By Ala Salman – Managing Director, CSCP, MCSE
International 3PL
Defining Supply Chain
A supply chain is the interconnected system of people, organizations, activities, resources, and technologies involved in creating and delivering a product or service—from raw materials to the end consumer.
In principle, supply chains exist to achieve three fundamental objectives:
- Availability – Products should exist where and when needed
- Affordability – Costs should be minimized through smart sourcing and logistics
- Reliability – Flow should be stable, resilient, and predictable
When properly designed, supply chains reduce waste, lower cost, and improve access.
But modern supply chains have drifted far from those principles.
What many corporations now label as “efficient supply chains” are often neither efficient nor resilient. They are financially optimized distribution empires designed primarily to maximize shareholder returns—not to minimize real economic cost.
This shift has become one of the largest structural contributors to inflation in the modern economy.
The Original Model: Local Production, Short Distribution
For most of economic history:
- Food was grown near where it was eaten
- Goods were produced near where they were used
- Services were delivered locally
- Transportation supported commerce—it did not dominate it
This model naturally:
- Minimized transportation cost
- Reduced handling layers
- Encouraged local competition
- Anchored prices to local productivity
Prices remained grounded because distance was limited, intermediaries were few, and competition was constant.
This was not backward thinking.
It was structurally efficient.
The Consolidation Phase
Large corporations did not displace small producers by being inherently more efficient.
They displaced them by being better financed and able to absorb losses longer.
The pattern repeated across industries:
- Corporations temporarily underpriced local producers
- Small farms, factories, and service providers collapsed
- Corporations acquired or replaced them
- Production centralized
- Distribution expanded nationally
Once local competition disappeared, pricing power shifted.
Not through innovation.
Not through superior productivity.
But through market control.
The Myth of National Distribution Efficiency
Corporations sold a powerful narrative:
“National distribution networks increase efficiency and lower costs.”
The premise is fundamentally flawed.
Moving products farther, more frequently, through more nodes cannot reduce total cost.
It can only:
- Reallocate cost
- Delay cost recognition
- Hide cost inside complexity
Every mile introduces:
- Fuel expense
- Labor expense
- Equipment depreciation
- Maintenance
- Insurance
- Risk
- Delay
Distance multiplies cost.
There is no economic mechanism that reverses this truth.
What Actually Happened
Instead of:
Local production → Local consumption
We created:
Centralized production → Mega Distribution Center → Regional DC → Local DC → Last-mile delivery
Each layer adds:
- Rent
- Payroll
- Management
- Software systems
- Financing cost
None of this makes products cheaper.
It makes balance sheets look sophisticated.
Financial Engineering Replaced Operational Efficiency
Modern supply chains are optimized for:
- Inventory turns
- Earnings per share
- Valuation multiples
- Shareholder optics
They are not optimized for:
- Lowest physical cost
- Shortest physical distance
- Community resilience
Financial efficiency is not operational efficiency.
A system can look excellent on spreadsheets while being physically wasteful.
Most modern supply chains fit that description.
Shareholder Pressure Forces Inflation
Public corporations must:
- Grow revenue every quarter
- Expand margins every year
- Demonstrate “scalability”
True operational efficiency has limits.
Once those limits are reached, only one lever remains:
Raise prices.
Inflation becomes embedded in the business model itself.
Not because costs exploded.
But because growth expectations demand constant expansion.
Centralization Creates Artificial Scarcity
When production is concentrated:
- One factory shutdown affects the entire country
- One port disruption cascades nationally
- One trucking shortage becomes universal
Localized systems absorb shocks.
Centralized systems amplify them.
This fragility allows price increases to be justified under the label of “supply chain disruption,” even when raw materials are abundant and demand is stable.
Scarcity becomes a narrative.
Transportation Became the Product
In many industries, the dominant cost is no longer manufacturing.
It is movement.
We now ship:
- Water across states
- Produce across continents
- Furniture across oceans
- Construction materials thousands of miles
Consumers are not paying more for better goods.
They are paying more for longer journeys.
This is not efficiency.
It is distance monetization.
Why Local Systems Were Anti-Inflationary
Local supply chains naturally:
- Create competition
- Keep margins modest
- Limit logistics overhead
- Prevent monopolization
- Anchor value to labor and land
They do not scale infinitely.
And that is precisely why they work.
Unlimited scale benefits capital.
Limited scale benefits society.
The Irony of “Advanced Supply Chain Technology”
AI, robotics, automation, and predictive analytics are largely deployed to manage complexity that never needed to exist.
Instead of designing simpler systems, we built powerful tools to cope with overly complicated ones.
That is adaptation.
Not progress.
Inflation Was Structural, Not Accidental
Inflation did not rise simply because:
- People bought more
- Workers earned more
- Technology advanced
It rose because:
- Supply chains became longer
- Fewer corporations controlled more goods
- Pricing power centralized
- Finance replaced production
- Distance replaced proximity
This is structural inflation.
What Real Efficiency Looks Like
True efficiency would prioritize:
- Regional manufacturing
- Local agriculture
- City-level production hubs
- Short-haul logistics
- Distributed micro-fulfillment
- Many small operators instead of few giants
This model:
- Lowers transportation cost
- Increases competition
- Pushes prices downward
- Builds resilience
It does not create trillion-dollar monopolies.
That is why it is not favored.
Conclusion: Shorter Chains, Not Smarter Chains
We do not need:
- More mega-warehouses
- More coast-to-coast distribution
- More layers
We need:
- Shorter distances
- More producers
- More regional autonomy
- More local competition
Until supply chains are redesigned around proximity instead of dominance, inflation will remain embedded in the system.
Not because products are scarce.
But because we built an economy that profits from making them expensive.