How did the South Become the New Center of US Manufacturing?
Following up on last newsletter's deep dive into manufacturing construction starts, we took a closer look at how different US regions are actually performing in the battle to attract new industrial facilities—and the results reveal what's really driving American manufacturing competitiveness.
The numbers tell a stark story: the South dominated 2024 with $124 billion in new manufacturing facilities, crushing the Midwest ($48B), West ($54B), and especially the Northeast ($7.6B).
Dig deeper and this isn't just about cheaper labor—though Southern construction wages do run 30-50% less than coastal markets.
The real lesson is about ecosystems:
No silver bullet approach: The South succeeded by coordinating land policy, workforce development, regulatory reform, and infrastructure investment simultaneously
Speculative site development: States like Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Texas pre-invested in 1,000+ acre industrial sites with zoning, entitlements, and infrastructure already complete
Georgia’s GRAD program is particularly prolific with over 68 sites >1MM square feet in size currently available.
Streamlined permitting: Southern states took control from local municipalities to guarantee fast approvals
Innovation vs. production geography: The South shows you can win factory construction even when the innovation comes from other regions—a lesson for places like New England that dominate in R&D but struggle to convert breakthrough technologies into local scaled production
The competitive landscape isn't fixed—New England's underutilized brownfield sites with existing power infrastructure could shift the game for states willing to make similar comprehensive investments.