Industrialist Paper No. 9
The Very Lively Corpse of Globalization
Most “globalization” arguments skip the part where procurement actually happens. A prototype needs a quick turn and the program manager wants hardware next week. The buyer sends the RFQ to whoever answers fast, asks the fewest questions, and will ship on a credit card. That channel is often overseas, not because anyone loves it, but because it is searchable and responsive by design. Anyone paying attention knows that globalization has failed and is dead. But the corpse is still quite vigorous because the buyer’s incentives are immediate and local.
Act 1 (papers 1-10) of this 40 paper series argues that American manufacturing already exists as a national system, but it is hard to query, hard to verify, and therefore hard to coordinate. This paper - No. 9 - focuses on why “globalization is over” can be true in the mouths of governments and C-suites and talking heads, and still false in the RFQ inbox. Even as executive and government policy shifts toward resilience and de-risking, urgent procurement continues to route to the fastest, lowest-friction global channels unless domestic sourcing is made equally routable through portable evidence, which can be measured as a persistent offshore share of emergency buys and prototype awards despite stated reshoring goals.
Globalization, here, is not “trade exists.” It is a specific operating mode where distance is treated as a stable parameter, enforcement is assumed, and procurement can optimize around unit price and lead time without re-litigating jurisdiction, compliance, or consequences on every PO. That mode was engineered, then drifted, then got exploited. The drift matters because the corpse can keep moving long after the strategic rationale has died.
Mechanism: two objective functions, one supply chain
After World War II, the United States led a wave of globalization, building negotiated rules and institutions to revive trade and investment. In the Cold War frame, that economic order sat alongside alliances and security commitments aimed at containing the Soviet Union and binding partners into a shared system. This was not for the good of all mankind. It was in fact a design choice that avoided military occupation: open markets plus aligned enforcement, inside a broader security architecture, created growth and created a virtual blockade against the spread of communism. That was the idea anyhow.
That architecture assumed the enforcement envelope would remain mostly symmetric among major participants. It also assumed that if a new participant joined, the rules would discipline behavior over time. China’s entry into the WTO was sold in that spirit, with explicit expectations around market opening and commitments. The problem is not that China traded. The problem is that China pursued a state-directed industrial model inside a system optimized for rule-following firms, and it learned how to use gaps between the letter of rules and the realities of enforcement. Why a communist, authoritarian regime was ever admitted into the system that was designed to contain communist, authoritarian regimes is anyone’s guess.
The U.S. government’s own compliance reporting points to the recurring mechanisms that China used to exploit global trade: market access limits, discriminatory regulation, preferential treatment for state firms, data restrictions, and forced or pressured technology transfer. This is what “weaponized” looks like at the operational layer. It shows up as an RFQ routed into an ecosystem where subsidies distort price, where recourse is weak, and where the buyer cannot reliably audit sub-tiers or enforce a dispute outcome. A system built for predictable enforcement becomes a machine for asymmetric advantage.
Now zoom out to Davos present day (Jan ‘26), where governments talk about order, sovereignty, and the end of naive assumptions. The World Economic Forum itself is describing an era of “structural volatility,” and it reports that a large share of leaders now prioritize resilience investments. Recent Davos speeches and coverage have also emphasized rupture in the rules-based order and the use of economic tools as weapons. You do not need to agree with any politician to observe the shift: policy and executive language has moved toward de-risking, redundancy, and strategic autonomy. “Sovereignty” is the term that really captures this.
Then the buyer goes back to their inbox and does what they have always done. They’re not measured on sovereignty. The buyer is measured on line uptime, ship dates, and whether the program manager stops calling. The buyer will accept geopolitical risk as an externality if the part arrives on time, because their personal downside is immediate and visible, while the systemic downside is delayed and seemingly abstract and, basically, someone else’s problem.
WW2 to today, and why the incentives diverged
In the early decades, the order’s strategic purpose and the commercial reality were aligned enough that firms could treat global trade as a tailwind. That alignment weakened in stages. The Soviet Union collapsed, the geopolitical justification for a U.S.-underwritten global commons changed, and the system increasingly became a venue for economic competition without the same shared assumptions about enforcement.
China’s rise was facilitated by its inclusion and simultaneously made the divergence unavoidable. It became an indispensable production node in almost every category, and it got exceptionally good at being easy to buy from. That “easy” is not cultural, it is transactional, and it is rooted in software systems. Searchability, instant quote turnaround, small MOQs, integrated logistics, and a willingness to iterate quickly on a STEP file all collapse procurement friction. Meanwhile, domestic sourcing - as a national system - is really still in a 1940s pre-software era that demands friction up front: vendor onboarding, insurance, net terms, quality clauses, cert requirements, and a first-article process that is correct, but slow.
This is where the corpse keeps moving. At the top of the organization, resilience is framed as policy because it touches national security, export controls, and audit exposure. At the PO level, resilience is framed as delay because it adds steps between need and order. Unless the organization converts “resilience” into a routable constraint with artifacts, the buyer will continue to optimize for speed.
The academic and practitioner literature is increasingly explicit that speed in procurement is a strategic value driver in volatile environments. That is the uncomfortable overlap: volatility should push organizations to de-risk, but volatility also increases the reward for whichever channel can quote and ship fastest. In the absence of a structured evidence layer that makes domestic sourcing low-friction, the buyer’s local optimum keeps feeding the global optimum of the old system.
Evidence in two layers
For a generalist, think of a custom metal rack that holds parts as they’re being built. It’s an important thing; the factory can’t work without it. But the drawing is simple, the finish is cosmetic, and nobody cares about the long-term geopolitical story. The buyer needs a quote tonight and a ship date tomorrow to calm the schedule board. A global platform gives them that. A domestic shop might also be able to do it, but they would have to be able to find them and then may require phone calls, onboarding, and a week of back-and-forth that does not fit the problem.
For a builder, look at the artifacts that create friction. The RFQ packet has a drawing, a STEP, and a revision letter, but the award requires more: a cert packet standard, an inspection plan, and a first-article definition that is consistent with the traveler. If the domestic path requires assembling those artifacts from scratch for every new supplier, onboarding time explodes and the buyer stops trying. If the offshore path accepts ambiguity and ships anyway, the buyer will take the risk, especially for prototypes, MRO, and non-safety-critical parts.
This is why surveys can show that companies are de-risking while buyers still route urgent work through global channels. Deloitte has cited manufacturing outlook data showing a large share of firms working to de-risk supply chains, and it frames the ongoing rebalance between efficiency and resilience. Kearney’s reshoring work similarly reflects intent alongside constraints, which is what you would expect when the bottleneck is not desire but execution capacity and coordination overhead. The story is consistent: policy says “reduce exposure,” procurement says “reduce time.”
Implications
If resilience stays at the slogan layer, procurement will keep buying speed from whoever sells it, and the organization will accumulate hidden exposure while believing it is de-risking. The measurable symptom is a stable offshore share of emergency buys and prototype awards, even as executives announce reshoring initiatives. The shop floor will experience this as parts arriving fast but variability rising: more rework, more inspection surprises, and more supplier churn when a single miss forces a scramble.
If resilience is translated into procurement constraints without reducing friction, the likely outcome is supplier concentration, longer RFQ-to-award time, and slower iteration. You get more checkboxes, more approvers, and fewer awards to new suppliers because the evidence burden becomes too high to carry at speed. That is how a well-intended resilience push can accidentally reduce throughput.
The only stable way out is to make resilience a property of routable evidence. That means portable verification artifacts, rev-lock discipline, cert packet normalization, and clear consequences tied to NCR closure codes and dispute handling. When domestic sourcing is as fast as offshore, but with the added artifacts of qualification, buyers can pick it without being heroes, and “resilience” stops being a policy debate and becomes an operations metric.
Questions for you
Hard mode: think about machines and tools, not just parts.
- In your last 50 urgent buys, what share went offshore, and how many of those were decided inside 48 hours based on quote speed and logistics certainty rather than unit cost?
- What is your median time from RFQ release to PO for a new supplier, and which artifact causes the longest stall: vendor packet, cert packet requirements, inspection plan, or first-article definition on the traveler?
- Do your buyers have an explicit, auditable rule that triggers a domestic preference for certain part classes, and is that rule attached to the RFQ record as a required field with a compliance reason code?
- When an offshore order succeeds, what evidence do you capture that would let you re-route the next similar drawing domestically without redoing onboarding from scratch?
- When an offshore order fails, do you classify the failure in an NCR record as quality, logistics, policy, or enforceability, and do you feed that code back into sourcing rules?
In the next paper (No. 10) we shift from strategy to boundary conditions: tariffs. Tariffs and enforcement can blunt an unfair cost advantage and buy time, but they do not make a drawing clearer or a quote faster. To actually change those criteria through tariffs would be a crushing change to the economy of manufacturing. In the day-to-day reality, the control points stay operational and measurable: price and RFQ response latency… sometimes compliance with specific requirements. Industrial policy moves on calendar time and that is a LOT slower than traveler time. The durable advantage has to come from coordination infrastructure that makes domestic capacity routable under pressure.