Competing on value, not cost: Why Singapore appeals to German manufacturers
They increasingly view the city-state not just as a sales outpost, but also as a base to serve the rest of South-east Asia.
[HANNOVER] When Siemens announced plans in 2023 to build a 200-million-euro (S$299 million) digital factory in Singapore, the move prompted questions over why it would choose to manufacture in one of Asia’s more expensive business hubs.
But for the German engineering giant, the decision was not so much about labour costs. Rather, it valued the access to skilled talent, supply chain resilience and Singapore’s role as a regional hub for advanced manufacturing and industrial innovation.
The move reflects a broader shift among some German industrial firms, which increasingly view Singapore not just as a sales outpost, but also as a base to serve the rest of South-east Asia.
TRENDING NOW
Profit with purpose: Kim Choo Kueh Chang’s pivot from public listing to protecting heritage
Singapore Kitchen CEO, senior manager charged with alleged fraud, falsifying accounts; both to stay in jobs for now
Record Singapore-US rate gap may widen further on inflows and hawkish Fed outlook
Marco Polo Marine shares plans to unlock value as boutique fund manager becomes substantial shareholder