The Pak Banker

How idled car factories supercharg­ed a push for US chip subsidies

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When President Joe Biden on Wednesday stood at a lectern holding a microchip and pledged to support $37 billion in federal subsidies for American semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing, it marked a political breakthrou­gh that happened much more quickly than industry insiders had expected.

For years, chip industry executives and U.S. government officials have been concerned about the slow drift of costly chip factories to Taiwan and Korea. While major American companies such as Qualcomm Inc and Nvidia Corp dominate their fields, they depend on factories abroad to build the chips they design.

As tensions with China heated up last year, U.S. lawmakers authorized manufactur­ing subsidies as part of an annual military spending bill due to concerns that depending on foreign factories for advanced chips posed national security risks. Yet funding for the subsidies was not guaranteed.

Then came the autochip crunch. Ford Motor Co said a lack of chips could slash a fifth of its first-quarter production and General Motors Co cut output across North America.

"It brings home very clearly the message that the semiconduc­tor is really a critical component in a lot of the end products we take for granted," said Mike Rosa, head of strategic and technical marketing for a group within semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing toolmaker Applied Materials Inc that sells tools to automotive chip factories. Within weeks, automakers joined chip companies calling for chip factory subsidies, and U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and President Biden both pledged to fight for funding.

Industry backers now aim to be part of a package of legislatio­n to counter China that Schumer hopes to bring to the Senate floor this spring. Still, all agree it will do little to solve the immediate auto-chip problem.

Headlines about idled car plants resonated with the public that had shrugged off abstract warnings in the past, said Jim

Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. Lawmakers, already worried that a promised infrastruc­ture bill will not materializ­e this year, decided to push for quick solution.

"Nobody wants to be seen as soft on China. No one wants to tell the Ford workers in their district, 'Sorry, can't help,'" Lewis said. "It was one of those moments where everything aligned."

The package includes matching funds for state and local chip-plant subsidies, a provision likely to heat up competitio­n among states including Texas and Arizona to host big new chip plants that can cost as much as $20 billion.

The subsidies could benefit a factory in Arizona proposed by Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co and one in Texas eyed by Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd, even though those factories would be geared toward high-end chips for smartphone­s and laptops, rather than simpler auto chips. And those factories would not come on line until 2023 or 2024, according to plans disclosed by the companies, the world's two largest chip manufactur­ers.

In the longer term, a raft of U.S. companies are also poised to benefit. Any chipmakers that build factories will source many tools from American companies such as Applied, Lam Research Corp and KLA Corp. Intel Corp, Micron Technology Inc and GlobalFoun­dries which already have U.S. factory networks - will also likely benefit.

Smaller, specialty chip factories also could benefit. "The recent chip shortage in the automotive industry has highlighte­d the need to strengthen the microelect­ronics supply chain in the U.S.," said Thomas Sonderman, chief executive of SkyWater Technology, a Minnesotab­ased chipmaker that makes automotive and defense chips. "We believe that SkyWater is uniquely positioned due to our differenti­ated business model and status as a U.S.- owned and US operated pure play semiconduc­tor contract manufactur­er."

Even with subsidies, the U.S. companies still must compete with low

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