Become a global chip power, India officially announced its actions, and the United States may become a variable
India has now officially announced that it will negotiate investments among chipmakers in the United States, South Korea, Japan to increase subsidies for chip production. According to India, most of these companies have invested in India to build factories to help India become a major chip manufacturing country on a global scale.
It is admirable that India still does not have its own semiconductor manufacturing plant, but it has such ambitions. In the words of the older generation, before they learned to walk, they thought about running away.
However, India's ambitions are not small, and as more and more chipmakers join the negotiations, even Foxconn is unlikely to give up India's chip subsidies.
It is only when Indians are more optimistic about the development of chip manufacturing in their own country that foreign countries say: the United States or other countries have become a major variable for them.
However, India's ambitions in chip manufacturing are not inferior to those of the United States. On the one hand, it wants to keep up with the footsteps of the United States, because the United States believes that in view of the new situation of the global semiconductor industry, huge subsidies have formed an independent chip chain. Another reason is that many countries, such as India, Vietnam, and the European Union, have begun to produce upstream and downstream of chips.
The second point is definitely that the "good old man" United States wants to be more closely linked to India. Last year, the two countries reached an agreement on semiconductors to strengthen cooperation. Subsequently, many American companies began to invest in India. It is worth mentioning that American companies now have a large number of key technologies, and if they are willing to deepen cooperation with India, India will undoubtedly enjoy the benefits brought by American technology.
Because of this, India is hostile to Chinese companies. After all, according to the old American norms, they are also quite harsh on Chinese companies. One way in which India has shown goodwill is by showing goodwill.
But does the U.S. really want to help India with semiconductor projects? Probably not.
I don't know if you remember that when India announced that India's iPhone sales were still growing, India's top leader stated that it would not compare with the mainland's manufacturing industry, and praised the mainland's manufacturing industry across the board. At the same time, within India, there is a voice: "There is no time to make yourself stronger, but to be better".
Don't you think it's just a coincidence? Even if this is not a coincidence, at least in some ways, the "good old man" United States is not interested in its potential competitors. They just want to use India to suppress other countries that develop semiconductors, and of course, we are no exception.
In addition, the semiconductor industry in the United States is now letting them deal with the technological hegemony of the United States, and a large amount of subsidies are just to make American technology more influential. If at this time, India's semiconductor industry begins to compete with other countries, will the United States sit idly by? Unless they believe that India does not have the capacity to develop its own semiconductors, and that everything is under their control.
Under such an analysis, what foreign countries say is true, and under their ambitions, the actions and attitudes of the U.S. semiconductor industry may have become its variables. In the final analysis, the premise of cooperation is to take out one's own things, and if there is no value, it may not end well.
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