tooLongInEDA
Moderator
The "can-do" Americans moved onto more exciting (for them) leading edge technology areas with higher immediate ROI. They certainly have not stopped innovating. There are pluses and minuses to US corporate culture (the invention of the cube farm is not anything to boast about in my book) but they've certainly mastered the tech startup and successfully exported that model around the world over the last 20 years.What's with the patriotic American "can-do"-ism? US "playing too nice"? When has the US ever played to nice when something serves its national interest?
You talk like the US actually does anything innovative for the sake of innovation, when it's really just all about money.The reason the US fell behind in semis is the same reason it fell behind on manufacturing in general - deregulated capitalism with no central planning. Companies move production offshore to cut cost and increase profit margins. Moving production back do domestic shores will only happen if it makes sense financially - some subsidies from the Feds is nice but ultimately just a band-aid compared to what China is able to do with their industry planning.
As for Taiwan and South Korea, they are just too far ahead by this point for any other country to seriously catch up. And that situation won't change for as long as big American tech companies continue to rely on them for their tech leadership.
Capitalism is a an ouroboro. We reap what we sow.
This exactly. Intel embodies the textbook American corporate culture. For a long time after WWII America has enjoyed a financial & industry monopoly on international trade because, well, most other industrial countries were bombed into smoking ruins. Times have changed and we no longer have tech & industrial leadership. Intel's business model simply can't compete anymore. To truly innovate they will need to open up and allow ideas and technologies to flow, instead of guarding their secrets like some cultish cabal.
That alone has bootstrapped a lot of technical and business advance around the world. I've always found the US technical/business culture the most open.
All big companies tend to become inward looking. Intel has the additional challenge of having been an effective monopoly supplier for so long. I'm not sure that's unique to the US.
It's tempting to believe that the US have somehow has a "free ride" since WW2 and enjoyed some sort of "unfair advantage". If there was (I'm dubious on that), I suspect that's second order and that the first order advantage is their innovation and hard work. [I'm not from the US].
One detail - over the last 30 years, the largest exporting countries have been Germany, Japan and China. The US might have strong influence, but it's not dominant.
Back to the point - does it really matter that the fabs are offshore ? Since the US is the defence guarantor of Korea (and presumably Taiwan) ? In the worst case, you can either take the hit on extra defence costs (if it's not enough already) to mitigate the risk or bring the fabs back - or both.