The global spread of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020 brutally exposed the vulnerabilities of hyperconnected just-in-time production networks. It was met by prominent calls by business and political leaders to prioritize resilience over efficiency and to reshore global production. About one year later, this commentary provides an early assessment of the extent to which the COVID-19 pandemic has altered the political economy of globalized production. Rather than fundamentally changing the structural organization of multinational corporations, it is argued, the pandemic highlighted and accelerated important trends that were already well underway before the outbreak of the pandemic. Even though the COVID-19 crisis has not fundamentally altered infrastructures of global production, there are indications that transnational production networks may be in the process of bifurcating further into US- and China-centered spheres—with more cross-border integration within but less across the two—in the years to come.
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June 07 2021
Speeding Up “Slowbalization”: The Political Economy of Global Production before and after COVID-19
Lukas Linsi
1
University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands
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Global Perspectives (2021) 2 (1): 24433.
Article history
Received:
January 29 2021
Accepted:
March 22 2021
Citation
Lukas Linsi; Speeding Up “Slowbalization”: The Political Economy of Global Production before and after COVID-19. Global Perspectives 1 February 2021; 2 (1): 24433. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2021.24433
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