HawkInsight

  • Contact Us
  • App
  • English

U.S. Factory Problem Not Solved TSMC to Build Factory in Germany

Is it a good thing or a bad thing for TSMC to build factories everywhere??First go to the United States, the factory is built, the people are in place, it seems that everything is ready。Now it has gone to Germany again, TSMC has been revealed to have been officially approved to build a plant in Germany, focusing on 28nm capacity chips with a total investment of more than 10 billion euros, which will be TSMC's first plant in Europe.。As an enterprise, TSMC does have its helplessness, but the German plant, ah, may not go more smoothly than the American plant.。As an outsider, TSMC's U.S. plant hasn't opened yet, but the turmoil is one after another, the cost is high, there is still a shortage of people, and the people are not well managed.。Considering that the lack of skills of American workers will lead to delays in production, TSMC wanted to send someone from Taiwan to add a hand, but it was slapped by the old US, saying that TSMC was an excuse to bring in lower-paid foreign workers.。Although the latter clarification is a misunderstanding, but presumably life will not be better。And TSMC's German factories will also face labor shortages, even if the local in order to support manufacturers, the introduction of some subsidy policies, creating a lot of jobs, but the trend of Germany's aging population is really serious, which in the end who should fill the pit??At this time, Germany is still evaluating the replacement of all Huawei equipment in the railway system.。The reason why Germany agreed to subsidize TSMC is that it also wants to transfer technology and talent, and transfer more production lines to the local market in order to reduce its dependence on Asian countries.。Not to mention BenQ's lesson, it's probably unknown whether TSMC's German plant will open on schedule.。

·Original

Disclaimer: The views in this article are from the original Creator and do not represent the views or position of Hawk Insight. The content of the article is for reference, communication and learning only, and does not constitute investment advice. If it involves copyright issues, please contact us for deletion.