By Stephen Anderson
For all of the media ballyhoo about the CHIPS Act, it really is a page out of the old five-year plans from the Soviet Union. The CHIPS Act will have the same success as befell the Soviets.
From Frequently Asked Questions: CHIPS Act of 2022 Provisions and Implementation
The U.S. share of global semiconductor fabrication capacity fell from about 36% in 1990 to about 10% in 2020. Policymakers became increasingly concerned about the potential implications of this trend for economic and national security reasons, and noted the risks associated with ensuring an adequate supply of semiconductors resulting from potential disruption of East Asian manufacturing and shipping due to trade disputes, natural hazards, or armed conflict. The COVID-19 pandemic and consequent interruption of semiconductor supplies to the United States—and the subsequent effects on U.S.-based industries—bolstered these concerns. U.S. overreliance on semiconductor production in East Asia and its vulnerability to disruption has been an ongoing source of concern for many Members of Congress.
Typical market distortion and misallocation of resources, free money from the taxpayer guarantees that the money will be not optimally allocated, some private resources will be diverted to please the government at the expense of other more profitable ventures. These public-private deals typically result in a Mexican stand-off, the public sector defending its allocation of funds and the private sector pretending it spent it well while it had no reason to do so. Boeing is the perfect example of dysfunctional company perverted by easy government money, once a great company it now needs a hitman budget to deal with whistleblowers having a lot to say about the company practices
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anything from the government is theft, anything the government does is abuse, anything involving the government will ultimately fail.
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to me, successful implementation depends on effective collaboration between government, industry, and academic stakeholders
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We have to defend South Korea 🇰🇷 and Taiwan 🇹🇼 if necessary
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We already have 37000 troops in South Korea
The 8th Army
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I'm objecting to the "have to" in your statement.
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We should help Taiwan and South Korea with defense and military if China or someone else invades
These two countries are important: geopolitical pivot points in Asia and Pacific and economic interests
Unlike Ukraine and Israel
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I don't care about any of that. It's not worth sending anyone to die over.
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But we rely on those countries for chips
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They can be made anywhere. If East Asia can't do it without us supplying military support, then production should move somewhere safer.