The tariff showdown between Washington and Beijing? It kicked off a massive exodus. American manufacturers rushed to relocate. India seemed like the perfect landing spot—until policy winds shifted at the White House.
Here's the irony: just as factories were packing their bags for Mumbai and Bangalore, new directives from DC threw a wrench in the works. One minute you're the golden child of supply chain diversification. Next minute? Back to square one.
This whiplash isn't just about textiles or electronics. Think bigger—mining hardware, chip manufacturing, the physical infrastructure that powers decentralized networks. When trade policies zigzag this hard, it's not just factories that suffer. It's entire ecosystems trying to build outside traditional power centers.
India bet big on becoming the alternative hub. Poured resources into infrastructure. Streamlined regulations. Then geopolitics did what it does best: changed the game mid-play.
The lesson? In a world where policy can pivot overnight, diversification isn't just smart—it's survival. Whether you're moving factories or building the next layer of Web3 infrastructure, never bet everything on one jurisdiction's welcome mat.
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Anon32942
· 17h ago
Speaking of which, India has really become a cut leek... The policy is like a roller coaster, who dares to gamble
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NFT_Therapy
· 17h ago
The tariff drama between Washington and Beijing directly messed up the industrial chain, and India wanted to take the opportunity to pick up the leak but was slapped in the face, which is amazing... To put it bluntly, all plans have to be restarted when the policy wind changes, and Web3 infrastructure must be more careful, don't put all the eggs in one basket
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CommunityLurker
· 17h ago
To put it bluntly, it's just playing with fire... India was beaten back to its original form with a single order from the United States, and no one dared to gamble on this capricious policy
The tariff showdown between Washington and Beijing? It kicked off a massive exodus. American manufacturers rushed to relocate. India seemed like the perfect landing spot—until policy winds shifted at the White House.
Here's the irony: just as factories were packing their bags for Mumbai and Bangalore, new directives from DC threw a wrench in the works. One minute you're the golden child of supply chain diversification. Next minute? Back to square one.
This whiplash isn't just about textiles or electronics. Think bigger—mining hardware, chip manufacturing, the physical infrastructure that powers decentralized networks. When trade policies zigzag this hard, it's not just factories that suffer. It's entire ecosystems trying to build outside traditional power centers.
India bet big on becoming the alternative hub. Poured resources into infrastructure. Streamlined regulations. Then geopolitics did what it does best: changed the game mid-play.
The lesson? In a world where policy can pivot overnight, diversification isn't just smart—it's survival. Whether you're moving factories or building the next layer of Web3 infrastructure, never bet everything on one jurisdiction's welcome mat.