Get your act together, Congress.
The United States has a chip shortage that threatens its economic future.
China is committing $150 billion to expand its semiconductor industry. Taiwan's chipmakers are investing $120 billion to strengthen their grip on the global market. Japan has provided subsidies with the intention of tripling its chip production by 2030. South Korea has plans to spend $450 billion over the next 10 years to stay ahead of its foreign competitors. Even the European Union has committed $47 billion to chip production in an effort to become less dependent on foreign firms.
The U.S.? Despite broad bipartisan support for the CHIPS Act, the legislation providing $52 billion for American chipmakers, continues to languish in Congress. Every day that the CHIPS Act fails to pass is another day in which the U.S. falls further behind in the chips war.
Blame Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for this blatant act of congressional malpractice. His decision to block the legislation is a threat to our national and economic security.
The Senate and the House passed different versions of the CHIPS Act 18 months ago as part of a national defense bill. But the bills included different funding approaches, requiring a compromise by Senate and House lawmakers. McConnell has threatened to sink the entire bill unless Democrats give up on reaching a separate climate, energy and tax deal with Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.
Now the leading U.S. chipmakers are saying that if lawmakers fail to act promptly, they will have to consider taking their planned manufacturing plants elsewhere.
It's not an idle threat.