Low wages have made China and Southeast Asia unrivalled locations for garment production – but the tide is now starting to turn. A pair of jeans produced in Turkey, for instance, currently cost 3 percent less than in China, when adding together production, transport, and import costs. The same goes for the North American market. A pair of jeans from Mexico shows even 12 percent lower total costs. For some garments with lower-cost production, it now makes sense to nearshore production to Europe or North America. But the main reason for so-called nearshoring is the extremely shorter delivery times it enables, which allows apparel companies to react to trends more quickly and be more agile in aligning collections. A garment from Southeast Asia can take up to 30 days to transport by sea to Western markets – whereas transport from Turkey to Germany takes only three to six days. The garment can even make its way from Mexico to the US in just two days.
Is apparel manufacturing coming home?
| Analyse
Nearshoring: Faster delivery advantage – automation allows for bringing it home– the trend also improves supplier sustainability