Houston Chronicle

Raimondo rallies U.S. in $52B chip program

Biden prepares to accept requests for microchip funding

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON — Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo on Thursday called on the country to unite around a $52 billion effort to restore the U.S. 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 U.S. 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 U.S. — 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. That has Raimondo saying that colleges and universiti­es must triple the number of graduates in semiconduc­tor-related fields, otherwise there will be a shortage of workers.

“This is math, people, this isn't a political agenda,” Raimondo said in her speech.

The new law also contains $11 billion to fund a research partnershi­p between universiti­es, companies and national laboratori­es — all with the mission of increasing a chip’s processing power and lowering the cost of semiconduc­tors so that there are buyers in a global market.

“We have to bring down the cost — big time — which means innovation, innovation, innovation,” Raimondo told the Associated Press in an interview.

To succeed, she said, the U.S. needs a whole-of-society effort. It’s the kind of mobilizati­on akin to World War II or the space race that grandparen­ts talk about to younger generation­s, a make-orbreak moment for the nation with the world’s largest economy and military.

“There have been times in history,” Raimondo said in the interview, “where a president used the pursuit of a goal, a technologi­cal goal, like putting a man on the moon, like leading the world in nuclear technology, to catalyze the whole country to do their part in achieving that goal.”

Critics note that the real work is with administer­ing the law and monitoring how the funds are used, warning that simply spending money does not guarantee the desired results and could create economic distortion­s.

“The CHIPS Act is a work in progress to say the least,” said Anthony Kim, a research fellow at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation. “Spending more is not and cannot be a solution, particular­ly in the current economy environmen­t where inflationa­ry pressures are still abundant.”

The promise of government support is spurring constructi­on plans, though it’s still early in a process that will take years. Major chip companies such as TSMC, Intel, Micron, IBM and others have so far committed to roughly $200 billion for investment­s in new plants, according to the White House. Last week, Texas Instrument­s announced an $11 billion investment to expand its semiconduc­tor production in Utah.

The moves are long-term in nature. There is a relative glut of chips available right now, after a shortage as the world economy began to emerge from the coronaviru­s pandemic in 2021.

 ?? Al Drago/Bloomberg ?? Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo speaks at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Raimondo emphasized the need to restore the U.S. as the world leader in advanced computer chips.
Al Drago/Bloomberg Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo speaks at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Raimondo emphasized the need to restore the U.S. as the world leader in advanced computer chips.

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