China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Experts see challenges for bill to boost chips

US Senate passes bill to provide $52b for semiconduc­tor makers

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

The US Senate passed a bill Wednesday that would provide $52 billion in subsidies to domestic semiconduc­tor manufactur­ers to boost competitio­n with China, but experts see some challenges in achieving that goal.

By a 64-33 vote, the Senate passed the $280 billion “CHIPS and Science Act”, formerly known as the CHIPS Act. About $52 billion would go to chip companies to provide financial incentives for domestic semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing.

The bill will head to the House, where it is likely to pass this week, and then move to President Joe Biden for his signature before it becomes law.

Biden has said the legislatio­n is one of his agenda’s top priorities and urged the House to pass it as soon as possible. The bill “will accelerate semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing in the US, lower prices, create jobs, and — critically — decrease our reliance on imported chips”, he said in a statement Wednesday.

“I see two challenges. Fifty-two billion dollars for semiconduc­tor investment­s will move the needle but barely,” George Koo, a retired internatio­nal business adviser in Silicon Valley, told China Daily, in response to the passage of the bill.

Industry experts have said that the funding is far from enough to bring back chip manufactur­ing to the US, because it’s extremely expensive and complicate­d to build a new foundry, which costs close to $20 billion today.

“And the added question is whether the United States still has the required skills after being dependent on offshore manufactur­ers for decades,” said Koo. “Lack of the necessary technical skills can’t be fixed in an instant. This country needs another ‘Sputnik moment.’”

Advocates of the bill have been promoting it as a solution for the global chip shortage, which has caused price hikes and supply chain disruption­s in several industries. But critics said it won’t solve the problem because the chip factories won’t be complete for years, and the demand for chips has already slowed.

The US share of global semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing capacity has been declining in recent decades — from 37 percent in 1990 to 12 percent today.

Manufactur­ing moved out of the US because of lower costs in Asia. The costs of owning a new chip factory in the US are roughly 30 percent to 50 percent higher than in Asia, according to the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n.

The decline in domestic chip manufactur­ing has spurred calls for legislatio­n to bring chip production back to the US and bolster the competitiv­eness of the US semiconduc­tor industry. But critics believe it isn’t worthwhile to reverse this trend.

Senator Bernie Sanders has called the legislatio­n a “bribe” and has argued that chip companies are, in effect, extorting American taxpayers.

Senator Ron Johnson, who voted against the bill, called the package “more corporate welfare”.

Included in the CHIPS and Science Act are provisions that would prohibit companies from building most types of new semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing facilities in China “or any other foreign country of concern” for a decade after receiving federal funding.

The administra­tion of former president Donald Trump started export controls on chips and chipmaking equipment three years ago to try to contain China’s developmen­t. The Biden administra­tion is considerin­g new measures to prevent China from buying chipmaking equipment.

“The Biden administra­tion’s belated attempt to suppress China’s semiconduc­tor industry appears to have backfired. China has found workaround technologi­es that bypass the aging American IP that Washington has embargoed,” wrote David Goldman, a columnist for Asia Times, in a recent article.

“American pressure has prompted China to push for selfsuffic­iency, raising the possibilit­y that China’s chip industry may become the world’s dominant producer by the end of the decade,” he said.

Koo echoed his comments. “The Biden administra­tion and the US Congress remain convinced that the way to suppress China from making economic progress is to deny it access to American technology and know-how,” he said.

“The more pressure the US exerts to stifle China’s advance, the more determined the Chinese will be to find their own technical advances and skirt around American roadblocks,” said Koo.

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