Electronics Industry Warns Mexico Tariffs Could Undercut U.S. Manufacturing and Supply Chain ResilienceOctober 23, 2025 at 10:55 AM EDT
Bannockburn, Illinois, USA, Oct. 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- As negotiations over U.S.–Mexico trade policies near an October 29 deadline, the Global Electronics Association today released a new policy brief, From Risk to Resilience: Why Mexico Matters to U.S. Manufacturing. The report warns that proposed 30% tariffs on electronics imports from Mexico would fracture North American supply chains, raise costs for U.S. manufacturers, and undermine efforts to reshore production and strengthen domestic competitiveness. Authored by the Association’s Chief Economist, Shawn Dubravac, and the Industry Intelligence team, the report concludes that Mexico has developed into a full-fledged production hub within the North American ecosystem, drawing on a diversified global network of suppliers Data shows that Mexico’s imports from China have declined significantly since 2017, with sourcing shifting to Vietnam, South Korea, Taiwan, and the European Union. “Electronics manufacturing today depends on cross-border collaboration,” said Lorena Villanueva, director of the Global Electronics Association’s Mexico office. “Mexico has become an essential partner in strengthening North American manufacturing. Our supply chains are not competitors; they are collaborators. Policies that recognize this partnership will ensure both nations remain competitive in a rapidly changing global market.” The Association emphasized that maintaining a strong trade partnership with Mexico is a top priority for manufacturers on both sides of the border. Many of its members report that U.S.–Mexico trade is their single most important policy issue. “U.S.–Mexico trade isn’t just important—it’s indispensable to a resilient North American electronics ecosystem,” said Chris Mitchell, vice president of global government relations at the Global Electronics Association. “Boosting U.S. manufacturing and supporting Mexico’s industrial growth are two sides of the same coin.” The report underscores that many electronics systems and components cross the U.S.–Mexico border multiple times before final assembly, reflecting deeply integrated supply chains that support competitiveness, jobs, and security across the region. Disrupting these flows with tariffs would drive up costs, slow delivery times, and threaten the survival of small and medium-sized manufacturers. The Association urges policymakers to finalize a bilateral trade agreement that preserves tariff-free access, strengthens enforcement, and reinforces Mexico’s role as a co-builder of North American manufacturing resilience. “Mexico’s manufacturing evolution is one of the clearest examples of nearshoring success,” the report concludes. “Protecting that progress is essential to the region’s economic stability and to building truly resilient supply chains.” The full report, "From Risk to Resilience: Why Mexico Matters to U.S. Manufacturing," is available for download at https://go.electronics.org/-mexico-policy-brief. ### ![]() Michelle Leff Mermselstein Global Electronics Association 202-661-8092 MichelleMermelstein@electronics.org More NewsView MoreVia MarketBeat
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