Antelope Valley Press

Raimondo wants US to unite over chip program

- By JOSH BOAK Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo on Thursday called on the country to unite around a $52 billion effort to restore the US as the world leader in advanced computer chips, saying it will require training of tens of thousands of workers.

“The research, innovation and manufactur­ing sparked by this law will enable us to be the technologi­cal superpower, securing our economic and national security future for the next generation,” Raimondo said in a speech at Georgetown University.

The government sees the funding as a launching pad to create two major semiconduc­tor clusters inside the US featuring a network of factories, research laboratori­es and other infrastruc­ture.

But fulfilling that vision will be a multi-year challenge that requires job training and figuring out scientific breakthrou­ghs to lower the cost of producing advanced chips.

There is a level of cooperatio­n that is needed among the federal government, state government­s, local officials, CEOs, universiti­es and school districts — the kind of joint effort that could be challengin­g in an era of divided politics.

The Biden administra­tion is hopeful it can surmount political hurdles as Democrats and Republican­s alike back the initiative.

President Joe Biden signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law last August on the promise that it would spur factory groundbrea­kings. It is also designed to ensure a steady supply of the chips needed for autos, appliances, electronic­s, toys, toothbrush­es and weapons systems.

The US — despite being the birthplace of chips — has ceded ground to producers in South Korea and Taiwan, creating an economic and national security challenge if shipping lanes are blocked.

Chips are integrated circuits that are embedded in a semiconduc­tor, a material — notably silicon — that can manage the flow of electric current. The terms “chip” and “semiconduc­tor” are often used interchang­eably.

Starting next week, the applicatio­n process will begin for semiconduc­tor firms seeking to qualify for $39 billion in government backing to help fund their expansion. The

administra­tion expects the $39 billion for factories will generate 10 times that, at a minimum, in private-sector investment.

The potential benefits come from the spillover effects of computer chip production jobs that typically pay over $100,000, leading to additional economic activity and business formation.

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