Why Is Everything Made in China? What UK Businesses Need to Know

April 22, 2026
Why is so much manufactured in China?

China became the world’s dominant manufacturer through a combination of deliberate government industrial policy, massive investment in production infrastructure, an enormous and disciplined labour force, a deeply integrated domestic supply chain, and decades of accumulated manufacturing knowledge and tooling capability. For UK businesses, understanding why China makes so much of the world’s goods — and what is beginning to change — is essential context for making informed sourcing decisions.

Why Is Everything Made in China? — Why UK Businesses Should Understand This

The phrase “make in China” has become so embedded in global trade that most UK consumers and business owners accept it as a fact of life without questioning the underlying reasons. But understanding why China became the world’s factory — and why that dominance is now being tested by rising costs, geopolitical tensions, and the emergence of alternative manufacturing destinations — is genuinely useful for UK businesses making sourcing decisions. If you know why China is cheap, you can identify when it’s no longer the cheapest option. If you know where China is strong, you can identify which product categories are worth sourcing elsewhere.

China’s manufacturing dominance is not simply a matter of low wages — that narrative is increasingly outdated as Chinese labour costs have risen significantly since the early 2000s. The real competitive advantage of Chinese manufacturing today is the depth of its industrial ecosystem: the concentration of raw materials, component suppliers, tooling manufacturers, logistics networks, and skilled factory operators within close geographic proximity. This “clustering” effect, combined with China’s huge domestic market and the scale efficiencies that come with producing for the entire world, creates a manufacturing capability and cost structure that alternative destinations are still working to replicate.

China’s Manufacturing Advantages: A Country Comparison

FactorChinaVietnamBangladeshUK / Europe
Manufacturing BreadthUnmatched — all categoriesStrong in garments, electronics assembly, furniturePrimarily garments and textilesSpecialist, high-value manufacturing
Labour CostMedium (risen significantly since 2005)Lower than ChinaVery lowHigh
Supply Chain DepthExtremely deep — everything available locallyModerate — some components from ChinaLimited — fabrics often importedDeep but expensive
MOQ FlexibilityHigh — very small runs possibleModerateLower flexibilityVery flexible at high cost
UK Import DutyUK Global Tariff (varies by product)Preferential under UKVFTAPreferential under UK GSP0% (UK trade with EU dependent on origin rules)

The Seven Reasons China Dominates Global Manufacturing

Seven structural factors explain China’s manufacturing dominance, most of which remain intact today despite rising costs:

  1. Industrial clustering: China’s manufacturing is concentrated in regional clusters where every factory, raw material supplier, component maker, and logistics provider is within close reach. Dongguan for electronics, Keqiao for textiles, Foshan for ceramics and furniture — the proximity creates speed and cost advantages that geographically dispersed competitors cannot match.
  2. Infrastructure investment: China has built the world’s most extensive manufacturing and logistics infrastructure — ports (including the world’s largest container port, Shanghai), motorways, rail networks, and industrial parks — which reduces the cost of moving goods from factory to ship.
  3. Scale: China’s domestic market of 1.4 billion consumers means factories producing for the world also produce for China itself, achieving scale efficiencies that reduce unit costs across the entire production run.
  4. Tooling and engineering capability: China has accumulated decades of tooling knowledge — injection moulds, stamping dies, casting patterns — that enable fast, low-cost product development. A UK brand can get a prototype tooled and sampled in China in weeks for a fraction of the cost of doing the same in the UK.
  5. A full raw material supply chain: China produces a significant proportion of the world’s steel, aluminium, copper, rare earth materials, textiles, chemicals, and plastics — giving Chinese factories domestic access to inputs that manufacturers in other countries must import.
  6. Workforce scale and skills: China’s manufacturing workforce numbers in the hundreds of millions, and decades of factory operation have developed deep institutional knowledge of production processes, quality management, and export logistics.
  7. Government industrial policy: China’s government has actively supported manufacturing through subsidised land, tax incentives, export financing, and state investment in industrial parks — creating a policy environment that tilts the playing field in favour of Chinese manufacturers.
⚠️ The ‘China Plus One’ Strategy

Many UK businesses and global brands are now adopting a “China Plus One” strategy — maintaining their Chinese manufacturing relationships while simultaneously developing a second manufacturing source in Vietnam, India, or another Asian country to reduce geopolitical and supply chain concentration risk. This approach gives businesses the cost and capability benefits of Chinese manufacturing while building resilience against tariff changes, geopolitical disruptions, or factory capacity constraints.

How Epic Sourcing Helps UK Businesses Source Strategically from China

🌏 China vs. Vietnam Analysis

We help UK businesses evaluate whether China or Vietnam is the right sourcing destination for their specific product — modelling the landed cost, duty implications, and supply chain risk of each option.

🏭 Factory Network Access

Our on-the-ground team in China gives UK brands direct access to the right factory for their product category — without the risk and inefficiency of sourcing blind from online marketplaces.

🛡️ Supply Chain Risk Management

We help UK brands build diversified supply chains that reduce dependency on a single factory or country, improving resilience against future disruptions including tariff changes and factory shutdowns.

📋 Compliance & Due Diligence

We conduct factory due diligence on your behalf, covering business licence verification, production capability assessment, quality system review, and ethical trading standards.

Are Chinese manufacturing costs still low compared to other countries?

Chinese manufacturing costs have risen substantially since the early 2000s, with wages in coastal manufacturing provinces now significantly higher than in Vietnam, Bangladesh, or Cambodia. However, China’s cost advantage for most product categories remains intact when you consider the full picture: the depth of its supply chain (meaning fewer imported components), tooling costs (significantly lower than anywhere else), manufacturing speed, and quality reliability. For products requiring complex manufacturing processes, multi-component assembly, or access to specialist materials, China remains the most cost-competitive source globally. For simpler, labour-intensive goods — basic garments, footwear, simple plastic items — Vietnam and Bangladesh are increasingly competitive.

Will US tariffs on China affect UK businesses sourcing from China?

US tariffs on Chinese goods — including the significant tariff increases imposed in 2018–2019 and expanded in subsequent years — directly affect UK businesses in two ways. First, if you are a UK business that also sells into the US market, Chinese-origin goods attract significantly higher US import duties, making China less competitive for US-bound products. Second, US tariffs on China have accelerated the migration of some production to Vietnam and other Asian countries, which affects factory capacity and pricing in those markets. UK import duty on Chinese goods is set by the UK Global Tariff independently of US tariff policy — so US tariffs do not directly affect what you pay to import goods from China to the UK.

Is it ethical to source from China?

Ethical sourcing from China is entirely achievable, but it requires active due diligence rather than passive assumption. The ethical landscape in Chinese manufacturing is varied: many Chinese factories adhere to internationally recognised labour standards, hold SA8000 or BSCI audit certifications, and maintain strong worker welfare programmes. Others — particularly smaller or sub-contracted factories — may not. UK businesses with ethical sourcing commitments should require factory audit reports (such as SMETA, BSCI, or SA8000), conduct their own factory visits or engage a sourcing agent to do so, and build contractual ethical trading requirements into their supplier agreements. Specific concerns around forced labour in certain Chinese regions make supply chain mapping and transparency increasingly important for UK brands operating under modern slavery reporting obligations.

What is reshoring, and should UK businesses consider it?

Reshoring refers to the process of moving manufacturing back to the UK or a nearer location (nearshoring) from countries like China. For a small number of UK businesses — particularly those producing very high-value, low-volume products; those with strong domestic brand positioning; or those for whom lead time and supply chain visibility are critical — reshoring may be economically viable or strategically desirable. However, for the vast majority of UK businesses producing consumer goods at competitive retail price points, reshoring to the UK is not economically feasible given the significant differences in production costs. Nearshoring to Eastern Europe or Turkey offers a middle ground for some categories — faster lead times than China, lower costs than UK production — but at higher unit costs than Chinese manufacturing.

Which products are no longer cost-competitive to source from China?

As Chinese wages have risen, certain product categories have shifted towards lower-cost manufacturing destinations. Basic cotton T-shirts and standard knitwear are now often cheaper to source from Bangladesh, Pakistan, or Vietnam. Simple footwear (basic canvas shoes, flip-flops) has largely moved to Vietnam and Indonesia. Some low-complexity plastic injection moulded parts are increasingly produced in Thailand or Malaysia. However, the categories that remain firmly anchored in China are those requiring complex multi-step manufacturing, specialist tooling, or integration with a deep local supply chain — including electronics, complex garments and accessories, furniture, metal fabrications, and custom-tooled products.

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