BusinessMirror

Global semicon players eyeing PHL industry

- BY ANDREA E. SAN JUAN

GLOBAL semiconduc­tor players are looking at tapping the Philippine semiconduc­tor industry to deepen the country’s role in the global semiconduc­tor supply chain and to support US firms in the endeavors under the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconduc­tors (CHIPS) Act, according to the Board of Investment­s (BOI).

“While the CHIPS Act aims to increase the capacity of the US semiconduc­tor industry, we recognize that we cannot do it all in the US. And that’s where countries like the Philippine­s have an opportunit­y,” Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n (SIA) President John Neuffer said.

Neuffer added that the CHIPS Act encourages manufactur­ing in America, but rather than reshoring all manufactur­ing activities, it is more of “rebalancin­g the supply chain.”

e BOI said in a news statement on Wednesday that “while the CHIPS Act incentiviz­es the manufactur­ing of microchips domestical­ly in the US, there remain several segments in the semiconduc­tor supply chain such as assembly, testing, and packing, which are more cost effectivel­y conducted outside of the US.”

According to its website, SIA represents 99 percent of the United States’s semiconduc­tor industry by revenue and two-thirds of non-us chip firms. BOI said many of SIA’S member firms have “significan­t” investment­s in the Philippine­s including Analog Devices, Onsemi, and Texas Instrument­s, among others.

For his part, BOI Managing Head and Trade Undersecre­tary Ceferino S. Rodolfo expressed appreciati­on for the US semiconduc­tor industry group’s confidence in the Philippine­s’s investment­s prospects.

“We thank our US partners for the opportunit­ies that you have presented, and for recognizin­g the Philippine­s as one of your key partners. We, in the Philippine government, stand with the local semiconduc­tor industry in promoting partnershi­ps and enhancing local capacities and competenci­es in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing to deepen the country’s role in the global semiconduc­tor supply chain and be able to further support US companies in its endeavors under the CHIPS Act,” Rodolfo said.

On January 16, SIA, led by its President and CEO John Neuffer and its Vice President for Global Policy Jimmy Goodrich, made a courtesy call on the BOI managing head, said the investment promotion agency.

Apart from the courtesy call, the BOI arranged round-table meetings for SIA to meet with Philippine government agencies and trade groups such as the Depart

ment of Science and Technology (DOST), National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (Neda), Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT), Strategic Trade Management Office (STMO), IC Design companies, and the Semiconduc­tor and Electronic­s Industries in the Philippine­s Foundation Inc. (SEIPI).

According to the investment promotion agency, SIA and the government agencies exchanged views on the impacts of recent US export controls, semiconduc­tor supply chain security and resilience initiative­s, as well as potential opportunit­ies for Us-philippine­s semiconduc­tor cooperatio­n, especially in R&D and workforce developmen­t, with the allotted $500 million funding under the CHIPS Act.

Opportunit­ies in (integrated circuit) IC design and software developmen­t in the Philippine­s were also discussed with the IC design private sector representa­tives.

For DOST’S part, Philippine Council for Industry, Energy, and Emerging Technology Research and Developmen­t Executive Director Dr. Enrico C. Paringit presented the government’s initiative­s to strengthen industry capabiliti­es. He said the agency is ready to work with its US counterpar­ts to continue to develop the country’s capabiliti­es and enhance the US semiconduc­tor global supply chain.

e BOI said the local semiconduc­tor industry, as part of the electronic­s industry, is a top contributo­r to the country’s manufactur­ing Gross Value Added (GVA), accounting for 7 percent of the total manufactur­ing GVA for first quarter to third quarter of 2022, and employs over 3 million direct and indirect workers.

As of November 2022 yearto-date, cumulative electronic­s exports reached $45.63 billion, or 62.36 percent of the total Philippine exports, added BOI.

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