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Trump tariffs won't lead supply chains back to U.S., companies will go low-tariff globe-hopping: CNBC survey
Most companies that responded to a new CNBC Supply Chain Survey said high costs are the biggest headwind in moving manufacturing back to the U.S., and that if they did so, they would favor automation ...
WTW has launched its 2025 Global Supply Chain Risk Survey, which highlights significant changes in how businesses manage supply chain risks, based on a survey of 1,000 senior executives from various ...
Forty percent of all clinicians and other stakeholders say their hospital has cancelled a surgical case due to missing supplies, and more critically, 27 percent knew of a patient being harmed due to ...
CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A new study by R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company (RRD) reveals 93% of supply chain leaders are at least somewhat confident in their supply chain’s resilience against future ...
Self-distribution is increasingly on the minds of health system supply chain leaders, according to a new survey from Swisslog Healthcare. The Journal of Healthcare Contracting conducted the online ...
If China is going to lose some manufacturing as a result of President Donald Trump's tariffs, the U.S. manufacturing sector won't be the main beneficiary, according to a new CNBC Supply Chain Survey.
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