Why Factories Are Moving and Supply Chains Are Following
The China+1 strategy has gained serious momentum. Rising labour costs in China, geopolitical tensions, and new tariff risks are pushing manufacturers into Southeast Asia — Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia. While this shift creates fresh opportunities, it also puts strain on developing port infrastructure, feeder networks and customs systems across the region. As demand rises faster than capacity, congestion remains a recurring challenge.
What the Shift Means for Australian SME Importers
For Australian SMEs, the ASEAN pivot offers attractive pricing and new supply options — but logistics complexity is rising just as quickly. Longer trans-shipment paths, irregular feeder schedules and inconsistent container availability can turn a simple purchase order into a multi-stop exercise. Retailers and manufacturers working with slim timelines may face fluctuating lead times, unexpected holding charges and the need for more hands-on logistics planning.
How SMEs Can Make ASEAN Sourcing Work Smoothly
- Vet suppliers on logistics reliability, not just price or factory output.
- Add buffer days to procurement cycles, especially in peak export months.
- Prioritise major ports over small or inland terminals that may face bottlenecks.
- Share forecasts with carriers/forwarders to secure space during tight periods.
Source: ASEAN Trade & Industry Manufacturing Shift Report & Australia–ASEAN Business Council (Oct 2025).
Disclaimer – Market data is from public sources we consider reliable but has not been independently verified; accuracy is not guaranteed