TSMC founder says he supports US efforts to slow China’s chip advances

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TSMC founder Morris Chang said that in the chip sector, globalisation is dead.

TSMC founder Morris Chang said that in the chip sector, globalisation is dead.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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TAIPEI - The retired founder of TSMC said on Thursday that even as he supported United States’ efforts to

slow China’s advances in the semiconductor industry,

the “bifurcation” of the global supply chain and the reversal of globalisation would increase prices and reduce the ubiquity of chips that power the modern world.

“There’s no question in my mind that, in the chip sector, globalisation is dead. Free trade is not quite that dead, but it’s in danger,” Mr Morris Chang said, speaking at an event hosted by Taiwan’s CommonWealth Magazine.

“When the costs go up, the pervasiveness of chips will either stop or slow down considerably,” said Mr Chang, who at 91 remains an influential voice in Taiwan’s chip industry. “We are going to be in a different game.”

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, or TSMC, is Asia’s most valuable listed company and a major Apple supplier.

In Taiwan, TSMC is widely regarded as the “sacred mountain protecting the country”, because of its economic importance.

China has in recent years

ramped up diplomatic and military pressure

against Taiwan, which Beijing views as its territory, raising concerns about the fate of the chip fabs that dot Taiwan’s western coast and produce the majority of the world’s most advanced chips if China blockades or attacks the island.

United States “onshoring” and “friendshoring” efforts to boost chip manufacturing stateside or in allied countries present a predicament for Taiwan.

“Friendshore does not include Taiwan. In fact, the commerce secretary has said repeatedly that Taiwan is a very dangerous place, we cannot – America cannot – rely on Taiwan for chips,” Mr Chang said. “Now that, of course, is I think Taiwan’s dilemma.”

TSMC is expanding its global production footprint, even as it keeps its most advanced technology in Taiwan.

In late 2022, TSMC began construction of a second chip factory in Arizona which will start production in 2026, using advanced 3-nanometer technology. The company’s total investment in the US project amounts to US$40 billion (S$54 billion).

Meanwhile, the Chinese government is ploughing billions into bolstering its chip sector, but Mr Chang said China’s chip manufacturing technology lags that of Taiwan by “at least five or six years”. REUTERS

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