analysisJan 25, 2026ยท12 min read

Is Decoupling from China Working? The Data Behind the Divorce

The US is trying to decouple from China. But supply chains are sticky, costs are rising, and the alternatives aren't ready.

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Key takeaway: The US is trying to decouple from China. But supply chains are sticky, costs are rising, and the alternatives aren't ready.

Since 2018, US trade policy has aimed to reduce economic dependence on China. Tariffs of 25-145%, export controls on semiconductors, investment restrictions, and "friend-shoring" incentives have all been deployed. Eight years in, the results are mixed at best. US imports from China have fallen, but total import costs have risen, supply chains have become more complex (not simpler), and China remains indispensable for critical materials.

The Trade Data

US Imports from China vs. Total Imports

Year China Imports China Share Total Imports
2017$505B21.6%$2,342B
2019$452B18.1%$2,498B
2022$536B16.5%$3,250B
2024$438B13.3%$3,295B
2025 (est.)$320B10.8%$2,960B

Source: Census Bureau, USITC. 2025 estimates based on partial-year data.

China's share of US imports has fallen from 21.6% to approximately 10.8%. On the surface, decoupling appears to be working. But dig deeper and the picture is more complicated.

The "Vietnam Detour" Problem

Much of the decline in Chinese imports is illusory. Chinese companies have set up assembly and transshipment operations in Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and Mexico. Products are manufactured or substantially processed in China, shipped to a third country for minimal final assembly, and then exported to the US as a "Vietnamese" or "Mexican" product.

The evidence is striking. Vietnam's exports to the US surged 35% from 2022 to 2024, while Vietnam's imports from China grew by a nearly identical amount. US Customs has investigated hundreds of cases of "transshipment" โ€” Chinese goods routed through third countries to evade tariffs.

The net effect: Americans are paying higher prices (due to the added cost of the detour), the products still originate largely from Chinese supply chains, and the decoupling is partly a statistical illusion.

Where China Remains Indispensable

In several critical categories, no near-term alternative to Chinese supply exists:

  • Rare earth elements: China processes ~70% of global rare earths. These are essential for EVs, wind turbines, defense systems, and electronics. China's 2025 export controls have exposed this vulnerability.
  • Battery materials: China controls ~75% of lithium-ion battery cell production and ~90% of battery-grade graphite processing.
  • Solar panels: China produces ~80% of the world's solar panels and controls most of the polysilicon supply chain.
  • Active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs): China and India produce ~80% of APIs for US generic drugs. China alone produces most precursor chemicals.
  • Consumer electronics assembly: Despite diversification efforts, China still assembles ~70% of the world's smartphones and laptops.

The Cost of Decoupling

Even where supply chain shifts have been real (not just transshipment), they've come at significant cost:

  • Higher production costs: Manufacturing in Vietnam, India, or Mexico is often 10-30% more expensive than China for comparable quality. China's infrastructure, workforce scale, and industrial ecosystem took decades to build.
  • Longer timelines: Building new factory capacity takes 3-7 years. Companies that began shifting in 2018 are only now seeing partial results.
  • Quality and reliability: New suppliers in new countries often have higher defect rates, inconsistent delivery, and less developed logistics infrastructure.
  • Duplicate investment: Companies maintaining both Chinese and non-Chinese supply chains face higher overhead costs.

A 2025 McKinsey study estimated that full supply chain diversification away from China would cost US companies $2-4 trillion in cumulative investment over a decade, with ongoing production cost increases of 15-25%.

China's Response: Moving Up the Value Chain

Rather than being weakened by decoupling, China has accelerated its move up the value chain. Chinese companies now dominate:

  • Electric vehicles (BYD surpassed Tesla in global unit sales in 2024)
  • 5G infrastructure (Huawei remains the global leader despite US sanctions)
  • Solar and wind technology
  • Advanced battery technology
  • AI applications and semiconductor design (despite chip export controls)

China's exports to the rest of the world have increased even as US-China trade declined. Decoupling has not weakened China's economy as much as proponents hoped; it has redirected Chinese trade toward the EU, ASEAN, Middle East, and Global South.

The Strategic Assessment

Reducing strategic dependence on China for critical materials and technologies is a legitimate national security goal shared across the political spectrum. But tariffs alone are an inefficient tool for achieving it:

  • Tariffs raise costs immediately but don't create alternative supply for years
  • Tariffs on consumer goods (clothing, toys) have no strategic rationale
  • Investment incentives (CHIPS Act, IRA) have done more to build domestic capacity than tariffs
  • Allied coordination (friend-shoring) requires trade agreements, not trade wars

Key Takeaways

  • โœ“ China's share of US imports fell from 21.6% to ~10.8%, but much trade reroutes through third countries
  • โœ“ China remains indispensable for rare earths, batteries, solar, pharma ingredients
  • โœ“ Full decoupling would cost $2-4 trillion and take a decade
  • โœ“ China has redirected exports globally and moved up the value chain
  • โœ“ Investment incentives (CHIPS Act) have been more effective than tariffs at building alternatives

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