Tim Culpan & Noah Smith, Columnists

Biden Can Forget About Making IPhones in the U.S.

There’s a chance to reduce supply-chain vulnerability while rebuilding global alliances.

Foxconn’s facility in Wisconsin never met job-creation expectations.

Photographer: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty

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While much of Joe Biden’s first term in office will involve digging out from the Covid-19 pandemic and recession, the incoming president has also vowed to change the way the U.S. manages its supply chains. This is framed as a way to make America more resilient in the face of crises after struggling to secure much-needed protective and medical materials in the early days of the coronavirus.

But it’s obvious that his supply-chain policy centers on weaning the U.S. and its allies off China. Already dashed is the old theory that free trade would induce Beijing to peacefully democratize and integrate itself smoothly into existing global institutions.