The post-Cold War era was widely associated with the Washington Consensus, which promoted economic efficiency, specialization, and trade liberalization as pathways to growth and social welfare. Globalization facilitated the rise of geographically dispersed production networks, known as global value chains (GVCs). For decades, firms benefited from offshoring by exploiting labour cost differentials, accessing cheaper resources, and entering new markets. However, since 2010, political and societal shifts have driven a collective reconfiguration of GVCs. Today, manufacturing systems are being reshaped by three major forces: digital transformation, climate change, and geopolitical tensions.
This volume focuses on the latter - geopolitical disruptions - and examines their impact on corporate strategies related to trade and foreign direct investment. Firms increasingly respond by relocating operations, either through reshoring to the home country or through nearshoring to adjacent regions. The study investigates the drivers behind these decisions, comparing current reshoring patterns with previous disruptions, such as those during the COVID-19 pandemic. It also evaluates the role of policy frameworks in enabling relocation and considers how these may evolve. While the analysis centres on the European Union, it offers a global perspective on geopolitical risks. The book serves as a key resource for academics, practitioners, and policymakers seeking to understand international business and investment decisions.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Global Value Chains: On A Lookout for Rewiring? 2. The Three "De-"s - Global Economy in Face of Geopolitical Complexity 3. Global Value Chains and Megatrends 4. Geopolitical Distress and GVCs' Resilience: Towards Reconfiguration? 5. Relocation as a GVC Reconfiguration Trajectory 6. International Production Trajectories Under Geopolitical Strain: The Case of Semiconductors and Wire Harness Systems 7. Policy Frameworks for Reshoring in CEE: A Review of the Existing Solutions and EU Expectations 8. Closing the Loop: GVCs and Contemporary Extensions of Rodrik's Dilemma. References.