Lodi News-Sentinel

Chip shortage idling U.S. auto factories

- Laura Davison and Jennifer Jacobs

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said he is asking the chamber's top Republican­s and Democrats to draw up legislatio­n aimed at improving U.S. competitiv­eness with China in manufactur­ing and technology, including bolstering the supply of American-made semiconduc­tors.

The outline Schumer set down Tuesday calls for emergency funding for programs included in a recent defense-policy bill that authorized federal incentives to promote semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and research in the U.S., but provided no money for the grants and tax credits lawmakers say is necessary to attract investment. The issue has taken on new urgency with a global chip shortage that's forced some U.S. carmakers to idle plants and that threatens to spread to the electronic­s industry.

“Right now semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing is a dangerous weak spot in our economy and in our national security,” Schumer said at a news conference at the Capitol. “That has to change. We cannot rely on foreign processors.”

The announceme­nt comes a day before President Joe Biden is scheduled to meet with a group of lawmakers from both parties at the White House to discuss the semiconduc­tor shortage, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The meeting is expected to accompany Biden's signing of an executive order aimed at strengthen­ing supply chains for microchips and other vital products, one of the people said. The review is expected to take several months, before recommenda­tions are issued. The U.S. still leads the world in chip design, but manufactur­ing has largely been ceded to foreign firms. The supplychai­n executive order and any funding Congress approves for semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing won't have much effect on the immediate shortage. That will require leaning on producers in Taiwan and elsewhere overseas to allocate supply to U.S. electronic­s makers.

Schumer's plan also listed possible sanctions or other steps directed at trade with China and concerns about intellectu­alproperty theft. It would aim to encourage allied approached towards China, as seen in recent years with U.S. and U.K. efforts to redline China's telecoms giant Huawei Technologi­es Co.

“All of these have bipartisan support,” Schumer said. “I want this bill to address American's shortterm and long-term plan to protect the semiconduc­tor supply chain and keep us No. 1 in things like AI, 5G.”

Schumer said he hopes to have the legislatio­n on the Senate floor for a vote this spring.

The tough-on-China approach to boosting U.S. supply chains and manufactur­ing is also one way that senators could open the door to bipartisan talks on a robust infrastruc­ture bill that Biden says will be his priority once the $1.9 trillion pandemic-relief package clears Congress.

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