Large manufacturers are increasingly moving production back to the United States from China, according to a new report by The Boston Consulting Group released on Thursday.
In the third annual survey of US-based senior executives at manufacturing companies with annual sales of at least $1 billion, the number of respondents who said their companies were reshoring production to the US from China increased 20 percent from a year earlier.
"Given the fact that China's wage costs are expected to grow, do you expect your company will move manufacturing to the United States?" the August survey asked executives at an unspecified number of companies that manufacture in China.
The executives who said "Yes, we are already actively doing this" rose to about 16 percent in the "Made in America, Again" survey in August from 13 percent a year earlier and 7 percent in the first survey in the series, in February 2012.
After watching the US bleed jobs for years as manufacturers offshored production to China, "now we're watching a switchback", Harold Sirkin, a co-author of the BCG research, told AFP.
The Boston-based global management consulting firm said the online survey was conducted across a wide range of industries, from electronic and computer equipment to transportation machinery, petroleum refining, apparel and food products.
Almost all of the decision-makers work for companies that manufacture in the US and overseas and make products for consumption in the US and elsewhere, BCG said, without identifying the companies. The overall survey drew 252 responses.
The number of executives who said their companies would "consider" moving production back to the US from overseas in the near future climbed by about 24 percent.
More than half - 54 percent - of the respondents said they were interested in reshoring production to the US, roughly the same percentage as a year earlier.
More than 70 percent cited better access to skilled labor as a reason to move production to the US, more than four times as many who cited it for moving production away from the US.
For goods that would be sold in the US, nearly 80 percent gave shorter supply chains and reduced shipping costs as motives for reshoring.
In addition, 71 percent said it was easier to do business in the world's largest economy and about 75 percent said the move provided local control over manufacturing processes and improved quality and yield.
"These findings show that not only does interest in repatriating production to the US and creating American jobs remain strong but also that companies are acting on those intentions," Sirkin said in a statement.
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