A trade group for the semiconductor industry on Wednesday called on US government leaders to boost funding for chip research and science education while easing limits on green cards in an effort to counter China's investments in chip technology.
The Semiconductor Industry Association, which represents firms such as Intel, Micron Technology, and Nvidia, is asking US officials to raise federal funding for chip research from a current $1.5 billion to $5 billion over the next five years and double funding for related fields such as materials science.
The group also wants changes to help it recruit skilled workers. In the short term, that means making it easier for skilled immigrants the industry needs from countries such as China and India to obtain permanent US residency. And in the long term that means boosting education spending to double the number of American science and engineering graduates by 2029.
The two efforts are meant to play off one another, with increased research dollars for US national labs, universities and companies creating more jobs for the new graduates, Sanjay Mehrotra, chief executive of Micron and current chair of the trade group, told Reuters.
"It helps feed the pipeline of ... talent that is very much needed to maintain global competitiveness in the industry," he said.
The US semiconductor group wants funding to counter the rise of China's chip industry, which is booming as the government there has poured research dollars into advancing the technology along with related fields such as artificial intelligence. China imports hundreds of billions of dollars worth of chips but can currently supply only a fraction of its demand domestically.
Chinese officials are seeking to change that dynamic and last year fast-tracked plans to bolster the country's chip industry after the United States banned sales of chips to the Chinese phone vendor ZTE Corp, nearly crippling the company before US officials relented.
The US chip industry group is also asking for US trade agreements to include provisions for the fair treatment of US firms in foreign courts during intellectual property disputes.
"It's no secret that when an American company has an (intellectual property) problem in China, they don't get any significant relief in Chinese courts," John Neuffer, chief executive of the trade group, told Reuters.
In November, the US Justice Department indicted two companies based in China and Taiwan alleging they conspired to steal trade secrets from Micron.
© Thomson Reuters 2019
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