Singapore eyes chips investments: Official

 

Bloomberg

Singapore will be looking to win its “fair share” of investments in semiconductor assembly and integrated
circuit design, a top official said, amid a growing geopolitical divide between the US and China over trade and technology.
The city-state will be focussing on the semiconductor value chain of activities, Beh Swan Gin, chairman of Singapore’s Economic Development Board, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin, as he discussed the fallout of the US’s so-called CHIPS Act aimed at wooing investments back to America and stemming China’s economic influence.
The move by President Joe Biden’s administration is a “muscular industrial policy to bring back manufacturing and technology development to the US,” Beh said.
“It has definitely made competition for investments more intensive and certainly for the type of investments that today Singapore is also aiming for.”
“We will have to take it as it is and we will do our best to secure our fair share,” he said, noting separately that Singapore currently accounts for about 5% of the global wafer fabs output.

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