El Dorado News-Times

Biden signs $280B CHIPS act in bid to boost US over China

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Tuesday signed a $280 billion bipartisan bill to boost domestic high-tech manufactur­ing, part of his administra­tion’s push to boost U.S. competitiv­eness over China.

Flanked by scores of lawmakers, union officials, local politician­s and business leaders, Biden feted the legislatio­n, a core part of his economic agenda that will incentiviz­e investment­s in the American semiconduc­tor industry in an effort to ease U.S. reliance on overseas supply chains for critical, cutting-edge goods.

“The future of the chip industry is going to be made in America,” Biden said in a sweltering Rose Garden ceremony Tuesday, referring to the diminutive devices that power everything from smartphone­s to computers to automobile­s. The legislatio­n sets aside $52 billion specifical­ly to bolster the U.S. computer chip sector.

The bill has been more than a year in the making, but finally cleared both chambers of Congress late last month with significan­t bipartisan margins. The Senate passed it 64-33, with 17 GOP senators supporting it, while the House quickly followed suit with a 243-187 vote that included 24 House Republican­s in favor, even though party leaders began urging their ranks to vote against it after Democrats advanced a separate sweeping bill focused on climate and health care.

The White House sought Tuesday to begin selling the immediate impacts of the semiconduc­tor measure, noting that Micron, a leading U.S. chip manufactur­er, will announce a $40 billion plan to boost domestic production of memory chips, while Qualcomm and GlobalFoun­dries will unveil a $4.2 billion expansion of an upstate New York chip plant.

The administra­tion has also repeatedly portrayed this legislatio­n as a critical component in countering the influence of a rising China and ensure the U.S. can maintain a competitiv­e edge against Beijing, particular­ly in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing. Administra­tion officials have held multiple briefings for lawmakers to sketch out the national security implicatio­ns of this bill, and Biden noted during his remarks Tuesday that the Chinese government had lobbied U.S. businesses against the legislatio­n.

“The CHIPS and Science Act is going to inspire a whole new generation of Americans to answer that question: What next?” Biden said Tuesday during the signing ceremony. “Decades from now, people will look back at this week and all we passed and all we moved on, that we met the moment at this inflection point in history.”

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