China Daily

Homeshore chips plan fries in its own grease

- — ZHANG ZHOUXIANG, CHINA DAILY

US President Joe Biden’s muchfeted $52.7 billion initiative to homeshore semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing is not going according to plan. On Thursday, 13 months after holding a “tool-in” ceremony at its new manufactur­ing plant in Phoenix, Arizona, at which it announced a second factory at the site, Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company said the start of the second factory’s operations would be delayed from 2026 to 2027 or 2028.

This admission came five months after it postponed plans to start manufactur­ing at the first plant from 2024 to 2025 due to “a lack of skilled labor”. It is reportedly trying to fast-track visas for 500 workers from Taiwan. Unions in the US have claimed that TSMC has fabricated the skills shortage as an excuse to hire cheaper, foreign labor. There have also been reports that the delays are because of safety issues at the plants.

But on Thursday, TSMC Chairman Mark Liu suggested that plans for its second plant were in flux, saying the size of government incentives would determine the kind of technology deployed.

Detailed guidelines on applying for subsidies were announced in March 2023. Since the subsidies come with harsh conditions, the number of applicants was only about 170 compared to the 500 companies that indicated their interest in applying prior to the release of the guidelines.

TSMC is still struggling to get a share of the promised pie.

It seems that the only outcome of the Biden administra­tion pressuring TSMC to set up workshops in Arizona is that Biden has been able to tell voters at home that “American manufactur­ing is back, folks”, something he proudly proclaimed when he visited the site in Dec 2022.

The two-year delay is long enough for the semiconduc­tor technology to upgrade to the next generation. In an age of fast technologi­cal progress, the decision to move to the US based on political rather than commercial considerat­ions might prove to be a bad one for TSMC.

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