By Aseem Goyal
“Resilience is the new return on investment. »
For more than two decades, China has been the undisputed “factory of the world.” After joining the WTO in the early 2000s, it combined scale, profitability and ecosystem depth in a way that few economies could replicate. Between 2000 and 2010, GDP growth averaged more than 10 percent per year.
I witnessed this transformation when I arrived in Shanghai in 2005. Construction cranes dominated the skyline. Consumer demand seemed insatiable. Growth regularly exceeded 11% and peaked at 14.2% in 2007. This momentum seemed historic – and it was. It was a time when “efficiency” was the only metric that mattered, and China was implementing it on a scale the world had never seen.
But in the early 2010s, structural pressures emerged. Labor costs were increasing. The demographics were changing. China was deliberately moving up the value chain toward high-tech manufacturing. Geopolitical tensions have escalated, intellectual property concerns have grown, and trade frictions have escalated into large-scale tariffs. Then the pandemic revealed a harsh truth: Highly concentrated supply networks, no matter how efficient, were fragile. At the same time, the new norm for China’s GDP is now 4-5%.
What followed was an architectural overhaul of global production. “China Plus One” has become embedded in corporate strategy – not as a replacement for China, but as a mandatory insurance policy. Today, China still holds nearly 30% of global manufacturing capacity and will continue to dominate for the foreseeable future. It is not about replacing China; it is about becoming an indispensable node in an integrated global system.
The geopolitical layer: Friend-shoring as a strategyBeyond logistics, the “Plus One” architecture is increasingly defined by security and alignment. In 2026, supply chain resilience is inseparable from geopolitical “friend-shoring”. The success of these emerging hubs is often linked to their free trade agreements (FTAs) and their membership in blocs like the CPTPP Or IPEF. For the global CEO, a “Plus One” node is only viable if it is in a regulatory “green zone” that mitigates the risk of sudden sanctions or trade barriers. The race for the essential is as much about diplomatic alignment as it is about factories.
Redefining success: from arbitration to architectureIn the early days of China plus One, success was defined narrowly: arbitrage in the labor market. This definition is now obsolete. Success is now also defined by structural resilience – a country’s ability to anchor long-term, higher-value investments in an integrated ecosystem.
Today’s competitive advantage is based on five interrelated factors:
Ecosystem depth and speed: Competitive locations offer dense networks of second- and third-tier suppliers within efficient logistics corridors.Digital and green readiness: Renewable energy compliance (ESG) and digital-first infrastructure are now prerequisites for procurement.Regulatory harmonization and risk reduction: Long-term capital flows to countries that align with G7 or “friendshoring” standards (for example, GDPR-style data privacy or carbon border taxes).Work, skills and demographics: Countries that combine technical capabilities and favorable demographic trends benefit from structural leverage.Market scale and commercial connectivity: The most powerful model is “manufacture where you sell”. provide natural risk reduction for global businesses.The strategic landscape: a multi-node modelCountryStrategic roleMain advantageThe “trap” (risk)VietnamThe speed championProximity to China; AgilityLabor/land saturation; Wage inflationIndiaThe scale bet1.4 billion market; Young talentsComplexity of enforcement and regulationMalaysiaThe specialistLeadership in Semiconductors/ATPSmaller labor pool; High-tech nicheIndonesiaThe power of resourcesDominance of nickel; Potential of electric vehiclesPolitical friction; Infrastructure gaps; Resource nationalismThailandThe reliable hubAutomotive and electronics baseAging population; Middle income trapDeep regional dives:Vietnam: the champion of speedVietnam has quickly integrated itself into global electronics and consumer goods supply chains, attracting giants like Samsung and Apple.
Its structural advantages are competitive labor costs, extensive trade agreements and geographical proximity to southern China, enabling smooth flow of components. However, agility alone no longer constitutes a sustainable gap. While manufacturing wages have increased 7 to 9 percent annually in recent years, the country is aggressively adopting AI-driven logistics to address infrastructure gaps. The government’s national digital transformation agenda aims for large-scale automation by 2030, in a race to achieve automation before rising costs erode its competitive advantage.
India: the challenge of scale
India is the only competitor capable of offering an alternative to the size of China. India combines internal scale and external integration through FTAs, bolstered by a median age of 29 (compared to 39 in China), adding 12 million people to its workforce each year.
India’s production-linked incentive (PLI) programs have catalyzed growth in the semiconductor and automobile manufacturing sectors. Basically, India is positioning itself as a leader in Sovereign AI. Initiatives such as ‘India AI Mission’ and the AI Impact Summit 2026 show that a country is overcoming traditional manufacturing barriers by integrating ‘Physical AI’ into industrial environments. Its constraint remains execution and regulatory obstacles.
Malaysia: the semiconductor specialistMalaysia competes on technical depth rather than scale. With decades of experience in the semiconductor field, it holds a significant share of global assembly, testing and packaging (ATP). This ecosystem is mature and difficult to reproduce.
Malaysia is also moving forward in integrated circuit design and R&D by integrating automated precision manufacturingthereby ensuring that its smaller labor pool does not hinder its production. It is the indispensable node in the high-tech heart of the global supply chain.
Indonesia: the power of resourcesIndonesia controls more than half of the world’s supply. Its “downstream” policies require raw materials to be processed locally, effectively forcing the creation of a national electric vehicle battery ecosystem.
Its opportunity lies in sectoral domination. The country aims to become a regional AI innovation hub, using data-driven insights to manage complex resource extraction and processing. Its success depends on maintaining policy coherence and avoiding scaring off investors with resource-related nationalism.
Thailand: the test case of middle-income countriesThe “Eastern Strait” remains a reliable production hub. However, this sector is too advanced for low-cost labor, yet it is being crushed by high-tech specialists. Thailand responds by driving Industry 5.0 adoption, using intelligent manufacturing systems and robotics to maintain its lead in the automotive and electronics sectors. It serves as a reminder: standing still is like going backwards.
The hard truth: there is no one winnerSo who wins the China plus One draw? The answer does not come from just one country. This is a multi-node model.
Vietnam gains speed.India is a winner in the long term.Malaysia gains on technical specialization.Indonesia wins the resource-based energy transition.Thailand is the benchmark for reliability for middle-income hubs.The role of AI: the energy-AI paradoxIn 2026, “Plus One” is also technological parity. Companies are moving their factories to build “smart factories” using predictive maintenance, digital twins and autonomous quality control. However, this introduces a new bottleneck: Energy infrastructure. The question for CEOs is no longer “Where is the workforce?” to “Where is the digital infrastructure and stable power grid to support my automated fleet?” » A hub’s ability to provide green energy 24/7 to power AI-integrated assembly lines is now a powerful competitive differentiator.
Design the futureDiversification is no longer a hedge; it’s architecture. Companies that thrive in the next decade will design multi-country production systems that treat supply chains as strategic networks rather than linear pipelines.
No country can replace China in the near future. But some will become essential supplements. In the next phase of globalization, Indispensability – not cost – will determine who wins.
Resilience is the new return on investment.
The China Plus One Checklist: Is Your Architecture Ready?
Technical parity: Can this location support the same level of AI-integrated automation used in our main hubs?The energy moat: Does the local grid provide the 24/7 reliability and renewable energy mix required to meet our 2030 ESG mandates?Ecosystem density: Are there second and third tier suppliers within 100 km?Geopolitical “green zone”: Is this nation a signatory to trade blocs (CPTPP, IPEF, etc.) that align with our major consumer markets?Talent pipeline: Does the local professional system support the s “Industry 5.0” skills or will we face a critical shortage?Asim Goyal is a global financial services executive and advisor with 35 years of experience across eight international markets, including a training mandate in Shanghai (2005-2007). He currently advises organizations on Southeast Asian expansion and is the author of an upcoming memoir on global leadership.