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US-China trade war
EconomyGlobal Economy

‘Not easy’: how a US firm avoided Trump’s China tariffs by sourcing American

Excel Dryer succeeded in sourcing all components locally by 2023, but analyst questions whether other firms can follow suit

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William Gagnon, executive VP of Excel Dryer, stands in his US-based factory. Photo: HANDOUT
Ralph Jennings

Denis Gagnon had long wanted to establish a manufacturing firm supplied only by American-made parts, a vision shaped by his experience in the international corporate world and his assessment of business risks offshore.

He was an outlier in an era of globalisation when businesspeople, including his US peers, waxed lyrical about outsourcing from Asia to minimise production costs.

The Gagnons, including his son William, run a medium-sized company called Excel Dryer in the US state of Massachusetts.

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In 2018, the year US President Donald Trump raised tariffs on Chinese imports in his first term, the father and son knew they had the right plan. Their conviction was reinforced earlier this year when the world’s two largest economies escalated duties on each other’s imports.

“The tariff increase only solidified our decision to move forward,” said William Gagnon, who is now executive vice-president of the company.

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After eight tough years searching for a motor supplier outside China, the maker of electric hand dryers achieved its goal of sourcing 100 per cent of its parts domestically by 2023, William Gagnon told the Post.

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