Oman Daily Observer

FAT SALARIES, PERKS

China lures chip talent from Taiwan with

- YIMOU LEE

Ahuge pay rise, eight free trips home a year and a heavily subsidised apartment. It was a dream job offer that a Taiwanese engineer simply could not refuse.

A veteran of Taiwan’s top-tier chipmakers, including United Microelect­ronics Corp (UMC), the engineer took up the offer from a Chinese state-backed chipmaker last year and now oversees a small team at a wafer foundry in eastern China.

The engineer joined a growing band of senior Taiwan profession­als working in China’s booming and fastdevelo­ping semiconduc­tor industry.

Attracting such talent from Taiwan has become a key part of an effort by China to put the industry into overdrive and reduce the country’s dependence on overseas firms for the prized chips that power everything from smartphone­s to military satellites.

That drive, which started in 2014, intensifie­d this year as Us-china trade tensions escalated, according to recruiters and industry insiders, exposing what China feels is an overrelian­ce on foreign-made chips.

China imported $260 billion worth of semiconduc­tors in 2017, more than its imports of crude oil. Home-made chips made up less than 20 per cent of domestic demand in the same year, according to China Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n.

More than 300 senior engineers from Taiwan have moved to Chinese chipmakers so far this year, joining nearly 1,000 others who have relocated since Beijing set up a $22 billion fund to develop the chip industry in 2014, according to estimates from H&L Management Consultant­s, a Taipeibase­d recruitmen­t firm.

The battle for skilled engineers has raised concerns in Taiwan that the island could lose a key economic engine to its political foe, China. Analysts say China is still years behind Taiwan in terms of chip design and manufactur­ing, however, even as it moves ahead in terms of the production of lower-end chips.

China’s semiconduc­tor plans accelerate­d this year after the United States banned sales of chips to the Chinese phone vendor ZTE (0763. HK), senior Chinese officials familiar with the matter told Reuters in April.

Tariffs imposed by Washington on $16 billion worth of China’s imports have hit Chinese semiconduc­tors, which are now subject to tariff rates of 25 per cent.

That will make Chinese chips less competitiv­e compared to those from Taiwan and South Korea, and could disrupt China’s semiconduc­tor ambitions. Beijing’s aim is to have local chips comprise at least 40 per cent of China’s semiconduc­tor needs by 2025.

Underscori­ng the talent crunch, two state-run institutio­ns said in August that about 400,000 profession­als were working in China’s integrated circuit sector at the end of 2017, far short of the estimated 720,000 workers needed by 2020.

While China has also targeted engineers from South Korea and Japan to address that shortage, it has had the most success in Taiwan thanks to a common language and culture, recruiters say.

Lin Yu-hsuan, a manager at the recruitmen­t firm H&L, said engineers from Taiwan were lured by high pay, perks and more senior positions at Chinese chipmakers like Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp (SMIC) that are flush with cash from China’s multibilli­on chip fund.

“Many of them said: ‘the money I will earn in China in three years is equivalent to what I could get in Taiwan in 10 years. I could retire earlier’,” Lin said.

Steve Wang, the vice chairman and president of Novatek Microelect­ronics, a Taiwanese integrated chip designer, said a small percentage of its employees had left for China over the past two years, and acknowledg­ed that it would be difficult to match offers from Chinese rivals.

The engineer at the wafer foundry, who declined to be named as the details of his contract were not public, said his Chinese employer offered him a new three-bedroom apartment with a 40 per cent discount on the condition that he worked for the company for more than five years, in addition to a 50 per cent pay rise. He declined to give the exact figure.

“China dares to burn money, whereas Taiwan companies have limited resources,” he said. COUNTER-OFFER

A senior executive at a newlyestab­lished chipmaker in northeaste­rn China, Sien (Qingdao) Integrated Circuits Company Ltd, said about one-third of its recently recruited 120 engineers were from Taiwan.

“There is not a lack of money. What we need is talent,” said the person, who declined to be named as he was not authorized to speak to the media.

He said the company, led by Richard Chang, the founder of SMIC, China’s leading chipmaker, offers new hires discounted property and attractive subsidies for bilingual schools in the port city of Qingdao.

“Taiwanese engineers are most experience­d and could help us cultivate local talents,” the executive said. “The movement will continue to escalate.”

Industry watchers said Taiwan’s widely respected chip design houses and foundries have been among the hardest hit by the outflow of engineers, and have been forced to ramp up spending to lure workers.

The island’s leading integrated circuit designers and chipmakers have seen a 35 per cent jump in labour costs, including salary and benefits from two years ago, compared with a 21 per cent hike in revenue, according to Reuters calculatio­ns based on corporate filings from Taiwan’s 10 largest listed companies by market value. TRADE SECRET

Taiwan has been watching the Chinese recruitmen­t efforts with growing anxiety.

It has long barred chipmakers like Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co Ltd, a key supplier to Apple Inc, from moving their most advanced technology to manufactur­ing operations in China to keep it from falling into the hands of Chinese rivals.

Many in Taiwan are also concerned that the rapid developmen­t of China’s chip industry could lead to the sort of oversupply and plunging prices that came with Chinese efforts to develop other key industries like solar panels and liquid crystal displays.

China’s integrated circuit design firms have already surpassed their Taiwan rivals in terms of revenue, with $31 billion in 2017, compared with Taiwan’s $22 billion, according to Mark Li, an analyst at Bernstein.

The fears are that the battle for talent will widen that gap further.

In a move to retain top talent, Taiwan’s cabinet in July pledged to relax tax regulation­s on employee stock ownership.

“The Chinese Communist Party has been poaching our talent,” said Chen Mei-ling, minister of Taiwan’s policy-planning National Developmen­t Council. “The government has amended regulation­s to help companies keep talent.”

Ho Chan-cheng, legal affairs director at Taiwan’s Intellectu­al Property Office, said “inappropri­ate poaching” could lead to the leaking of trade secrets and that the government was working to protect the island’s core technology — namely the capacity to increase chip yield per wafer.

Taiwan companies are also trying to offer their own incentives.

Antonio Yu, spokesman for the Taiwan-based chip design house Phison Electronic­s Corp, said that while the company “does not have the capital to play such a money game,” it has tried to create a “reassuring environmen­t” for its employees.

He cited long-standing cash bonuses and programs such as free legal counsellin­g, as well as a monthly town hall meeting with Phison’s chairman, Khein-seng Pua.

“We treat our employees like family,” he said.

Despite such efforts, Taiwanese engineers are finding incentives from China hard to resist.

Tommy Huang, a 37-year-old Taiwanese chip engineer who in 2016 joined United Semiconduc­tor in southern China — a joint venture between Taiwan’s UMC and Chinese state-backed partners — said Taiwanese efforts to retain talent did not work for him.

“You don’t have any chance if you stay in Taiwan,” said Huang, whose Chinese employer offered him an annual school subsidy of up to 60,000 yuan ($8,689) for his five-year-old child and a salary more than double what he earned in Taiwan.

“We are buying hope by coming to China.”

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