The Government Is Subsidizing Microchip Firms—While Making It More Expensive To Produce Microchips
Politicians say they want to subsidize various industries, but they sabotage themselves by weighing the policies down with rules that have nothing to do with the plans.

Let's call it the "Biden way": When our president can't get his policies through Congress, he tries to impose them in other ways. Just look at his student loan forgiveness plan, which faced a stiff Supreme Court challenge this week, and his imposition of stricter "Buy American" provisions to the infrastructure-spending bill. Now, he wants to reshape corporate America by attaching the big string of "high-quality" child care to, of all things, semiconductor subsidies.
This strategy, while popular with other presidents, has only one redeeming aspect: It beautifully illustrates how politics diverts industrial policy and similar attempts to direct the economy away from their stated goals. See, politicians say they want to subsidize this and that to improve manufacturing or bolster national security, but invariably sabotage themselves by weighing the policies down with rules and requirements that have nothing to do with the plans.
It is certainly true with last year's "bipartisan" CHIPS Act, which provides $52 billion to revive American microchip manufacturing. Now, President Joe Biden's Commerce Department has announced that companies getting the subsidies will have to do (and not do) a bunch of other things if they want the money.
Specifically, subsidized firms must provide "high-quality childcare for plant workers." They can even divert some of the subsidies to build child care centers and hire providers—activities that do little to increase the supply of microchips. Companies will also be required to do all sorts of financial disclosures and share part of any unanticipated profits with the government. Preference for funding will be given to companies that promise not to buy back stock. The New York Times cleverly named this approach the "Chips and Strings."
These strings will significantly undermine chip manufacturing by increasing production costs. For instance, when the administration says high-quality child care, it really means more expensive child care because of requirements that caregivers be college-educated and such. Building those child care and chip factories will be subjected to Buy American and environmental requirements, Davis-Bacon pay requirements, and minority and women material sourcing requirements, along with pressure to be more open to the demands of labor unions.
I don't want you to think that these industrial policies would succeed if there weren't strings attached—I don't believe that. The best way to outcompete China is not to emulate China's heavy economic interventions. For one thing, America's already-profitable chip industry doesn't need such funding. Second, even if Biden's scheme were to work and all the hoped for factories were built, we would still be far from making most chips at home. That's a good thing, as I explain below, making this a rotten strategy to begin with.
Indeed, even without these requirements, it would take years to build new chip factories. These would also be unlikely to offer the industry's most advanced manufacturing technology. By then, freer, nimbler firms could be building completely different chips. That's what happened in the 1980s when the United States was having this same semiconductor fight but with Japan. The U.S. government resorted to subsidies only to produce a product that was immediately displaced by more lucrative segments of the industry. Added requirements will only multiply the cost of each project and the time required for companies to deliver.
More importantly, the best way to compete is to renew our wildly successful commitment to free markets and entrepreneurial innovation. This requires ending subsidies and letting the market direct capital to its highest and best uses.
In addition, competing with China demands that we keep our supply chains diverse rather than be more self-sufficient. Diversification avoids single points of failure. Better supply chains require, among other things, removing the regulatory barriers that "currently block or deter the construction of chip fabrication plants and the broader ecosystem of facilities and companies a domestic semiconductor industry requires for long-term success," says Adam White in The Wall Street Journal.
Finally, liberalizing immigration would make more workers available for chip manufacturing and child care. In fact, this would do more to reduce the price of child care than all the president's attempts to reshape corporate America combined.
There is so much to be done to make this country more competitive when it comes to doing business, building, and innovating. But industrial policy—especially when it's loaded with politically fashionable requirements—moves us in the opposite direction.
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The companies could always, you know, turn down the money.
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Does your child care recognize all 72 possible genders? And only employ bipoc sex offenders? If not, no government goodies for you!
No way in hell I would trust a child care provider called "Touch Heights." Not unless I want my kid to end up having to show a judge on a doll where they were touched.
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Maybe it's actually a Buttplug sock puppet account? I didn't click the link either and muted it after making my snarky reply.
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And government by executive and bureaucratic fiat continues to expand.
Welcome to the thirties; government control of the economy by bullying or bribing corporations to implement preferred policies.
If only trained economists knew a name for this economic approach.
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Look at Reason attacking Biden for continuing Trump's policies.
Look at you trying to blame trump. For a bill passed last year.
Obama is the real inspiration for Biden. He's got a pen and a phone too, but alas, has forgotten how to use them, so his aides do it, and more often.
Unlike Trump who never used executive orders.
Relevance citation missing.
You should try harder to try harder.
And you claim you aren’t a leftist. Only ever able to criticize trump.
Called the DNC special.
It’s the reverse - Midas or Charlie Brown touch. The government breaks everything it touches.
My favorite Beatles quote:
"Everything government touches turns to crap." - Ringo Starr
At the time in 1970s England, the government had indeed broken everything it touched especially the British auto industry (good like finding a British car maker that survived past 1980). But there was oh so much more equity! And we probably never would have had punk rock.
Gov-Gangster-Gun theft always makes it more expensive.
because Guns don't make sh*t.
and "armed-theft" is a net-negative.
Only the business of Gov-Guns gets to pretend that theft is a net-positive on their end of year balance sheet.
What good is a bill if you can't load it with pork?
So the money comes with strings attached. Whodathunk?
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And we can tell them because they wear 'adult' diapers?
No more mean Tweets!
Standard government grift, raise prices 3-4x to the point companies start to leave then come to the rescue for some with tax breaks reducing that to 2-3x original costs with further restrictions and requirements.
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