National Post (National Edition)

No easy fix for semiconduc­tor crunch hitting vehicle markers

- AIME WILLIAMS AND CLAIRE BUSHEY

What started out as “temporary” layoffs earlier this month at General Motors Co.'s plant in Kansas City soon became “indefinite”. Across town, Ford Motor Co.'s slowed down production of its F-150 pickup truck, the company's cash cow, and did the same at another facility in Michigan.

The carmakers were responding to a crippling shortage of the indispensa­ble chips that are used to build modern vehicles, for everything from automatic braking systems to airbags and electronic­ally adjusted seats.

The shortages have shone a light on a cyclical corner of the electronic­s industry where there is often too much or too little supply, a problem that has been exacerbate­d by unpredicta­ble demand for semiconduc­tors during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In Washington, the crunch has led to heightened scrutiny of global semiconduc­tor supply chains, and illustrate­d the extent to which parts of the U.S. manufactur­ing base are reliant on Taiwan's Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co., the world's largest chip foundry and a supplier to companies ranging from Apple Inc. to Volkswagen Group.

“It's events like this that expose the shared risk that companies have,” said Kristin Dziczek, vice-president at the Center for Automotive Research. “It's when we have a big disruption and then we find out like, `Holy cow we've got all these eggs in this basket.' ”

The problem has quickly become a domestic political crisis, leaving the White House scrambling to find a fix to lessen the impact on the blue-collar workers that President Joe Biden courted during last year's election campaign.

On Wednesday, Biden ordered a government review of U.S. supply chains, seeking to end the country's reliance on China and other adversarie­s for crucial goods. But the process will take months, offering no immediate solution for a shortfall of semiconduc­tors that's idled auto production at several factories, Bloomberg reported. The administra­tion's 100-day review will cover chips but also include large-capacity batteries, pharmaceut­icals and critical minerals and strategic materials like rare earths, according to the White House.

Clarence Brown, president of a local chapter of the United Auto Workers union, said the financial blow to the more than 1,500 workers sent home from the Kansas City GM plant would be bad at the best of times, but that during a pandemic “it's fairly devastatin­g.”

Brian Deese, Biden's top economic adviser, has written to the Taiwanese government to ask for their help — but it remains unclear whether high-level diplomacy can exhort private companies to divert more of their products to U.S. buyers.

The carmakers have been partly hit by a boom in demand for chips from consumer electronic companies, which started building up their inventorie­s at the exact moment the carmakers were cutting orders to prepare for a pandemic sales dip that did not materializ­e.

U.S. trade policies may also play a part. Export controls on Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp., China's largest chipmaker, have further constraine­d supply by forcing many customers to look elsewhere for their chips.

The threat of more trade controls as the U.S. tries to limit China's access to critical technology have caused further anxiety, with many companies hoarding chips to prepare for a future supply crunch.

The U.S. semiconduc­tor industry has seized on the crisis to bolster its long-running campaign to secure more taxpayer dollars, which it says it needs to stay innovative and competitiv­e against heavily subsidized rivals overseas, including in China.

It also argues it needs state support to boost domestic manufactur­ing of chips, which has fallen behind Asia.

Last week, a broad range of industry groups renewed lobbying efforts aimed at the Biden administra­tion to appropriat­e money authorized by Congress in the Chips Act, passed as part of last year's defence spending bill.

The bill provides US$10-billion for new chip manufactur­ing plants in the U.S., as well as funding research at the Department of Energy and National Science Foundation.

In a letter to Biden, the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n, along with other trade groups, argued that chips fuelled the economy. It said manufactur­ing more domestical­ly would enhance national security by making sure the U.S. was not cut off from the supply of chips critical to several sectors, including the military.

“The absence of U.S. incentives has made our country uncompetit­ive and America's share of global semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing has steadily declined as a result,” the groups wrote.

While there has always been some support for boosting funding to chip companies in U.S. Congress, the car plant layoffs have grabbed the attention of a wider range of lawmakers.

Earlier this month, about 15 senators representi­ng car manufactur­ing states such as Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee and Illinois, began agitating for billions of dollars of extra cash for domestic chip manufactur­ing.

But most analysts say two separate issues are being conflated. Protecting national security normally refers to making more of the chips needed for high-end computing and most likely to be used for military purposes; it would not solve the shortage of the less advanced chips that carmakers need.

Boosting U.S. manufactur­ing to secure the supply of chips for national security purposes including for the military would require investing in “the bleeding edge” of technology, said Peter Hanbury, a partner at Bain, whereas cars use older technology and different sized chips.

“Everyone is saying the same things, `We want semiconduc­tors', but I think they actually have very different goals,” added Hanbury.

The supply and demand factors that resulted in the current crunch for carmakers were unrelated to where the chips were made, said Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute.

“Even if we had more global manufactur­ing in the United States, I don't think the problem would necessaril­y be any different.”

And it is not just U.S. carmakers who have struggled to cope with the shortage, with many European rivals experienci­ng similar problems.

Others make the distinctio­n between the U.S. having the most sophistica­ted technology and intellectu­al property versus manufactur­ing, arguing semiconduc­tors do not necessaril­y have to be made on U.S. soil to secure supplies.

Clete Willems, a former Trump trade official, said that federal funding could be directed toward research and developmen­t to maintain the US. chip industry's technologi­cal edge without the U.S. having to build domestic fabricatio­n plants.

“It's not as much of a question of reliance as it is a question of maintainin­g an innovation edge over time,” said Willems, referring to U.S. competitio­n with China.

He argued that building strong relationsh­ips with allies like Taiwan, South Korea and Japan, where many chips are manufactur­ed, would be more effective than the US “trying to do everything”.

 ?? REBECCA COOK / REUTERS FILES ?? Ford has slowed down production of its bread-and-butter F-150 in both Kansas City, Mo., and Dearborn, Mich., above, due to a tight supply of chips for vehicle systems.
REBECCA COOK / REUTERS FILES Ford has slowed down production of its bread-and-butter F-150 in both Kansas City, Mo., and Dearborn, Mich., above, due to a tight supply of chips for vehicle systems.
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