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What happens when walls go up in a connected world?

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Manage episode 489432132 series 2869751
Content provided by Tony Hines. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tony Hines or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Global supply chains have become the invisible architecture supporting our modern world, seamlessly connecting resources, manufacturers, and consumers across continents. Yet as trade tensions rise and tariffs become political weapons, this delicate ecosystem faces unprecedented challenges.
We take you behind the scenes of three everyday products to reveal their surprisingly global journeys. The iPhone, despite its "Designed in California" branding, relies on a supply chain spanning 43 countries – from South Korean displays to Taiwanese chips to Swiss gyroscopes before final assembly in China. When faced with tariffs, Apple didn't bring production home but instead diversified to Vietnam and India, revealing how companies adapt without abandoning global sourcing.
Television manufacturing tells a similar story, with brands like Samsung and LG orchestrating complex networks of suppliers across Asia before final assembly in strategic hubs designed to minimize tariff exposure. Meanwhile, "American" automobiles depend on global sourcing for everything from Canadian steel to Japanese transmissions, with companies carefully balancing domestic and international production to navigate trade policies.
Perhaps most concerning is how agricultural tariffs ripple through food supply chains. Farmers face higher costs for imported inputs, leading them to shift crop choices based on tariff impacts rather than optimal land use. The result? Higher food prices, reduced agricultural diversity, and potential environmental consequences that affect us all.
What emerges is a clear picture: tariffs don't simplify supply chains – they complicate them. Companies respond not by abandoning globalization but by creating workarounds through AI-driven logistics, regional sourcing strategies, and greater supply chain flexibility. The next decade will see even more innovation as businesses adapt to an increasingly unpredictable trade environment while striving to minimize disruptions and costs.
Subscribe to Chain Reaction for more insights into how global trade shapes our world and affects the product

Send us a text

You can follow Chain Reaction on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook

Support the show

THANKS FOR LISTENING PLEASE SUPPORT THE SHOW
You can support the podcast by following the link here. It makes a big difference and helps us make great content for you to listen to. Follow like and share the Chain Reaction Podcast with colleagues and friends on social media: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn.
News about forthcoming programmes click here
SHARE
Please share the link with others so they can listen too https://chainreaction.buzzsprout.com/share

LET US KNOW
If you have any comments, suggestions or questions then just direct message on Linkedin or X (Twitter)

REVIEW AND RATE
If you like the show please rate and review it. Every vote helps.
About Tony Hines and the Chain Reaction Podcast – All About Supply Chain Advantage
I have been researching and writing about supply chains for over 25 years. I wrote my first book on supply chain strategies in the early 2000s. The latest edition is published in 2024 available from Routledge, Amazon and all good book stores. Each week we have special episodes on particular topics relating to supply chains. We have a weekly news round up every Saturday at 12 noon...

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Introduction to Chain Reaction (00:00:00)

2. Global Supply Chains Overview (00:01:21)

3. iPhone's 43-Country Supply Network (00:02:02)

4. Television Industry's Global Web (00:03:51)

5. US Automobile Multi-Tiered Supply Chains (00:07:00)

6. Agriculture and Tariff Impacts (00:09:32)

7. Tariffs Create Inefficient Supply Chains (00:14:47)

8. Episode Closing and Resources (00:15:30)

318 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 489432132 series 2869751
Content provided by Tony Hines. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tony Hines or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Global supply chains have become the invisible architecture supporting our modern world, seamlessly connecting resources, manufacturers, and consumers across continents. Yet as trade tensions rise and tariffs become political weapons, this delicate ecosystem faces unprecedented challenges.
We take you behind the scenes of three everyday products to reveal their surprisingly global journeys. The iPhone, despite its "Designed in California" branding, relies on a supply chain spanning 43 countries – from South Korean displays to Taiwanese chips to Swiss gyroscopes before final assembly in China. When faced with tariffs, Apple didn't bring production home but instead diversified to Vietnam and India, revealing how companies adapt without abandoning global sourcing.
Television manufacturing tells a similar story, with brands like Samsung and LG orchestrating complex networks of suppliers across Asia before final assembly in strategic hubs designed to minimize tariff exposure. Meanwhile, "American" automobiles depend on global sourcing for everything from Canadian steel to Japanese transmissions, with companies carefully balancing domestic and international production to navigate trade policies.
Perhaps most concerning is how agricultural tariffs ripple through food supply chains. Farmers face higher costs for imported inputs, leading them to shift crop choices based on tariff impacts rather than optimal land use. The result? Higher food prices, reduced agricultural diversity, and potential environmental consequences that affect us all.
What emerges is a clear picture: tariffs don't simplify supply chains – they complicate them. Companies respond not by abandoning globalization but by creating workarounds through AI-driven logistics, regional sourcing strategies, and greater supply chain flexibility. The next decade will see even more innovation as businesses adapt to an increasingly unpredictable trade environment while striving to minimize disruptions and costs.
Subscribe to Chain Reaction for more insights into how global trade shapes our world and affects the product

Send us a text

You can follow Chain Reaction on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook

Support the show

THANKS FOR LISTENING PLEASE SUPPORT THE SHOW
You can support the podcast by following the link here. It makes a big difference and helps us make great content for you to listen to. Follow like and share the Chain Reaction Podcast with colleagues and friends on social media: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn.
News about forthcoming programmes click here
SHARE
Please share the link with others so they can listen too https://chainreaction.buzzsprout.com/share

LET US KNOW
If you have any comments, suggestions or questions then just direct message on Linkedin or X (Twitter)

REVIEW AND RATE
If you like the show please rate and review it. Every vote helps.
About Tony Hines and the Chain Reaction Podcast – All About Supply Chain Advantage
I have been researching and writing about supply chains for over 25 years. I wrote my first book on supply chain strategies in the early 2000s. The latest edition is published in 2024 available from Routledge, Amazon and all good book stores. Each week we have special episodes on particular topics relating to supply chains. We have a weekly news round up every Saturday at 12 noon...

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Introduction to Chain Reaction (00:00:00)

2. Global Supply Chains Overview (00:01:21)

3. iPhone's 43-Country Supply Network (00:02:02)

4. Television Industry's Global Web (00:03:51)

5. US Automobile Multi-Tiered Supply Chains (00:07:00)

6. Agriculture and Tariff Impacts (00:09:32)

7. Tariffs Create Inefficient Supply Chains (00:14:47)

8. Episode Closing and Resources (00:15:30)

318 episodes

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