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reshoring

American  
[ree-shawr-ing] / riˈʃɔr ɪŋ /

noun

  1. the practice or process of repatriating previously offshored jobs or business activities.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Khan said Apple is focused on simpler reshoring goals to start.

From The Wall Street Journal

The serious kernel of Mr. Hassett’s complaint, to the extent there is one, is that the New York Fed economists overlooked a wide range of other ways the tariffs could affect the U.S. economy, such as stimulating reshoring of production and an increase in domestic wages.

From The Wall Street Journal

For starters, electricity demand is growing from a combination of power-hungry artificial intelligence, the electrification of transportation and industry, and the reshoring of manufacturing.

From Barron's

Industrial deals are benefiting from broad economic trends, including investment in domestic reshoring and supply-chain resilience, improvements to the power grid to support the artificial-intelligence boom, and strong defense funding and commercial aerospace demand.

From The Wall Street Journal

About 60% of the reshoring in 2025 relocated from China, according to the Manufacturing Advocacy and Growth Network, a nonprofit that conducted the survey.

From The Wall Street Journal