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Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Chip War by Chris Miller

This is not an area that I have any expertise, and when I saw this book on Obama's reading list, I thought wow, great, an opportunity to learn more about this. Power in the modern world - military, economic, geopolitical - is built on a foundation of computer chips. America has maintained its lead as a superpower because it has dominated advances in computer chips and all the technology that chips have enabled. (Virtually everything runs on chips: cars, phones, the stock market, even the electric grid.) Now that edge is in danger of slipping, undermined by the possibly naïve assumption that globalizing the chip industry and letting players in Taiwan, Korea and Europe take over manufacturing serves America’s interests. Currently, as Chip War reveals, China, which spends more on chips than any other product, is pouring billions into a chip-building Manhattan Project to catch up to the US. This book recounts in a voice that can be understood by the least informed of us, myself included, the fascinating sequence of events that led to the United States perfecting chip design, and how faster chips helped defang the Soviet Union by rendering the Russians’ arsenal of precision-guided weapons obsolete). The battle to control this industry will shape our future. China spends more money importing chips than buying oil, and they are China’s greatest external vulnerability as they are fundamentally reliant on foreign chips. But with 37 per cent of the global supply of chips being made in Taiwan, within easy range of Chinese missiles, the West’s fear is that a solution may be close at hand.

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