Who wields the power in the world’s supply chains?
Inventories offer a clue
SUPPLY-CHAIN managers cannot seem to catch a break. Consider the past month alone. A collapsed bridge has walled off the Port of Baltimore, one of the biggest on America’s east coast, until at least late May. A big earthquake in Taiwan, where a large share of microchips are made, has rattled an industry that increasingly underpins a lot of the world’s manufacturing. Houthi rebels in Yemen keep lobbing missiles at ships in the Red Sea, a critical passage for seaborne trade. America and China are still at loggerheads over their mutual economic entanglements. Wars still rack Ukraine and Gaza.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Strategy and stockpiles”
Business April 13th 2024
- Think Tesla is in trouble? Pity even more its wannabe EV rivals
- Who wields the power in the world’s supply chains?
- Productivity gurus through time: a match-up
- Airbnb bookings for the solar eclipse reach astronomical levels
- TSMC’s American chipmaking plans grow $25bn more ambitious
- Generative AI has a clean-energy problem
More from Business
Germans are world champions of calling in sick
It’s easy and it pays well
Knowing what your colleagues earn
The pros and cons of greater pay transparency
A $500bn investment plan says a lot about Trump’s AI priorities
It’s build, baby, build
Donald Trump’s America will not become a tech oligarchy
Reasons not to panic about the tech-industrial complex
OpenAI’s latest model will change the economics of software
The more reasoning it does, the more computer power it uses
Donald Trump once tried to ban TikTok. Now can he save it?
To keep the app alive in America, he must persuade China to sell up