Los Angeles Times

Biden talks up funding to ease chip shortage

- By Jenny Leonard, Keith Laing and Josh Wingrove Leonard, Laing and Wingrove write for Bloomberg. Writers Ian King, Laura Davison and Jennifer Jacobs of Bloomberg contribute­d to this report.

President Biden told companies vying with one another for a sharply constraine­d global supply of semiconduc­tors that he has bipartisan support for government funding to address a shortage that has idled automakers worldwide.

During a White House meeting with more than a dozen chief executives Monday, Biden read from a letter from 23 senators and 42 House members backing his proposal for $50 billion for semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and research.

“Both sides of the aisle are strongly supportive of what we’re proposing and where I think we can really get things done for the American people,” Biden said. “Now let me quote from the letter. It says, ‘The Chinese Communist Party ... plans to reorient and dominate the semiconduc­tor supply chain.’ ”

Chief executives including General Motors Co. CEO Mary Barra, Ford Motor Co.’s James D. Farley, Jr. and Sundar Pichai, CEO of Alphabet and Google, participat­ed in the virtual summit.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the meeting showed the administra­tion is serious about addressing supply-chain constraint­s and softening the blow for affected companies and workers.

National Economic Council Director Brian Deese and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan hosted the meeting, with Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo also participat­ing. Companies invited to join included Dell Technologi­es Inc., Intel Corp., Medtronic, Northrop Grumman Corp., HP Inc., Cummins Inc., Micron Technology Inc., Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co., AT&T Inc. and Samsung Electronic­s Co., as well as GM, Ford and Alphabet Inc.

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger said in an interview after the meeting that the White House and Congress are working aggressive­ly to support the semiconduc­tor industry with more domestic manufactur­ing, research and developmen­t as well as efforts to build the workforce.

The administra­tion intended to highlight elements of the president’s proposed $2.25-trillion infrastruc­ture-focused plan that it believes would improve supply-chain resilience, a White House official said. The agenda also included discussion­s about the auto industry’s transition to clean energy, job creation and ensuring U.S. economic competitiv­eness, the official added.

Many of the lawmakers supporting additional funding for semiconduc­tors want to see the measure in a stand-alone competitiv­eness bill aimed at China, not as part of Biden’s infrastruc­ture package, as it is now. The China bill has bipartisan support and could have a quicker path through Congress.

But exactly how to spend and allocate the semiconduc­tor funding is a source of debate among automakers and other buyers of chips, as well as the semiconduc­tor companies themselves.

Carmakers are pushing for a portion of the money to be reserved for vehiclegra­de chips, warning of a potential 1.3-million-chip shortfall in car and lightduty truck production in the U.S. this year if their industry isn’t given priority.

Yet makers of other electronic devices affected by the chip shortage, such as computers and mobile phones, have taken issue with the carmakers’ demands, worried that their industries will suffer. The debate was also a factor in the White House meeting.

“There were many, many voices saying, ‘Hey, we can’t just start carving things up for particular industries. We need a solution that works in the medium and long term and that are sensitive to some of the unique challenges of the immediate term,’ ” Gelsinger said in the interview. “I think we’re working pretty well through that process right now. Nobody will be entirely happy but we’re heading in a good direction.”

The White House has not taken a public position on the issue but has indicated privately to semiconduc­tor industry leaders that it would not support special treatment for one industry, according to people familiar with the matter.

Matt Blunt, president of the American Automotive Policy Council, which lobbies for Ford, General Motors and Stellantis (formerly Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s), expressed optimism that the Biden administra­tion would at least consider his industry’s arguments.

He said the White House has not endorsed any specific plans for setting aside money for carmakers but administra­tion officials “understand why the proposal was made.”

To avoid future chip shortages, Blunt’s group proposed that at least 25% of any federal support for the constructi­on of semiconduc­tor factories must go to U.S. facilities that commit to allocating at least 25% of their capacity to automotive-grade chips.

John Neuffer, president and chief executive of the Semiconduc­tor Industry Assn., said the industry understand­s “the difficulty the auto sector is feeling right now, and chipmakers are working hard to ramp up production to meet demand in the short term.”

For the long term, he said, the industry needs a boost in domestic production and innovation across the board “so all sectors of our economy have access to the chips they need, and that requires swiftly enacting federal investment­s in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and research.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States