Walmart shifts to India from China for cheaper imports
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[November 29, 2023] By
Richa Naidu and Siddharth Cavale
LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Walmart is importing more goods to the
United States from India and reducing its reliance upon China as it
looks to cut costs and diversify its supply chain, data seen by Reuters
shows.
The world's largest retailer shipped one quarter of its U.S. imports
from India between January and August this year, according to bill of
lading figures shared with Reuters by data firm Import Yeti. That
compared with just 2% in 2018.
Only 60% of its shipments came from China during the same period, down
from 80% in 2018, the same data shows. To be sure, China is still
Walmart's biggest country for importing goods.
The shift illustrates how the rising cost of importing from China and
escalating political tensions between Washington and Beijing are
encouraging large U.S. companies to import more from countries including
India, Thailand and Vietnam.
"We want the best prices," Andrea Albright, Walmart's executive vice
president of sourcing said in an interview. "That means I need
resiliency in our supply chains. I can't be reliant on any one supplier
or geography for my product because we're constantly managing things
from hurricanes and earthquakes to shortages in raw materials."
In a statement, Walmart said the bill of lading data painted a partial
picture of what it sourced and that creating redundancy "does not
necessarily mean" it was reducing reliance on any of its sourcing
markets. "We're a growth business and are working to source more
manufacturing capacity," Walmart said.
India has emerged as a key component of Walmart's efforts to build that
manufacturing capacity, Albright said.
Walmart has been accelerating growth in India since 2018, when it bought
a 77% stake in Indian e-commerce firm Flipkart. Two years later, it
committed to import $10 billion of goods from India each year by 2027.
That is a target it remains on track to hit, Albright said. It is
currently importing around $3 billion worth of goods from India each
year.
WORKFORCE, TECHNOLOGY ARE KEY DRAWS
Walmart is importing goods ranging from toys and electronics to bicycles
and pharmaceuticals from India to the U.S., Albright said. Packaged
food, dry grains and pasta are also popular imports from India, she
added.
India, whose stock market has risen to record highs this year, is viewed
as the country best equipped to outperform China in low-cost,
large-scale manufacturing.
Its rapidly growing workforce and technological advancement were a draw
for Walmart, Albright said. China on the other hand reported its first
decline in population in six decades last year.
Walmart started its sourcing operations in Bangalore in 2002. Now, the
company employs more than 100,000 people, including temporary workers,
in the country spread across several offices under its Walmart Global
Tech India unit, Flipkart Group, PhonePe and sourcing operations.
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in May
this year, a meeting that Modi termed "a fruitful one."
"Happy to see India emerge as an attractive destination for investment,"
Modi wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, on May 14. McMillon said
Walmart would "continue to support the country's manufacturing growth
and create opportunity."
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A Walmart worker organizes products for Christmas season at a
Walmart store in Teterboro, New Jersey, U.S., October 26, 2016.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz//File Photo
Walmart rival Amazon said this month it is targeting merchandise
exports worth $20 billion from India by 2025.
Freewill Sports, a small Indian supplier of soccer balls, is one
company that has benefited, its Chief Executive Rajesh Kharabanda
said in an interview.
The rising cost of shipping goods from China has also contributed to
the switch to India, supply chain experts say.
"Sourcing from mainland China has become less competitive because of
rising labor costs versus other manufacturing centers," said Chris
Rogers, research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence's supply
chain analysis group Panjiva.
China's minimum wage changes from province to province and sometimes
even from city to city, with a range between 1,420 yuan per month
and 2,690 yuan per month ($198.52 - $376.08). Meanwhile, average
wages for unskilled and semi-skilled workers in India range from
about 9,000 Indian rupees to 15,000 Indian rupees a month ($108.04 -
$180.06), according to central bank estimates.
SUPPLY CHAIN SNAGS
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed weaknesses in global supply chains,
showing U.S. importers to be over-reliant on a small number of
markets.
"Planning for a geopolitical event is like planning for a
hurricane," said Albright. "What I can control is where my product
is coming from and how do I make sure that Christmas still happens
if something happens in our supply chain."
Pakistan and Bangladesh have also benefited from Walmart's strategy,
expanding as suppliers of home and apparel products, Albright said.
Last year, at least eight Freewill shipments sailed to Walmart
warehouses from Mundra Port in Gujarat, the largest private port in
India, according to U.S. import data.
"There is a newfound confidence in the Indian manufacturing industry
and also the availability of factory infrastructure," Freewill's
Chief Executive Rajesh Kharabanda said in an interview.
India's central bank forecasts that the country's economy will
expand 6.5% this fiscal year. China is expected to grow around 5%
this year.
"In the last 12 to 18 months there has certainly been a bigger
impact," said Shekhar Gupta, whose family business Devgiri has been
selling floor rugs to Walmart for about a decade. "That's when
Walmart started putting a true strategy behind how they wanted India
at the center of their growth."
($1 = 7.1528 Chinese yuan renminbi)
($1 = 83.3050 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Richa Naidu and Siddharth Cavale; additional reporting
by Casey Hall and Manoj Kumar. Editing by Matthew Scuffham and
Sharon Singleton)
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