(of a company) transfer (a business operation that was moved overseas) back to the country from which it was originally relocated.
increasing numbers of US-based manufacturing businesses are planning to reshore production from China back to the US
no objectthe decision to reshore hinges on a host of factors, including taxes, regulations, currencies, and government incentives
Example sentencesExamples
This is still true even though the wages for reshored jobs are usually lower than what manufacturing workers in the U.S. traditionally have earned.
The company will bring 250 jobs to a refurbished plant as it takes the first step to reshore its power tool production.
That will be a one-time doubling of the number of jobs being reshored each year, currently about 30,000 per year.
Only six firms (including four that already reshored in the last two years) said they would bring back some operations in 2013.
The manufacturing being reshored isn't the type of lower-skill manufacturing the U.S. lost in the 1980s.
Still, some segments of manufacturing are recovering, and some products are being reshored to the United States.
Apparel manufacturing is the third-largest reshored sector of all industries in the US, after electronics and computers.
A trend is underway to reshore manufacturing to the US, reports the Wall Street Journal.
With the financial crisis receding and huge investment opportunities in energy and reshored manufacturing, the US has a moment of opportunity unlike any in a long time.
Suppliers can use the software to convince their customers to reshore.
Definition of reshore in US English:
reshore
verbrēˈSHôr
[with object]
(of a company) transfer (a business operation that was moved overseas) back to the country from which it was originally relocated.
increasing numbers of US-based manufacturing businesses are planning to reshore production from China back to the US
no objectthe decision to reshore hinges on a host of factors, including taxes, regulations, currencies, and government incentives
Example sentencesExamples
With the financial crisis receding and huge investment opportunities in energy and reshored manufacturing, the US has a moment of opportunity unlike any in a long time.
Apparel manufacturing is the third-largest reshored sector of all industries in the US, after electronics and computers.
Suppliers can use the software to convince their customers to reshore.
Still, some segments of manufacturing are recovering, and some products are being reshored to the United States.
The manufacturing being reshored isn't the type of lower-skill manufacturing the U.S. lost in the 1980s.
That will be a one-time doubling of the number of jobs being reshored each year, currently about 30,000 per year.
A trend is underway to reshore manufacturing to the US, reports the Wall Street Journal.
The company will bring 250 jobs to a refurbished plant as it takes the first step to reshore its power tool production.
Only six firms (including four that already reshored in the last two years) said they would bring back some operations in 2013.
This is still true even though the wages for reshored jobs are usually lower than what manufacturing workers in the U.S. traditionally have earned.