With the epic disaster our "most popular president ever" unleashed in Afghanistan in the last week, I feel certain that our rivals in the world (enemies if you prefer) are licking their chops and thinking this is an ideal time to do things they've never thought they could get away with. After watching how the US handled China's institution of harsh shutdowns in Hong Kong, I'm sure that the leadership in Taiwan is planning how they could respond to a Chinese invasion since they can't depend on the US.
Ask yourself if you can envision that our current crop of "perfumed princes of the pentagon" would go to war with China. About all I can envision is another "strongly worded press statement."
Peter Grant at Bayou Renaissance Man made reference to this in his morning post today:
If I were a resident of Taiwan right now, I'd be packing my bags and looking for an exit as fast as I could. (If I were a US manufacturer reliant on computer chips from Taiwan, which makes about half the world's supply, I'd be begging, borrowing and stealing any and all supplies I could get out of there before the invasion.).
Emphasis on the part in parentheses. The heart of the issue is the
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company or TSMC. I think everyone is aware that there's a chip shortage that's
affecting the delivery of many products, from pickup trucks to phones.
While there's still a fairly large group of the semiconductor fabrication
plants ("fabs") in the US, they tend to be older plants, not capable of the
leading edge of performance found in the most modern processors (Central
Processing Units or CPUs). TSMC is the monster in the field.
Around thirty five years ago, when I was working in defense electronics, many of the chips were made in Asia for American companies. In the years since then, the situation expanded and concentrated more fabs in Asia with fewer in the US. This was quite deliberate on the American companies' part. Coincidentally, Electronic Design did a feature article about the shortage of parts and the need to build more fabs in the states that showed up in today's email.
How We Got Here
In short, the relentless outsourcing and lack of investment in our own semiconductor sourcing moved the U.S. into last place at the most advanced nodes of this ever-growing industry. At present, American companies are at zero production capacity on a technology that’s coming more and more swiftly to define the world, both inside and outside of tech development.
The governments of Taiwan, Korea, and China, on the other hand, enacted swift, articulated industrial policies and incentives to semiconductor foundries. They traded short-term profit for the potential of long-term dominance. They did this at a time when capital investment subsidies were manageable and translated into ongoing competitive advantage.
The U.S. did not do the same. To the contrary, American companies took advantage of outsourcing deals that maximized near-term profit at the expense of long-term strategy.
It's important to note that first sentence; our problem is in the "most advanced nodes of this ever-growing industry." It's not like we have no fabs in the US, it's just that the most advanced processors can't be made here without substantial investment. The article notes that of the three types of semiconductors—digital, analog, and power—the U.S. holds only a slim lead on analog and faces a tense race with Germany for dominance in power microchips. FWIW, the difference between analog and power chips is the power chips are bigger. It's in the digital chips where we've fallen far behind.
We did a useful overview of the industry with emphasis on fab issues back in August of '16. While the "glamor" side of the semiconductor industry is smallest
transistors, 14 nanometers at that time, the actual work is done by older,
less fine geometries. From that 2016 post:
The graph on the left is showing that 43% of worldwide semiconductor production is in the five largest geometries: from 65nm up to the largest sizes used. Further, the graph on the right shows that 85% of new designs are 65nm and larger. Or-Bach takes this as evidence that the industry is bifurcating; very few designs move to the finest geometries while most designs are being designed into older, bigger geometries. This is leading foundries to invest and develop enhancements to the older processes, keeping older facilities in production longer.
The other aspect that goes along with most parts being larger is that
they're cheaper parts. Investing in the new machines, new processes and
learning how to make those components winnows out the field. This graphic
shows that while there were 22 companies capable of building parts with 130 nm
features, as features got smaller, the number of companies that could or would
invest in the plant went down, so that at the finest features (densest number
of transistors in the highest performance processors) only four companies were
still in the game. I'll bet one is TMSC and all four of them are
somewhere in Asia.
I don't know if China has one of those plants, but I find it easy to think part of their motivation for going after Taiwan might be for the income TMSC brings in. If the Chinese Communist Party owns the production of all the densest, most powerful processors, do you think they'll sell them to American companies? Do you think the supply issues that Ford and other carmakers have are going to get better or worse?
With one move into Taiwan, they could cripple us by cutting off processor shipments from TMSC, or raise the prices prohibitively. It's looking more like a low risk move for the CCP.
Just for the DOD side, the government should have required only domestic chips in anything bought for the military, or NASA.
ReplyDeleteShould have been done a long time ago. But...
As usual, the government - both fed and local - incentivized companies with fabs here in the states to move them offshore. Labor is a small part of the cost of a chip, so the big costs are land, building, machinery and environmental compliance. It's not like going to have an iPhone built in the slave labor camps in China.
DeleteYup. How many of our shortages now are the result of China manipulating the availability of "stuff" to see the impact?
ReplyDeleteThis all ties together very well with your post from a couple of days ago, "Efficiency: Not Always Our Friend."
DeleteIC design is extraordinarily complex and far beyond what even most companies can do. I always say that if you got everyone in the world together who could design those parts, you wouldn't fill a convention center.
Agreed. I think the deep end of the knowledge pool has very few folks in it in many tech fields.
DeleteInvading Taiwan is a risky move for the PRC not because the US has the spleen to stop them, but the reaction of the rest of Asia. In time the US or Japan or Brazil can catch up with the microchip market, but the damage that it will do to China in the longer time period (Long March) is very uncertain.
ReplyDeleteI'll be the first to admit this sort of prediction isn't my strong suit and I don't truly understand them. Different culture and all.
DeleteThat said, it seems to me China intends to take over the rest of Asia, judging by the border skirmishes with India and their generally belligerent interactions with all their neighbors.
Taiwan....AND Japan....are ostensibly " non nuclear powers". If both countries are smart they would be pulling all those parts out of storage and putting warheads onto missiles. And TELLING the CCP that what Pedo Joe does or doesn't do is irrelevant....that If China invades Taiwan or the Senkaku Islands then Beijing and a LOT of other Chinese locations will reach One Million Degrees within hours.
ReplyDeleteIt's a sad conclusion, but I agree with Dan.
ReplyDeleteAs a perhaps Contrarian point of view...other than microchips in what way(s) is Taiwan of any interest or value to the US. Although we have tried to " back" them please explain ( feel free to use small word) why the US should protect Taiwan ( Or S. Korea or more than half the NATO countries). How many American lives should be spent on such if needed??? 98% of Americans couldnt find Taiwan on a map. ( Sadly probably 15% or more wouldnt find it in less than a minute even if it were marked).
ReplyDeleteSorry if you thought that I'm advocating we should go to war with China. That's not my point at all.
DeleteOf course, if the Chicoms DO take Taiwan and cut us off from the supply of silicon, I have no doubt our Green overlords will remove their requirement which drive the use of much of that silicon in our everyday life. Do you not fully agree???
ReplyDeleteThe one potential saving grace is that Taiwan has allegedly proposed to destroy those factories if the Chicoms do their thing.
I also wonder how the ideological quality control, as practiced by the Chicoms, will affect the output once they gain control. Their results in other areas does not inspire confidence.
ReplyDeleteIf China takes over Taiwan blah blah blah...
ReplyDeleteIn 1972, in the Shanghai Communique, the US (Pres. Nixon) agreed that Taiwan was a province of China, and that eventually it would be reunited with China and be ruled by the CPC. Hopefully the reunification would be peaceful. In 1978/79, Pres. Carter and the US Congress cancelled the Mutual Defense Treaty we had with Taiwan, which went back to Chiang Kai-Shek and the Kuomintang. Every country that does business with China has accepted its One China Policy. The issue of Taiwan is settled, and all this take over nonsense should stop.
China's main goal now is to bring the remaining 600 million poor Chinese up to the middle class living standard of the other 800 million. To do this, China needs a generation of peace, and it needs to export manufactured goods to raise the money needed. If Taiwan were reunited with China, the TSCM would still be exporting chips. China needs the money.
The only way China stops trading with the US is if the US actually attacks China. The probability we would do so under our current Masters is uncomfortably high, especially since the US has a long sordid history of attacking countries at peace with us. Viz. Kosovo/Serbia, Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Yemen, Ukraine...
All these discussions need a little economic and historical reality. Apparently techno-geeks need some remedial education.
So colonialism is fine as long as it is done by the RIGHT people, eh???
DeleteAlso so - if the leader of one country tells the leader of a second country that it is okay to gobble up a third country, it's all fine in your book?
DeleteThey were once part of us...guess it would be okay for Italy to tell the rest of Europe that they need to come back under their control.
So many examples in history to choose from, this was just one.
However, in reality, there is no way Taiwan could remain independent with a carnivorous neighbor setting sights on them. I guess all we can hope for is peace in our time.
Being for or against war with China is irrelevant. We ARE at war with China and have been for decades....an asymmetric war of espionage, hacking, sabotage and infiltration. At some point the CCP will decide they have a large enough advantage to go KINETIC...and they will. Wishful thinking or preferring "peaceful" alternatives just means you're an idiot. China is going to do what China wants REGARDLESS of what anyone else believes or wants. OUR job....along with Taiwan, Japan et.al is to accept that FACT and be ready for that reality.
ReplyDelete