, Columnist
Why This China Shock Will Hit Close to Home
Getting squeezed by China.
Photographer: Muhammad Fadli/Bloomberg
During the salad days of global supply chains, the benefits of being on cordial terms with China were barely questioned. Being in the same neighborhood was considered better yet. It was a ticket to ever-greater prosperity.
That idea is now getting some welcome scrutiny. Asia’s years of runaway expansion are behind it, and being in China’s economic orbit is more of a mixed blessing. While that nation’s export juggernaut has encountered stiff resistance in the US, its factories are sending increasing volumes of cheap products to the rest of Asia. Consumers will find that attractive, but domestic manufacturers may come to loathe it — if they don’t already.
