July 5, 2006 4:00 AM PDT

Newsmaker: Putting the chip buzz back in U.S.

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George Scalise wouldn't mind making fewer trips to China.

The president of the Semiconductor Industry Association recently visited the country to learn more about how it is encouraging the development of its own chip industry. He and his staff came away impressed with the gleaming new universities and research facilities that are springing up in various parts of China.

The SIA, a consortium of U.S. chip companies, is trying to bring some of that buzz back to the United States. The U.S. share of worldwide chip production has fallen to 15 percent of the world's total, which isn't enough to sustain a "critical mass" of educational opportunities, design breakthroughs and overall competitiveness, according to Scalise.

The group would like to see that number increase to 30 percent over the next few years. But it doesn't believe that will happen unless the U.S. government increases funding for math and science education and research in grade schools and universities; allows more foreign workers to come to the U.S.; and reforms tax policies to give U.S. companies a better chance of competing against heavy government subsidies in other countries. Scalise and a group of SIA representatives recently visited San Francisco to talk about their proposals for encouraging more domestic chip production. An edited transcript of that conversation with CNET News.com follows.

Q: How will your proposals for increased educational resources and tax policies and whatnot increase the incentives for chip companies to build in the U.S.?
Scalise: You've got to see the total picture, and then I think it comes together and it makes a lot of sense. The thing that will make the investment come back, is there is a consequence of those components. You have the trained students; you have the technology coming out of universities; and those students can then go exercise it. We already have a capital structure in this country that allows good ideas and good people to get investment money, and you also have the trained students from foreign lands that are coming over here. Finally, you also have a competitive investment climate that says I made the investment in California, or if I make it in China or Ireland, I can come out with roughly the same cost structure and therefore be successful against my competition.

This is all about choosing to compete. If you ever get to the point where you are viewing this thing as corporate welfare or industrial policy or things of that nature then you have missed the whole argument.

This is all about choosing to compete. If you ever get to the point where you are viewing this thing as corporate welfare or industrial policy or things of that nature then you have missed the whole argument. It is only about what it will take to compete in this new global economy, and these are the three things in the technology world. When I came along, we didn't worry about what China or Japan or Europe is doing. They didn't really make any difference. They didn't matter. Today, they matter and therefore you cannot ignore them.

So there are two things you need to do today. One is strengthen the areas where we are really good: university research programs, rule of law, intellectual property protection, venture capital capability, financial institutions, and on and on. But then you also have to go look at what is the competition doing and what can they do to derail me, because they are getting good at some of these other things, but they are also doing some things in addition to that that we are not doing.

Are you going to be able to resist making the choice (to invest overseas) even if the conditions in the United States improve?
Scalise: If (former Intel CEO) Craig Barrett was sitting here--and I hate to put myself in his shoes--but he was talking not too long ago about caring about the industry as a chief executive and a chairman of a semiconductor company, and the decisions he'd have to make with that hat on were not necessarily the decisions he'd want to make if he were wearing the grandfather hat or the, you know, the family hat or the American taxpayer hat. Sometimes those decisions are at odds, but I believe what we're trying to do is close the gaps so that the decisions that you would make are clear regardless of where you sit. And the decisions are to invest here and to continue to support the industry here. So everyone, given the level of the playing field in a better competitive U.S. environment, will further invest in the U.S.

Is this an altruistic thing that the companies would prefer to invest in the U.S.?
Scalise: No, that's business.

If it's just the business then why do you care (where you invest)?
Scalise: Because you need to do basic research. You need to get the students out. You need to go do the development work, and you have to do the commercialization work; you have to do the consortium work and on those bigger problems that need a consortium effort, and then you have to manufacture, so that you can continue that loop. That's why you want to do it here, and you want to have those things to be the best.

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CONTINUED: Learning from China…
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6 comments

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Republican BS
Ok I get it. We fund, through our taxes, chip research so you can ship the jobs overseas and they can reap the benifits. Sounds like a Republican plan to me.
Posted by GrandpaN1947 (187 comments )
Reply Link Flag
It's worked for Big Oil!
We give them billions in tax breaks and they give us, gasoline
for the amazingly low price of $3/gallon.

The idea is simple: give big, rich corporations our tax dollars
and they'll produce for us! What's good for Corporate America is
good for America. Of course, that's way too simplistic for today's
economy where there is no longer any such thing as Corporate
America (they're all multi-national), but that won't stop
Republicans from pushing it on us.
Posted by Macsaresafer (802 comments )
Link Flag
Republican BS
Ok I get it. We fund, through our taxes, chip research so you can ship the jobs overseas and they can reap the benifits. Sounds like a Republican plan to me.
Posted by GrandpaN1947 (187 comments )
Reply Link Flag
It's worked for Big Oil!
We give them billions in tax breaks and they give us, gasoline
for the amazingly low price of $3/gallon.

The idea is simple: give big, rich corporations our tax dollars
and they'll produce for us! What's good for Corporate America is
good for America. Of course, that's way too simplistic for today's
economy where there is no longer any such thing as Corporate
America (they're all multi-national), but that won't stop
Republicans from pushing it on us.
Posted by Macsaresafer (802 comments )
Link Flag
Math Skills?
Why would any right thinking american student waste their time getting engineering or math skills? They already know if they did that down the road they would be replaced by an alien with an H1B visa. They may even have to train their replacement. The real problem is that companies are controlled by evil greedy self-serving individuals with obscene salaries and perks and no imagination. All they know how to do is please similar get-rich-quick stockholders. Good riddance Ken Lay and may others soon follow!
Posted by foolmetwice (3 comments )
Reply Link Flag
Math Skills?
Why would any right thinking american student waste their time getting engineering or math skills? They already know if they did that down the road they would be replaced by an alien with an H1B visa. They may even have to train their replacement. The real problem is that companies are controlled by evil greedy self-serving individuals with obscene salaries and perks and no imagination. All they know how to do is please similar get-rich-quick stockholders. Good riddance Ken Lay and may others soon follow!
Posted by foolmetwice (3 comments )
Reply Link Flag
 

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