Why are the biggest chipmakers in the world moving to the United States? Chris Miller on the U.S.-China struggle to control the most critical technology on the planet. Brought to you by [Congo Clothing Company]( Recently from The Signal: Tracey Meares on [why violent crime is down in America](. ⦠Today: Why are the biggest chipmakers in the world moving to the United States? Chris Miller on the U.S.-China struggle to control the most critical technology on the planet. ⦠Also: Gustav Jönsson on the Kremlinâs regionalâand globalâvision for conducting and supporting war. Subscribe to The Signal? Share with a friend. ⦠Sent to you? Sign up [here](. Components of a conflict Getty Images In early August, the U.S. administration announced that South Koreaâs SK Hynix, one of the worldâs five major manufacturers of semiconductor chips, would build an enormous new factory in West Lafayette, Indiana. Itâll be an R&D center with a production line for cutting-edge AI chips. SK Hynix will invest US$3.87 billion in it. And the U.S. government will support the investment with up to $450 million in grants. Now, all five of the biggest chipmakersâincluding one Taiwanese and two South Korean firmsâhave agreed to build plants in the United States. The government is providing substantial financial incentives to build in the U.S., as part of Washingtonâs developing view of semiconductors as a vital strategic asset. In this industry, the country wants to stay as far ahead of China as possible. In October 2022, the U.S. made its first major move to slow Beijingâs progress: It banned exports to China of the most advanced chips, as well as the tools to design and produce them. Since then, Washington has focused on building a domestic chip industry, as the vast majority of semiconductors have long been manufactured on Taiwanâan island thatâs been a locus of U.S.-China tensions for decades. Meanwhile, China has responded to the chip ban by boosting its own chip production. Last year, Huawei, the leading Chinese semiconductor firm, unveiled a sophisticated chip in a new smartphone. Now, itâs promising to introduce a chip to rival the worldâs best. So where does this struggle over semiconductor chips stand? Chris Miller is an assistant professor of international history at Tufts Universityâs Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and the author of [Chip War: The Fight for the Worldâs Most Critical Technology](. Miller says the financial incentives are working. But foreign firms arenât just taking the bait; theyâre also beginning to see the United States as their main future market. With AI investment in the U.S. booming, more and more of their business is with U.S. customers. Theyâre watching their Chinese markets shrink, too, as Beijing supports domestic firms and encourages them to move away from non-Chinese suppliers. Thanks to the export ban, Miller says, the world of semiconductor chips appears to be dividing into two spheresâa Western and a Chineseâand for now, the U.S. and its allies are pulling ahead ⦠[Read on]( The Signal is a new current-affairs brand for understanding democratic life, the trend lines shaping it, and the challenges confronting it. Learn [more](. And [join](âto be a valued member, support our growth, and have full access. Advertisement From Chris Miller at The Signal: - âAll the big South Korean companies have realized that even though they want to keep doing business in China where they can, it just isnât a growth market anymore. Chinese markets are often shrinking now, on account of Chinaâs industrial policy favoring domestic firms. So the South Korean business communityâthe chip industry, specifically, as well as more broadlyâhas made a deliberate choice to bet more heavily on the U.S. market, because theyâre still welcome there. They have capabilities that are welcome. Itâs the opposite in China.â - âNvidia has a special category of chips they can sell to China; theyâve deliberately downgraded them to meet the U.S. rulesâand Chinaâs buying a ton of these chips right now. If smuggling were solving all of Chinaâs problems, China wouldnât be spending all this money to import such volumes of Nvidiaâs downgraded chips legally.â - âChinese AI firms have been trying to rebrand themselves as Singaporean or even American. Theyâre trying to reduce the number of Chinese investors they have and to sell their products only outside China. That speaks to how the Chinese tech sector looks less attractive as a place to investâtime or money.â [Read on]( The world is complex, ambiguous, and inherently uncertain ⦠Thatâs why we look at it the way a detective would: Everything The Signal does starts with good questions, and every answer leads us to more of them. Become a [member]( to unlock this full conversation and explore the archive. Advertisement Wary of fast fashion? Shop Congo Clothing Company and make a differenceâin style. [Learn more]( NOTES Russiaâs global battle vs. democratic revolution A.L. On August 6, when Ukraine launched its incursion into the Kursk region, it was the first time Russia had been invaded since the Second World Warâand a dramatic twist in the current war. Russiaâs President Vladimir Putin had been hoping to conquer Ukrainian territory, not lose Russian territory. How did he get here? As Anatol Lieven [noted]( in 2022, three months after Russia invaded Ukraine, Putin believed that the Russian and Ukrainian peoples were bound together historically in a common, great civilization. The Ukrainian state may not have wanted to see their country under Russian rule; but the Ukrainian state, in Putinâs view, was after all run by a fascist clique that had little to do with everyday Ukrainians. So why wouldnât everyday Ukrainians greet the Russian army with flowers? Samuel Ramaniâs new book, [Putinâs War on Ukraine: Russiaâs Campaign for Global Counter-Revolution](, takes a complementary view: Putinâs fundamental motivation, Ramani says, was to counter the âcolor revolutionsâ in neighboring countries. If Putin could extend Russian hegemony over Ukraine, he could not only reverse its âEuromaidanâ uprising of 2014 but ultimately undo its âOrange Revolutionâ of 2004, Georgiaâs âRose Revolutionâ of 2003, and the entire pattern of nationalist-democratic revolutions in the region. Putinâs counter-revolutionary stance is popular in Russia, Ramani says, because it has âhistorical legitimacyââa broad resonance with Russiansâs common sense of their countryâs historical identity. In the nineteenth century, Tsar Alexander I earned the moniker âPoliceman of Europeâ for combating revolutionary forces and mores. In the twentieth, the Soviet Unionâfar from exporting revolutionâwas a force of reaction through the Warsaw Pact: The Soviets crushed popular uprisings in East Germany in 1953, Hungary in 1956, and Czechoslovakia in 1968. That counter-revolutionary tradition survived the fall of the U.S.S.R., too: During the constitutional crisis of 1993, Russiaâs acting prime minister, Yegor Gaidar, warned that ongoing unrest in the streets would turn Russia into a âhuge concentration camp.â Of course, the counter-revolutionary tradition would be nothing without another of Russiaâs traditions: the revolutionary tradition. That may be less visible in Russia at the moment, but Putin evidently doesnât like seeing it among his neighbors. âGustav Jönsson [Explore Notes]( Want more? Join The Signal to unlock full conversations with hundreds of contributors, explore the archive, and support our independent current-affairs coverage. [Become a member]( Coming soon: Robert Hamilton on how Ukraine's invasion of Russia is changing the war â¦
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