-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- smt007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current Issue
Wire Harness Solutions
Explore what’s shaping wire harness manufacturing, and how new solutions are helping companies streamline operations and better support EMS providers. Take a closer look at what’s driving the shift.
Spotlight on Europe
As Europe’s defense priorities grow and supply chains are reassessed, industry and policymakers are pushing to rebuild regional capability. This issue explores how Europe is reshaping its electronics ecosystem for a more resilient future.
APEX EXPO 2026 Preshow
This month, we take you inside the annual trade show of the Global Electronics Association, to preview the conferences, standards, keynotes, and other special events new to the show this year.
- Articles
- Columns
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - smt007 Magazine
Resilience Through Adaptation: What to Expect from the Electronics Industry in 2026
January 22, 2026 | John Mitchell, Global Electronics AssociationEstimated reading time: 3 minutes
Editor’s note: This was originally published as a blog post here.
What does the future hold for the global electronics industry? Few organizations are better positioned to answer that question than the Global Electronics Association. With a unique, global perspective spanning the electronics supply chain, we work at the intersection of industry, policy, technology, and workforce development by engaging with member companies, governments, and partners across major regions worldwide.
In this blog series, Global Electronics Association experts will share informed perspectives on the forces reshaping the electronics ecosystem, including geopolitical dynamics, regulatory change, supply chain resilience, sustainability, and technological innovation. Drawing on real-time industry engagement and long-term trend analysis, these insights are intended to help electronics leaders anticipate change, manage risk, and position their organizations for continued growth.
Despite volatility from tariffs, geopolitical tensions, and economic uncertainty, the electronics industry is expected to demonstrate remarkable adaptability in 2026.
Companies have evolved from reactive crisis management to proactive strategic planning by developing sophisticated tariff response strategies, building robust supply chain visibility systems, and positioning to serve concentrated growth sectors in artificial intelligence, defense, and advanced computing, among others.
Important growth sectors:
Strategic Diversification
In 2026, we'll see nations accelerate efforts to reconfigure their electronics supply chain dependencies, but the reality is that true decoupling is impossible. Instead, expect strategic diversification, where countries build redundancy in critical areas while accepting that global interdependency in electronics manufacturing isn't a weakness to eliminate but a reality to manage more intelligently.
Artificial Intelligence
The AI investment boom has likely saved us from recession, but companies will confront a sobering truth: the transformative returns everyone anticipated will take longer to materialize than the hype suggested. Patience, not panic, will separate the AI winners from the overextended.
Workforce
The global electronics manufacturing expansion is expected to hit a hard ceiling in 2026, and it won't be due to factory space or equipment. Workforce skills will emerge as the scarcest, most critical resource in our industry. We can build facilities in months, but we cannot accelerate workforce expertise at the same pace. This skills shortage will become the defining constraint on localization and manufacturing ambitions worldwide.
Raw Materials
Countries will increasingly treat raw materials as matters of national security in 2026. Expect aggressive investments in domestic mining and processing of rare earth elements, even when economics don't favor it. The electronics industry will witness a fundamental shift from lowest-cost sourcing to closest-to-home sourcing, reshaping decades of supply chain optimization.
Sustainability
Investments are expected to accelerate in 2026 as the business case becomes undeniable; however, we’ll simultaneously see fragmentation in global standards, which will create new inefficiencies. The challenge won't be convincing decision-makers that sustainability matters; it will be navigating an increasingly complex patchwork of regional requirements that could slow the very progress we've made.
Why This Matters for the Electronics Industry and the World
This matters because electronics are the foundation of global innovation, economic competitiveness, and resilience in every industry. Decisions made today around supply chains, materials, manufacturing, and infrastructure will determine which companies and regions lead in the decade ahead.
Looking Ahead
Success increasingly depends on strategic positioning relative to growth sectors, operational agility to handle continued trade uncertainty, and technological sophistication to serve evolving product requirements.
I’d love to hear your thoughts about the future of our industry. You can find me on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnwmitchell.
Testimonial
"Your magazines are a great platform for people to exchange knowledge. Thank you for the work that you do."
Simon Khesin - Schmoll MaschinenSuggested Items
ASMPT Wins JSD as New Distributor
04/21/2026 | ASMPTWith this cooperation, ASMPT is increasing its presence in one of the most dynamic electronics manufacturing regions of the country while improving the support options for its local customers.
Horizon Sales Adds LPKF Laser and Electronics to Its Lineup
04/21/2026 | Horizon SalesHorizon Sales, a leading manufacturers’ representative and distributor to the electronics industry, is pleased to announce a new partnership with LPKF Laser and Electronics, a global leader in precision laser technology
EDIP Opens the Door: EU Funding Now Available for Defence Electronics Including PCBs and Substrates
04/21/2026 | Alison James and Chris Mitchell, Global Electronics AssociationThe European Commission has published a call for proposals under the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP), and for European electronics manufacturers the message is clear: this is real money for real capacity, and PCBs and IC substrates are explicitly in scope. EDIP's Industrial Reinforcement Actions (IRA) dedicate €122.25 million to key electronic components, covering guidance electronics, propulsion electronics, RF and laser modules, multispectral cameras, avionics, PCBs and IC substrates, lithium-ion polymer batteries, power electronics, and critical semiconductor building blocks
Women in Technology: Learning to Just Be Myself
04/21/2026 | Michelle Te, I-Connect007Approximately 100 women and a handful of men gathered for a Women in Electronics evening event at APEX EXPO. As I wandered among the tables before it started, I stopped to chat with several women all wearing purple and white polo shirts emblazoned with the TTM logo. It turns out they are part of TTM’s Women in Technology Group, so I sat down and invited them to share their thoughts on coming to the event and what it means to be part of the electronics industry.
Advanced Electronics Packaging at APEX EXPO with Matt Kelly
04/20/2026 | Real Time with... APEX EXPOThe first advanced electronics packaging conference at APEX EXPO 2026 was well-received this year with an engaged audience. Matt Kelly, CTO of the Global Electronics Association, says the expanded focus on component and system-level integration fosters unprecedented collaboration across the industry. Also new this year were the Design Pavilion and Technology Theater, which brought commercial value to technical discussions and highlighted the critical role of timely standards development in rapidly evolving sectors such as AI and automotive.