In June 2021 the US Senate passed a bill dedicating more than $50 billion to increase the manufacture of semiconductors. At the time pandemic-related shortages in computer chips were highlighting US vulnerability to supply chain shocks, just as rising tension with China heightened national security concerns over technology. Bolstering domestic capacity to make components with such profound economic and strategic importance seemed like an easy win for officials across the political spectrum.
Over a year later that money—the centerpiece of a bill called the Chips Act—still hasn’t been deployed. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said his party won’t support a bill to do so unless the Democrats abandon plans for spending on climate and other issues. The Democrats, whose broader agenda has stalled anyway, are preparing a slimmed-down version for an imminent vote, and GOP leadership seems ready to support it.
The legislative momentum could yet give way to another round of inertia—considering the performance of Congress in recent years, it’s a decent bet that something such as this would happen. Either way, the delay and uncertainty have shown that Washington is not prepared to act with an urgency that matches its rhetoric. “The rest of the world is moving on with this,” says Bruce Andrews, chief government affairs officer at Intel Corp. “Other countries are aggressively recruiting. They’re providing incentives. They’re rolling out the red carpet.”
This story is from the July 25, 2022 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek US.
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This story is from the July 25, 2022 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek US.
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