Politicians Use Subsidies To Squeeze Semiconductor Manufacturers
When politicians manipulate industry, the public pays the price.

It's no secret that rising international tensions and snarled supply chains are fracturing the world, threatening to curtail an all-too-brief period of relatively free trade and the prosperity it brought. With political priorities competing with ones of efficiency, governments are increasing their control over production and commerce. That includes the Biden administration, which is subsidizing private companies to move the manufacturing of microchips to the U.S.—and then using its leverage to extract concessions and take a big skim of the profits. That means greater expense for you and me.
"Rebuilding America's leadership in the semiconductor industry is a down payment on our future as a global leader," U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo boasted shortly after the passage of the CHIPS Act last summer. "CHIPS for America, will ensure continued US leadership in the industries that underpin our national security and economic competitiveness."
That's a fancy way of saying the government will subsidize chipmakers to the tune of tens of billions of dollars to manufacture computer chips in the United States instead of in countries, like Taiwan, that are potentially at risk from China. That's not a baseless concern given that China's government is threatening "confrontation and conflict" with the United States and clearly wants to absorb Taiwan (though U.S. officials are not without fault in building these tensions).
Private Investment for Private Companies
But if moving production to the U.S. makes sense, chipmakers should do it themselves—and they are. Companies announced plans to expand manufacturing capacity long before the CHIPS Act passed.
"Samsung Electronics Co.'s planned $17 billion chip factory in Texas is expected to crank out top-end semiconductors that are essential to 5G cellular networks, self-driving cars and artificial intelligence," The Wall Street Journal reported in November 2021. "It follows hefty bets on U.S. soil by Intel Corp., Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. [TSMC] and Texas Instruments Inc."
Moreover, as Christine McDaniel and Weifeng Zhong of George Mason University's Mercatus Center pointed out, there are ways to encourage manufacturing that don't require subsidies. Red tape and government contract requirements are big impediments to opening multi-billion-dollar factories.
"First, we should streamline regulatory burdens on building manufacturing plants," they suggested. "Second, stop forcing ties between a subsidized private sector and labor unions… Third, scale back on trade policies, especially so-called Section 232 and 301 tariffs, that prevent all U.S. manufacturers from accessing inputs and from competing with China at globally attractive prices."
Politicians Want Leverage
But freeing the marketplace wouldn't give government officials the leverage over companies that comes with offering subsidies with strings attached. Those include requiring the use of U.S.-sourced construction materials, childcare provisions, and workforce "equity" targets.
"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," Reason's Veronique de Rugy cautioned. "These strings will significantly undermine chip manufacturing by increasing production costs."
"The recent Commerce Department notice…lards the notice of funding availability up like a Christmas tree with additional priorities," warn Patrick T. Brown of the Ethics and Public Policy Center and Connor O'Brien of the Economic Innovation Group, two industrial policy advocates who see the CHIPs Act justifying critics' fears. "The inevitable result will be to drive up costs for participating and water down the effectiveness of the new incentives."
Politicians Want to Skim Profits
Getting out of the way also wouldn't give officials a claim on manufacturing proceeds. And the Biden administration really wants a piece of the action.
"Among firms that receive more than $150 million in funding, Commerce will require 'Upside Sharing' of a portion of 'excess profits' with the U.S. government," notes the Tax Foundation's Erica York. "The notice defines excess profits as any cash flows or returns that exceed what firms submit for their projected cash flows as part of their application."
As a result, she adds, "if a project is surprisingly successful, the government can claw back up to 75 percent of the awarded funds."
Since the government's take will be based on "projected cash flows over the lifetime of the project," companies have an incentive to get creative with their forecasts, potentially divorcing them from economic reality. The whole scheme could turn domestic chip manufacturing into an ultimately uncompetitive political operation.
Like Mercatus's McDaniel and Zhong, the Tax Foundation's York thinks the government should get out of the way. She suggests reforming the tax code to reduce barriers to investment.
"Fixing the bias against capital investment and R&D by allowing full expensing is preferable to a CHIPS-and-Science-type industrial policy approach and its long track record of ineffectiveness," she adds. "The CHIPS Act implementation is proving our point."
Higher Costs in a Fractured World
Late last year, according to The Wall Street Journal, TSMC founder Morris Chang warned the Commerce Department that factors "including federal regulatory requirements" make it more expensive to produce computer chips in the United States. "Mr. Chang said the cost of making chips in Arizona may be at least 50% higher than in Taiwan."
That was before the Biden administration detailed its policy wish-list conditions for subsidies, and its plans to skim profits from participating companies. Interestingly, when TSMC broke ground on that Arizona plant, Chang sounded a mournful note about the circumstances driving the need for that facility.
"Globalization is almost dead. Free trade is almost dead. And a lot of people still wish they would come back, but I really don't think they will be back for a while," he commented. "In the meantime, because of the change in political situation, the new dream, well…it's the old dream revived, has the help of the US government, the federal government, the state government, the local government."
With the conditions government is placing on its "help" and the price it plans to extract at the other end, you might add that free enterprise is almost dead—at least for companies taking the CHIPS Act's subsidies. That expensive scheme threatens to put an important industry under the thumb of politicians, and to drive up costs for all of us.
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What could be wrong with industry and government working together for the benefit of the state? We all need to put individualism aside and think only of what's best for society as our moral and intellectual superiors dictate.
It takes a village to make a chip.
I KNEW HillaryBillary had her hand out in this gig somehow.......
We need a Hank Reardon here. Not the new technology angle, though that may come. We need the stubborn, "doing it my way" individualist.
Let's keep this civil and try to not get too technical on the actual definition of Nazi.
What could be wrong . . . ? Absolutely nothing, of course. The government cooperates – it helps – it provides “free money” for development. Of course, free is a relative term.
With that money comes “a few strings”. Your labor force must be union. Your labor force must also contain a minimum percentage of oppressed peoples of various colors and genders. You must not consider competence in your hiring decisions if this interferes with the development of a suitably diverse workforce. Nothing wrong here. After all, if you take our money, and our strings, and then go broke – well, nobody at Solyndra got in trouble, did they?
We understand that your utopically diverse workforce will not be especially efficient in production, and that will increase your ultimate cost of production, but – ya’ know – ya gotta break a few eggs to make the ultimate omelet. Nothing wrong here – everybody knows you gotta break eggs to scramble them, and if you disapprove of this notion – well, we can tell a racist when we see one. Nothing wrong here, if you ain’t a racist!
We will give you some money, along with the few “strings” mentioned. If, mirabile dictu, you actually manage to make a profit, we want that money back, way more than just the income tax you’ll owe. Of course, we understand that will drive purchase prices for end consumers up, but that ain’t our problem, Jack! Come on up and get your “free” money, and don’t worry about the strings. After all, we may later tie your competitors who didn’t get any “free” money up with those same strings, just for equity’s sake. Nothing wrong here either – it’s just “fair”, dontchaknow?
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[edited for spelling typo]
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I am shocked, shocked to learn fascists do fascism.
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Funny how he leaves out one of the biggest strings. These plants must be built by Union labor and must have Union employees. That's the main issue for the Biden Administration and their Union puppetmasters.
"Second, stop forcing ties between a subsidized private sector and labor unions…
It is there, just not much emphasis.
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Absolutely. Fuck you and your subsidies, they're too expensive and not worth it.
*stays in Singapore*
That includes the Biden administration, which is subsidizing private companies to move the manufacturing of microchips to the U.S.—and then using its leverage to extract concessions and take a big skim of the profits. That means greater expense for you and me.
No it doesn't. If a manufacturer who's considering moving manufacturing "back" (your word, not mine) to the US, if the costs of compliance overwhelm any subsidies they get, they'll simply opt out of the program, leaving everything the way it already was-- the us manufacturer "keeping" their operations overseas.
Nothing in my comment should be construed as "supporting" the strings attached to these "subsidies"... or even in support of subsidies WITHOUT strings attached.
But the calculus should be simple. If the city of X offers me a tax break to move into that city and work there, but then demands all kinds of concessions, parking lots, free healthcare, free childcare, swimming pools, free liquor, free lunch, travel vouchers, 50 weeks paid vacation a year (etc etc) then I'll calculate whatever breaks and subsidies I get over the costs of those things and make my decision. If those things exceed my current operating costs and overwhelm the subsidy, I'll decline to move to city X.
Apologies, you didn’t say “back”, don’t know why I read the the first read-through, you said move “to” the united states. However, that doesn’t change the formula. If you’re operating in Taiwan or Singapore for $X per unit, and the subsidies are $Y per unit, and the costs of doing business to receive those subsidies is $Y * 5, then the subsidies will not be worth it.
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Only problem is, even if the competently run companies steer clear, the program is likely to attract grifters who will be only too happy to go along. They'll line their own pockets and deliver nothing, and then the pundits and politicians will explain how it all failed due to the greed of the private sector and insufficient investment by the public sector. Oh, and do you believe for one second that the government won't look for ways to penalize companies that choose not to play ball? If the carrot doesn't work, there's always the stick. And the state is all about the stick.
Please stop treating cost as only the price at point of sale. We already pay the cost of semiconductor dependence in Taiwan; involving ourselves in Chinese domestic affairs, much to the chagrin of China.
Crony Socialism strikes again.
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That's right. Paying subsidies = Stealing profits in the Kook fart minds of Lying Libertarians.
You're more than welcome to PAY all the subsidies you want.
You have NO right to STEAL by Gov-Guns from other people.
Government has ever right to offer subsidies to Chip producers. If you don’t think so then spend your own money to challenge the government action in court – where rights are decided.
You won’t because you are a loser, and your proclaimed rights do not now, and have never existed.
You are as we say in the Legal practice…. A Retarded Loser.
You, “Government has ever right to STEAL from it’s citizens and give STOLEN earnings to Chip producers.”
According to TREASONOUS [Na]tional So[zi]ialsits and their Nazi-Empire that conquered the USA. You’re right; in modern day “Legal Practice” the USA has lost and has been conquered by a Nazi-Empire.
The fact that; that doesn’t disturb you is exactly why UR a POS traitor to this nation.
And if you don't think that violates the US Constitution (the very definition of this nation) and an act of treason; I'll be glad to correct you.
FYI: The Nazi's didn't 'invade' Germany. The people in Germany became Nazi's and elected Hitler for their Socialism Pipe-Dream.
EXACTLY what the left is doing to the USA.
Government has no rights, only powers. Trying to micromanage industry is not a legitimate use of government power. As for your courts, they have the power to declare what's legal, not what's right. If you choose to surrender your rights to the state, that's your decision. My rights aren't yours to give away.
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