
On a container terminal at night, there’s a certain silence. The floodlights wash everything in that pale industrial yellow, the trucks continue to idle, the cranes continue to move, and the men in reflective vests hardly talk to each other because the choreography has been the same for years. It appears well-organized. It appears to be unbreakable. And for the past thirty years, the world economy has been deceiving itself more than anything else.
It wasn’t until the shelves were empty that most of us realized how vulnerable we were. Pasta and paper towels came first, followed by semiconductors, baby formula, and medications whose names we couldn’t pronounce. The machinery behind it had been shaky for a while, but the pandemic pulled the curtain back. The 2011 Japanese tsunami completely changed the auto industry. In 2021, the estimated daily cost of a single ship lodged sideways in the Suez was nine billion dollars. Exactly, none of these were freak occurrences. These were tests of a system designed for affordability rather than survival.
| Key Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Topic | Global Supply Chain Fragility |
| Estimated value of goods moved through global supply chains (2019) | US$19 trillion |
| Primary risk model | Just-in-Time inventory (low buffer, high efficiency) |
| Most cited recent disruption | Red Sea shipping crisis & Cape of Good Hope rerouting |
| Share of international trade involving global value chains | Over two-thirds |
| Notable historical shocks | 2011 Japan tsunami, COVID-19 (2020–22), Ukraine war (2022), Suez blockage (2021) |
| Concentration risk | Heavy dependence on China, Taiwan, and a few maritime chokepoints |
| Share of typical company emissions tied to its supply chain | Around 80% |
| Policy responses | Reshoring, nearshoring, friendshoring |
| Long-term outlook | More frequent, smaller disruptions; slower healing periods |
The term “just-in-time,” which is frequently used by economists, has a clear, almost moral connotation. In actuality, this means that if a German automaker needs a wiring harness that is difficult to find elsewhere, it might have to rely on a single small factory in a coastal town in China. When you multiply that by a thousand suppliers per vehicle, you begin to see why the system shakes every time a drone is seen close to a tanker off Yemen or a port worker in Los Angeles raises a picket sign. Speaking with logistics professionals in private gives me the impression that they have always known this. They simply didn’t anticipate that the music would end abruptly.
The response has come slowly, which is odd. Following 2020, executives publicly discussed switching from “just-in-time” to “just-in-case.” For roughly eighteen months, the phrase was used in almost every quarterly earnings call. Then margins tightened, interest rates increased, and the excess inventory was discreetly written down. Cutting instinct prevailed, as it usually does. When the next quarter is the only one that matters, investors seem to think that efficiency is something that can be adjusted rather than rebuilt.
Meanwhile, governments are moving in a different direction. Brussels has responded to Washington’s tariffs on Chinese goods with its own policies, and a more subdued competition is in progress to bring rare earths, chips, and batteries back to the United States. This might work. Additionally, reshoring at scale may reduce global income by more than a percentage point while reducing countries’ reliance on a smaller pool of suppliers, according to some World Bank research. There are only various ways to arrange the risk; there is no easy way out of interdependence.
As you watch this happen, you begin to believe that the ports, ships, and even geopolitics are not the true vulnerabilities. Thirty years of corporate planning was predicated on the idea that the world would continue to function as it had. There is no slowing down of the Red Sea. There is not enough water in the Panama Canal. Somewhere, a new set of trade regulations will be drafted after the next election. The floodlights will continue to shine, the factories will continue to operate, and the cranes will continue to move. The question of whether the goods actually arrive on time is a different one, and no one seems prepared to provide an answer.
