Select your location
Kaitlin
About the author
“Gone are the days when unique world-scale plants would be considered sufficient to supply global demand. While there are scale effects to putting all manufacturing eggs in one basket (plant or country), these benefits will be discounted more heavily against the risks of manufacturing concentration.” Continue reading Tractus Executive Director Dennis J. Meseroll’s article for the Virginia Economic Development Partnership.
Continue reading here.
Recent Insights
Mega-Project Mania: Indonesia’s Industrial Land Supply Under Constraint from the Global Race for Strategic Minerals
Vietnam’s Bright Future: FTAs as a Catalyst for Economic Transformation | Tractus
Japan’s Bid to Become a Global Asset Management Hub | Tractus
This article is part of a series exploring Southeast Asia’s industrial zone landscape. For a comprehensive overview, refer to ...
Vietnam’s current economic boom did not happen overnight. The nation’s future is deeply intertwined with its past, ...
In a bold move to position Japan as a leader in the global asset management industry, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is considering the ...