Insight

Stress-Testing Global Trade

For decades, supply chains have been getting increasingly intricate. Now the Trump administration’s trade policies and other disruptions are challenging those systems

How American Supply Chains are Changing
JE

John Ettorre

September 14, 2018 01:44 PM

Few American brands are as iconic as Harley-Davidson. Apple is just as popular, but at age 42 it’s a relative upstart. GE is equally venerable, but it’s ailing. Not so the Wisconsin-based maker of distinctive motorcycles. Founded in 1903, it stands nearly alone as a fabled company that has remained vibrant for more than a century. During his presidential campaign, Donald Trump repeatedly invoked Harley as a proud example of American manufacturing prowess. The full story is considerably more complicated. Yes, Harleys are assembled in the U.S. But some are partly manufactured and assembled in plants around the world. (The company is currently shutting down a plant in Kansas in response to waning domestic sales, while ramping up production in Thailand to supply the growing Asian market.)

When President Trump introduced new tariffs on imported steel and the European Union responded with its own surcharges on American imports, Harley—noting that the levies could add millions of dollars to its cost structure—announced it’s considering making more of its products overseas to serve European markets. This was met with presidential disdain. “Surprised that Harley-Davidson, of all companies, would be the first to wave the white flag,” Trump tweeted in June. Yet the motorcycle maker is hardly alone. Globalization, frictionless intermodal transport systems, and lower international barriers to commerce in recent decades have led to increasingly far-flung supply chains for products as varied as consumer electronics and airplanes. Those carefully orchestrated systems, however, have been threatened of late by any number of disruptive events—extreme weather, Britain’s exit from the EU, currency fluctuations, and the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan.

Corporate supply chains may be in for their toughest stress test yet with the Trump administration’s erratic trade policies, as the world’s largest economy—the country that essentially designed the international trading system—threatens to tear up multilateral agreements and impose tariffs on even its closest allies. The burgeoning global trade war now affects some 10,000 products.

“Nobody knows what to do about anything anymore. It has completely upended all policy planning,” says Laura Baughman, an economist and president of Trade Partnership Worldwide, a consulting group based in Washington, D.C. “I joke—though it’s not really a joke anymore—that public companies are going to have to put into their 10-K [annual report] a new risk factor, which is the president himself, because even his closest policy advisors don’t know from one day to the next what’s going to happen.”

In a recent policy brief, Baughman’s organization examined the potential impact of a 25 percent tariff on automobiles, SUVs, light trucks, and other vehicles and parts. The economists estimated the tariffs would result in a net loss of more than 400,000 American jobs and add about $6,400 to the price of an imported $30,000 car. Putative earthquakes like these are causing supply-chain managers to scramble, especially given that they come against a backdrop of fundamental disruptions already taking place. “The possibility of dramatic changes in trade policy comes at a time when the economics of global manufacturing are already shifting in complex ways as manufacturing technologies advance and labor costs rise in China and other traditionally low-cost countries,” a Boston Consulting Group policy paper recently noted. “These factors on their own are significant enough to prompt many manufacturers to reconsider their global supply-chain strategies. The prospect of a major overhaul of trade agreements among leading economies makes such a reassessment urgent.”

Resilience Above All

That sense of urgency can’t be emphasized strongly enough. Despite the Big Data revolution, “most companies aren’t very good about turning that data into real-time, usable information,” says Steven Bowen, a prominent supply-chain consultant and author of Total Value Optimization—Transforming Your Global Supply Chain Into a Competitive Weapon. Building resilient supply chains is essential in a world of unexpected shocks and constant change, he adds. And it’s not just extreme weather or the sudden imposition of tariffs that drive these changes; even developments that don’t get much notice in the U.S. can have a vast ripple effect. “The sudden deflation of the Brazilian currency in 2017 created a lot of disruptions,” Bowen notes.

“Nearly every supply chain has a weak link—sometimes there are several,” Bowen has written. “Knowing where those weak links are, and at which points they break down, is the first step toward competitive success. Regardless of the origin of the stress points, stress-testing the supply chain is an important but often overlooked part of supply-chain management. The supply chain may look good on paper, but at what point, and under what circumstances, will it break down?”

Building supply chains of greater resilience requires several components, including creating commodity contingencies (such as the hedging strategies airlines use to soften the impact of wild swings in the price of jet fuel), diversifying supply sources for crucial components, and building in redundancy. Baughman, the economist, regards Apple as a case in point. “We’ve seen that some suppliers they were counting on can’t deliver,” she says. “Either they have a fire or production problems they can’t get past. So Apple is now realizing that it has to have more than one source for all its parts and pieces.”

Put to the Test

Bowen maintains that every organization with a supply chain should regularly submit it to a stress test, not unlike what federal regulators have done with banks in the wake of the Great Recession. “But I’d say it’s not the norm to do that,” he says. “The best companies are doing it, but they may not be stress-testing the whole system, including their suppliers. Companies like Amazon and Walmart have the clout to do stress-testing with their suppliers, but most do not.”

He emphasizes that “you don’t have to be big to be smart.” Sometimes large companies get lazy, he explains, assuming that their large-volume purchasing gives them the kind of financial heft that magically solves all supply-chain problems. But they often discover otherwise. Instead, he counsels, firms should engage in “predictive analytics,” something smaller organizations can do just as well as larger ones. Some experts, in fact, are predicting that such analytics, powered by ever-more-sophisticated artificial intelligence, will soon completely replace humans in managing supply chains. In a recent Harvard Business Review article, a trio of industry experts observed that “new digital technologies that have the potential to take over supply-chain management entirely are disrupting traditional ways of working,” adding that current supply-chain management systems may be obsolete in just five to 10 years.

“The trend is clear: Technology is replacing people in supply-chain management—and doing a better job,” the three contended. “It’s not hard to imagine a future in which automated processes, data governance, advanced analytics, sensors, robotics, artificial intelligence, and a continual learning loop will minimize the need for humans.”

Regardless of what the future holds, building the right system is a delicate balancing act. “Global supply chains can save you a lot of money,” Baughman says. “But they can cost you even more.”

Related Articles

The Human Cost


by Justin Smulison

2 new EU laws aim to reshape global business by enforcing ethical supply chains, focusing on human rights and sustainability

Worker wearing hat stands in field carrying equipment

Infrastructure Restructure


by David A. Lum

Developers are embracing creativity and ESG to continue their real estate projects amidst a backdrop of inflation, supply chain demands and pipeline issues.

Two figures standing in construction site

How Corporate Law in France Is Navigating the Trade Wars


by Best Lawyers

Bertrand Cardi and Cyril Bonan discuss M&A, protectionism, and the trade wars' impact in France.

An Interview With Darrois Villey Maillot Broc

Trending Articles

Introducing the 2026 Best Lawyers Awards in Australia, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore


by Jennifer Verta

This year’s awards reflect the strength of the Best Lawyers network and its role in elevating legal talent worldwide.

2026 Best Lawyers Awards in Australia, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore

Discover The Best Lawyers in Spain 2025 Edition


by Jennifer Verta

Highlighting Spain’s leading legal professionals and rising talents.

Flags of Spain, representing Best Lawyers country

Unveiling the 2025 Best Lawyers Editions in Brazil, Mexico, Portugal and South Africa


by Jennifer Verta

Best Lawyers celebrates the finest in law, reaffirming its commitment to the global legal community.

Flags of Brazil, Mexico, Portugal and South Africa, representing Best Lawyers countries

How to Increase Your Online Visibility With a Legal Directory Profile


by Jennifer Verta

Maximize your firm’s reach with a legal directory profile.

Image of a legal directory profile

Paramount Hit With NY Class Action Lawsuit Over Mass Layoffs


by Gregory Sirico

Paramount Global faces a class action lawsuit for allegedly violating New York's WARN Act after laying off 300+ employees without proper notice in September.

Animated man in suit being erased with Paramount logo in background

The Future of Family Law: 3 Top Trends Driving the Field


by Gregory Sirico

How technology, mental health awareness and alternative dispute resolution are transforming family law to better support evolving family dynamics.

Animated child looking at staircase to beach scene

Effective Communication: A Conversation with Jefferson Fisher


by Jamilla Tabbara

The power of effective communication beyond the law.

 Image of Jefferson Fisher and Phillip Greer engaged in a conversation about effective communication

The 2025 Legal Outlook Survey Results Are In


by Jennifer Verta

Discover what Best Lawyers honorees see ahead for the legal industry.

Person standing at a crossroads with multiple intersecting paths and a signpost.

Safe Drinking Water Is the Law, First Nations Tell Canada in $1.1B Class Action


by Gregory Sirico

Canada's argument that it has "no legal obligation" to provide First Nations with clean drinking water has sparked a major human rights debate.

Individual drinking water in front of window

The Best Lawyers Network: Global Recognition with Long-term Value


by Jamilla Tabbara

Learn how Best Lawyers' peer-review process helps recognized lawyers attract more clients and referral opportunities.

Lawyers networking

New Mass. Child Custody Bills Could Transform US Family Law


by Gregory Sirico

How new shared-parenting child custody bills may reshape family law in the state and set a national precedent.

Two children in a field holding hands with parents

Jefferson Fisher: The Secrets to Influential Legal Marketing


by Jennifer Verta

How lawyers can apply Jefferson Fisher’s communication and marketing strategies to build trust, attract clients and grow their practice.

Portrait of Jefferson Fisher a legal marketing expert

Finding the Right Divorce Attorney


by Best Lawyers

Divorce proceedings are inherently a complex legal undertaking. Hiring the right divorce attorney can make all the difference in the outcome of any case.

Person at a computer holding a phone and pen

The Future of Canadian Law. Insights from Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch Honorees


by Jennifer Verta

Emerging leaders in Canada share their perspectives on the challenges and opportunities shaping the future of Canadian law

Digital eye with futuristic overlays, symbolizing legal innovation and technology

New Texas Law Opens Door for Non-Lawyers to Practice


by Gregory Sirico

Texas is at a critical turning point in addressing longstanding legal challenges. Could licensing paralegals to provide legal services to low-income and rural communities close the justice gap?

Animated figures walk up a steep hill with hand

Family Law Wrestles With Ethics as It Embraces Technology


by Michele M. Jochner

Generative AI is revolutionizing family law with far-reaching implications for the practice area.

Microchip above animated head with eyes closed