SAN JOSE - Although U.S. semiconductor manufacturers still have 47% of
the worldwide chip market, only 20% of state-of-the-art production facilities
now under construction are in the U.S. Lower tax rates and incentives that
reduce the cost of capital in other countries - not lower labor costs - are the
principal reasons why most new manufacturing facilities currently being built
are outside the U.S., according to the Semiconductor Industry Association.
"A
dramatic shift in semiconductor manufacturing is now under way," said SIA
president George Scalise in testimony before the US-China Economic and Security
Review Commission in Palo Alto,
CA, on April 21.
"Approximately two-thirds of the 300mm wafer fabrication facilities now
under construction worldwide are in Asia, with a significant portion of those
facilities in China.
Chinese government policies - not lower labor costs - are the principal factor
in a differential of more than $1 billion in the 10-year cost of building and
operating a 300mm wafer fab in the U.S.
versus China,"
Scalise said.
"Even
an 80% differential in wage rates between China
and the U.S.
is not a major factor in plant location decisions because semiconductor wafer
fabrication facilities are capital- and technology-intensive," Scalise
continued. "Government incentives such as favorable tax treatment and
other assistance programs account for approximately 90% of the cost
differential. Like it or not, the reality is that government incentives play a
major role in where investment takes place. Given the critical importance of
semiconductors in driving U.S.
economic growth and ensuring our national security, maintaining a competitive
semiconductor manufacturing capability and a supporting ecosystem must be an
important priority for America's
federal and state governments."
Scalise
said the U.S.
needs a coordinated strategy to reduce the cost differential created by foreign
government tax and incentive policies. He recommended a number of specific
actions that Congress should take to change policies that discourage investment
in capital-intensive manufacturing facilities in the U.S., including:
•
Providing federal tax holidays to match the tax holidays offered by overseas
competitors.
• Making
the R&D tax credit permanent and enacting enhancements to make it more
effective.
•
Allowing companies to expense high-tech manufacturing equipment in order to
improve cash flow and stimulate investment in new equipment.
•
Re-examining international taxation rules and considering alternatives to the
current rules on taxing foreign-source income.
•
Enacting significant tax rate reductions to make manufacturing costs in the U.S. more
competitive with costs in other countries.
"Leadership
in semiconductor technology is ours to keep, or ours to lose. The investments
and policy changes needed to allow U.S. manufacturers to compete in
the face of foreign incentives designed to lure investment offshore are neither
easy nor inexpensive, but it is vital that we make them. The first step is that
we must choose to compete," Scalise concluded.
The full
text of the SIA testimony can be found at https://www.sia-online.org/downloads/testimony_china_050421.pdf.