According to mismo.team, nearshoring in Latin America is projected to boost the region’s exports by $78 billion annually, driven by North American companies relocating operations closer to home for resilience, cost efficiency, and talent access.
Drivers of the Nearshoring Surge
The shift reflects a strategic response to global supply chain vulnerabilities exposed by the pandemic and geopolitical tensions. In 2023, Mexico overtook China as the United States’ top source of imported goods for the first time in over two decades — with U.S. imports from Mexico reaching over $475 billion, while imports from China fell by 20%. Foreign direct investment (FDI) into Latin America surged by over 50% in 2022, hitting a record high of about $225 billion.
Nearshoring vs Reshoring vs Friendshoring
The source clarifies key terminology: nearshoring means moving operations to a nearby country — e.g., a U.S. company partnering with teams in Mexico, Colombia, or Costa Rica. Reshoring (or onshoring) refers to bringing operations fully back to the home country, such as relocating a factory from China to Ohio. Friendshoring involves relocating to allied nations to reduce geopolitical risk — a strategy that aligns closely with nearshoring in Latin America due to its proximity, cost advantages, and political compatibility with North America.
Top Nearshoring Destinations
- Mexico: Top destination, leveraging its shared U.S. border and the USMCA trade agreement; estimated to gain $35 billion in annual exports from nearshoring alone (Inter-American Development Bank).
- Brazil: Largest economy in Latin America; leader in IT services and software development, offering scale and deep technical expertise.
- Argentina: High English proficiency and highly educated workforce; top choice for software development.
- Colombia: Rapidly growing outsourcing industry with strong government support; excels in business process outsourcing (BPO) and IT services.
- Other key players include Costa Rica, Chile, Uruguay, Peru, Panama, and the Dominican Republic, each noted for strengths in high-value services, tech, finance, logistics, or bilingual talent.
Tangible Benefits for Supply Chain Professionals
According to the report, nearshoring delivers measurable advantages:
- Significant cost savings: Companies can save 60% or more on talent acquisition and salaries versus U.S. hiring — without compromising quality.
- Real-time collaboration: Shared or adjacent time zones enable faster problem solving, agile development, and stronger team cohesion.
- Access to skilled talent: Brazil and Mexico graduate tens of thousands of engineers and IT specialists annually.
- Cultural and language alignment: High familiarity with U.S. business culture and strong English proficiency across major tech hubs improve communication and integration.
- Supply chain resilience: Shorter distances mean goods from Mexico reach the U.S. in days — not months — enabling rapid response to demand shifts.
Strategic Infrastructure Needs
The source emphasizes that realizing nearshoring’s full potential requires robust infrastructure — including roads, rail, and digital connectivity — particularly critical for manufacturing and logistics scalability. While the article cuts off mid-sentence on physical infrastructure, it underscores that success extends far beyond labor arbitrage and hinges on systemic enablers.
Source: mismo.team
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









