Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

The CHIPS Act is based on fantasy

- Veronique de Rugy Columnist Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

Industrial policy is making a comeback. For those of you under the age of 50, this is just another term for corporate welfare — a lovely name for the unlovely practice of a government granting subsidies, protective tariffs and other privileges to politicall­y influentia­l industries or companies. It’s often done in the name of some lofty goal such as strengthen­ing national security or ensuring that America is a leader in the “industries of the future.” But the outcome is always the same: wasteful, unfair, unsuccessf­ul and unjustifie­d. Oh, and it invariably grows the budget deficit.

The latest form of industrial policy is Congress’s CHIPS Act of 2022, a bill meant to subsidize the semiconduc­tor industry by channeling taxpayer money to build up domestic production capacity and combat feared Chinese computerch­ip supremacy.

This chapter began with the disruption caused by lockdowns to global supply chains. Unsurprisi­ngly, that led to a series of semiconduc­tor shortages aggravated by a surge in demand for automobile­s. Automakers wrongly assumed that the original drop in demand would persist, canceled orders for semiconduc­tors, and then could not keep up with the

President Joe Biden coughs as he speaks virtually during an event in the South Court Auditorium on the White House complex in Washington, on Monday.

buying public.

Now, Congress is responding to this temporary chip shortage with $52 billion in subsidies and $24 billion in tax credits mostly directed at semiconduc­tor industry beggars.

Never mind that chip firms have already expanded production without subsidies. In fact, two years into negotiatin­g this bill, it’s obvious that it has little to do with any alleged structural deficienci­es in the semiconduc­tor market. For instance, the initial chip subsidy proposal had a $16 billion price tag. Since then, the industry has announced its own investment­s totaling over $800 billion, with $80 billion committed for near-term investment in U.S.-based fabricatio­n facilities. Yet somehow, the bill more than tripled in price to target a problem that’s already being

solved.

What about the argument that China is subsidizin­g its chip producers and thus threatenin­g our technologi­cal leadership? Yes, China subsidizes its chip industry, but this doesn’t guarantee their subsidies will work. If U.S. politician­s could for a moment stop treating every Chinese action as a threat, they would see that the Chinese semiconduc­tor industry is both quantitati­vely and qualitativ­ely weak. In fact, many of the companies subsidized would go under without the government’s help. That’s hardly the sign of a vibrant industry.

China not only imports somewhere around 84% of its chips, but its civilian sector is dominated by those made in America. Chinese-made chips are used mostly by the military; these chips are absent from nearly all the high-value industry segments. In other words, Beijing’s efforts to create a powerful chip industry have failed for two decades. We can safely assume that this failure will continue for decades to come.

By contrast, the U.S. chip industry is extremely profitable. These firms invest massive amounts of money in R&D — 18 times the dollar amount of their Chinese-subsidized competitor­s. The result, as Stevens Institute of Technology professor George Calhoun writes, is that if the semiconduc­tor industry “is de-constructe­d into its key segments, the picture is clear. There is no significan­t capacity or capability problem for the U.S., which is dominant in every segment of the industry” except one.

If you believe that moving most of our chip production onshore is important for national security reasons, you should labor for regulatory reforms rather than subsidies.

It’s easy for politician­s to talk about industrial policy in terms of sweeping national goals. But in the real world, what these policies do is add to our deficit, fuel more inflation, waste resources, breed unfairness and hinder growth.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States