across the entire economy.
The reality flips the script. US manufacturing's dependency on China? Higher now than any moment since the 1990s kicked off. Not lower. Higher.
The anecdotes scream one direction. The aggregate data whispers something completely different. That gap matters more than most people realize when you're trying to understand actual supply chain exposure versus the narrative being sold.
The disconnect between what we hear and what the numbers actually show keeps widening.