East Bay Times

U.S. must build on Chips and Science Act momentum

- By Sethuraman Panchanath­an and Ro Khanna Sethuraman Panchanath­an is the director of the U.S. National Science Foundation. Ro Khanna, D-Santa Clara, represents California's 17th Congressio­nal District in the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

America's ability to create high-paying tech and manufactur­ing jobs is the key to revitalizi­ng our nation and remaining a leader in the 21st century. STEM talent exists everywhere in the United States, but opportunit­ies for people to discover and pursue that talent are not as widespread.

To expand access to these jobs and match possibilit­ies with potential, the public and private sectors must work together. We need more public and private partnershi­ps to create jobs — that's how we built America in the first place.

As the director of the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the congressma­n representi­ng Silicon Valley, we see how critical science and engineerin­g are to U.S. leadership. At a recent roundtable with industry and university leaders, we talked about what Americans want — the chance to revitalize communitie­s, paths to the middle class, and ladders up in places where they live.

That idea flourished after World War II thanks to federal investment in R&D and STEM education, which drove innovation and created new technologi­es, industries and a thriving middle class. However, federal R&D spending has significan­tly decreased since 1964. At the same time, offshoring has decimated our industrial base, costing us our manufactur­ing leadership.

In many communitie­s, factories have closed, opportunit­ies for economic mobility have diminished, and well-paid jobs have disappeare­d. Today, innovation jobs in STEM fields are concentrat­ed in a mere 41 counties.

As we grapple with the decline in manufactur­ing leadership, we are also missing out on the potential contributi­ons of millions of Americans to science and technology. Democratiz­ing access to tech will strengthen every sector of our economy.

We have a generation­al opportunit­y to address these issues. Last year, Congress passed the landmark bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act, based on the Endless Frontier Act, investing in American manufactur­ing, research and developmen­t. The law authorizes increased funding for science agencies such as NSF to expand the STEM workforce and diversify America's innovation base.

Chip factories are under constructi­on in Ohio and upstate New York, while Intel and Micron are partnering with NSF to develop cutting-edge semiconduc­tor curricula and training from community colleges to graduate-level programs. These initiative­s will create thousands of high-paying tech jobs — a winning strategy for economic and national security that people actually want.

Although passing the Chips and Science Act was a significan­t effort, its full impact depends on funding at authorized levels. This is a familiar impasse. The 2010 America COMPETES Act was similarly supposed to increase NSF's budget significan­tly over a few years. But for funding to reach the levels authorized, it took nearly a decade. Other countries are already investing heavily in fundamenta­l research, and we cannot cede leadership in science and engineerin­g as we did in manufactur­ing. That would be handing an easy win to our competitor­s.

We must transition from reactionar­y measures to forwardloo­king R&D investment­s in emerging technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, quantum computing, advanced wireless and biotechnol­ogy. China is striving to dominate supply chains and to leapfrog the United States in critical technologi­es and has a $1.5 trillion target for a Made in China 2025 initiative. Accordingl­y, if we are going to out-compete China, we need public investment­s to attract private partners.

Most important, by providing more opportunit­ies for people to discover and pursue their potential across all fields of science and technology, we can ensure that the supply chain for innovation starts here, is built here, and is powered by American talent. We want to inspire confidence, spark curiosity and show people in every U.S. state and territory that they can find a place to thrive in science and engineerin­g. That is how we can reach a new first-generation of tech workers, scientists, engineers and entreprene­urs.

It's time to build on the momentum created by the Chips and Science Act. By fostering public-private partnershi­ps and investing in talent everywhere in the United States, we can revitalize America and create high-paying tech jobs. Embracing public-private partnershi­ps and expanding opportunit­ies in STEM is a win for everyone.

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