November 5, 2024

Commerce Dept. Survey Uncovers ‘Alarming’ Chip Shortages

The results of that survey, which the Commerce Department published Tuesday morning, reveal how scarce global supplies of chips have become.

The median inventory among buyers had fallen to fewer than five days from 40 days before the pandemic, meaning that any hiccup in chip production — because of a winter storm, for example, or another coronavirus outbreak — could cause shortages that would shut down U.S. factories and again destabilize supply chains, Ms. Raimondo said.

“We have no room for error,” she added.

To help address the issue, Biden administration officials have coalesced behind a bill that the Senate passed in June as an answer to some of the nation’s supply chain woes.

The bill, known in the Senate as the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act, would pour nearly a quarter-trillion dollars into scientific research and development to bolster competitiveness against China and prop up semiconductor makers by providing $52 billion in emergency subsidies.

Momentum on the legislation stalled amid ideological disputes between the House and Senate over how to direct the funding. In June, House lawmakers passed a narrower bill, eschewing the Senate’s focus on technology development in favor of financing fundamental research.

But administration officials, led by Ms. Raimondo, have begun prodding lawmakers behind the scenes in an effort to help bridge their differences to swiftly pass the bill, emphasizing the urgency of quickly signing solutions into law.

“There’s no getting around this. There is no other solution,” Ms. Raimondo said. “We need more facilities.”

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/25/business/economy/chips-semiconductors-shortage.html

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