Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Watch which way chips fall

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CHIPS ARE NOW A STRATEGIC RESOURCE THAT ARE NEEDED EVERYWHERE

rap your head around this,” says Pankaj Jain over the phone, “over 80% of chips designers are Indian.” While this good news comes over an informal conversati­on with the New York-based founder and managing partner of Saka Ventures, it throws up some questions as well. Why doesn’t then, for instance, India manufactur­e semiconduc­tors or chips, as they are loosely called?

Why this question matters is because as things are, we are in the midst of one of the fiercest battles since World War II. Unlike convention­al wars that most of us are acquainted with, the ongoing Us-china standoff over control of the semi-conductor ecosystem is different. Semi-conductors are now a strategic resource that are needed everywhere -- from the ubiquitous smartphone­s, to TVS, to the automobile­s we drive, to navigating traffic, and also for the microwaves and the washing machines at our homes, and for the clusters of super computers that are used for drug discovery. It’s thanks to these chips and how they are used that the Covid-19 virus could be mapped as quickly as it was, and a vaccine was created in record time.

What makes this battle for semi-conductors more compelling still is that the world’s semi-conductor headquarte­r is in Taiwan, and leading the pack is the Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company (TSMC). But what puts Taiwan and TSMC in a piquant spot is that while Taiwan is physically close to China, Morris Chang, the founder of TSMC, spent a large part of his life studying and working in the US. Chang set up TSMC in 1997 with covert assistance from the American establishm­ent. The Americans had started investing in research capabiliti­es to build chips some decades ago and had co-opted private participat­ion. Chang was one among them.

The Chinese, with their ambition of world domination, had read the writing on the wall a while ago and committed almost a trillion dollars over the next two decades to build an ecosystem to rival what the Americans have. While it is one thing to ‘design’ semi-conductors, it is another thing altogether to create the ‘foundries’ such as TSMC’S that can manufactur­e it. India hasn’t yet invested in the intricate capabiliti­es to manufactur­e semi-conductors.

Another narrative that doesn’t get spoken about much in the mainstream is that one of the reasons why China has its eyes on mainland Taiwan is that it wants control of TSMC. This keeps the foreign policy establishm­ent in New Delhi and other world capitals awake at nights. Their worry is that if China gains control of Taiwan and TSMC, their policies will have to be tweaked to suit Beijing. Everyone is used to dealing with the US. Going forward though, as the battle for control of semi-conductors get fiercer, the US may not stay benign and want its pound of flesh. This could include insisting countries stay on its side if they want access to semiconduc­tors.

It is one thing to fight on the borders, it is another thing to fight a battle over technology where the value lies in intellectu­al property that has been built over decades. When asked on what the likely outcomes of this battle is likely to be, G Venkat Raman, professor of humanities and social sciences at IIM Indore and a sinologist has some pointers to offer.

Even as the Americans try to choke China as they try to shift TSMC out of Taiwan to the US, and look to increase co-operation with friendlier countries such as Japan and woo India, it is unlikely that China can be stopped in the longer run.

So, Venkat Raman makes the case that India should start work on semi-conductors like the Chinese did. Anyway, as Pankaj Jain pointed out, the most numbers of chip designers are of Indian origin. To that extent, the expertise exists. What these designers needs now is the backing to build ‘foundries’ they can work out of. When that happens, it is inevitable that political sanctions and other such threats will follow. But that is part of the geopolitic­al game. Once upon a time, after Pokhran II, India was treated as a nuclear pariah by the Western world but that is now history.

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