Armed with a new law that boosts US support for computer chip manufacturing, Vice President Kamala Harris said the administration was looking for new investments and partnerships as she sat down with Japanese technology executives on Wednesday.
The morning meeting on her last full day in Tokyo reflects
the administration's focus on boosting semiconductor manufacturing and
expanding the supply chain for critical materials.
The economy's vulnerability to disruptions in the flow of
computer chips was revealed during the pandemic, when a shortage helped
increase costs and stall the assembly of cars and other products.
“The citizens and the people of our countries rely on
products without even knowing sometimes how reliant those products are on
semiconductor chips,” Harris said during the meeting at the US ambassador's
residence.
With China investing in computer chips of its own, the US is
trying to increase its domestic semiconductor manufacturing while also working
to solidify its technology relationships with South Korea, Taiwan and Japan.
Harris said the US understands that "no one country can
satisfy the globe's demand" and "it is important that we and our
allies partner and coordinate in a way that allows us to grow and in a way that
allows us to function at a very practical level.”
Legislation signed by President Joe Biden, known as the
CHIPS and Science Act, includes $52 billion for grants and incentives for semiconductor
companies, plus a 25 percent tax credit when they invest in US facilities.
There's also about $200 billion over the next decade to support research
programs.
Harris described the legislation as “a down payment on
future American leadership,” but she emphasized that “we see Japan as playing a
very important and critical role.”
Jimmy Goodrich, vice president for global policy at the
Semiconductor Industry Association, “there's a big opportunity and significant
space for future investment" involving Japan.
Although Japan was once a world leader in computer chip
manufacturing, its status has eroded over the last two decades, and the country
is increasingly worried about falling behind.
Much like the United States has done, Japan has set up its
own fund to support semiconductor production. Out of $4.3 billion, $3.3 billion
is being provided in subsidies for a new factory in Kumamoto, in the country's
southwest.
The facility is slated to begin production by the end of
2024, and it's a partnership between the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
Co., Sony Group, and Denso.
The companies participating in the meeting with Harris
include Tokyo Electron, Nikon, Hitachi High Tech Group, Fujitsu Limited,
Micron, and others.
When Biden was in Japan earlier this year, the two nations
agreed to work together on computer chips, including through a joint group
focused on developing more powerful technologies.
There are worries that if Japan is slow to act, the fruits
of the Biden initiative may likely be snatched up by another, and more ready,
Asian ally, South Korea.
Yasutoshi Nishimura, the Japanese minister for economy,
trade and industry, has repeatedly stressed the US-Japan alliance on
semiconductors, as well as energy and other issues.
In recent meetings with US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo
and US Ambassador Rahm Emanuel, Nishimura has promised to set up a facility for
semiconductor chips research in Japan this year, and expand the partnership on
semiconductors with other allies, including Europe and Taiwan.
Atsushi Sunami, who teaches at The National Graduate
Institute for Policy Studies, or GRIPS, in Tokyo, noted that the drawbacks to
Japan tackling advanced semiconductor technology may be rooted in the view that
Japan should not get involved in defense studies.
That view stems from Japan's role in World War II and the
prevalent pacifist views, both in Japan and in international circles, that came
after its defeat. But Sunami stressed a quick rethinking was in order, and the
US moves, given the US-Japan alliance, could be an opportunity for Japan.
“As the US-China hegemonic competition escalates, how Japan
hopes to position itself in the jockeying for international standards and
rule-making, and the strategic formation of alliances among nations, as well as
among companies, will be critically meaningful,” he said in a report earlier
this year.
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