The Cost of Decoupling: US Faces $14 Trillion Bill to End Reliance on China

A new EY-Parthenon analysis reveals that severing economic ties with China is not merely a policy shift but a financial burden requiring the US to invest an astronomical $13.7 trillion. This geopolitical tension in global trade threatens to eliminate the cost advantage of Chinese factories, triggering structural inflation risks for the Western world.
The Astronomical Price of Independence
The report starkly outlines the magnitude of investment required for the US, Eurozone, and UK to eliminate reliance on China in highly exposed sectors over the next 25 years:
Tariffs vs. Trade Reality
The Trump administration has intensified efforts to limit reliance on China through aggressive trade measures, including a 10% import tax and additional levies ranging from 7.5% to 100% under Section 301 for alleged unfair trade practices. These build upon previous initiatives like the Biden-era CHIPS Act. However, data indicates that the US economy remains heavily reliant on Chinese imports:
Structural Inflation and the Localization Trap
Mats Persson, EY-Parthenon UK macro and geostrategy leader, asserts that a massive push toward localization, particularly decoupling from China, is "plainly unrealistic." Due to the scale of production and supply chain density, Chinese factory prices are 20% to 100% cheaper than in the West. Establishing independent supply chains would structurally raise US inflation by 1% to 2%.
Persson notes that managing these prices would require the US to implement spending equivalent to the Inflation Reduction Act ($891 billion) annually. For the EU, taxpayer-funded supply chain changes would necessitate doubling the budget. Experts agree that achieving these investment levels is highly unlikely.
From an emerging markets perspective, the narrative of total decoupling is flawed. While the US capital markets provide a buffer Europe lacks, the sheer efficiency of Chinese manufacturing creates a pricing floor that Western protectionism cannot break without igniting sustained inflation. We are moving towards a "messy, non-linear globalization." Investors should brace for a bifurcated supply chain where efficiency is sacrificed for geopolitical security, keeping cost-push inflation alive for the foreseeable future.