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President Joe Biden tours the building site for a new Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. computer chip plant Dec. 6, 2022, in Phoenix. (AP) President Joe Biden tours the building site for a new Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. computer chip plant Dec. 6, 2022, in Phoenix. (AP)

President Joe Biden tours the building site for a new Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. computer chip plant Dec. 6, 2022, in Phoenix. (AP)

Louis Jacobson
By Louis Jacobson February 29, 2024
Amy Sherman
By Amy Sherman February 29, 2024

Fact-checking Joe Biden’s statement about semiconductor investments and CHIPS Act

If Your Time is short

  • A Semiconductor Industry Association analysis updated Feb. 26 said that $256 billion in private investments had been announced across 22 states since 2020, when precursor legislation to the CHIPS and Science Act was proposed. 

  • The White House website says that during the Biden administration, private companies have committed to investing $640 billion in technology industries. It credits Biden's agenda that included multiple pieces of legislation, not just the CHIPS and Science Act.

  • Three economists told us that Biden’s numbers are based on what companies have announced. That’s not the same as dollars already spent. 

  • Our mission: Help you be an informed participant in democracy. Learn more.

Ahead of his 2024 State of the Union address, President Joe Biden said that legislation under his watch boosted private sector investment in the semiconductor industry.

"I signed the CHIPS and Science Act, which attracted $640 billion in private companies’ investments that are building factories, creating jobs in America again," Biden said Feb. 12 at a Washington, D.C., conference for county officials. 

The White House has repeated this figure on numerous occasions, but attributed it to multiple pieces of legislation signed by Biden — not just the CHIPS Act. Economists told us that these numbers are based on company announcements and all of the spending may not come to fruition or could be years from now. Investments increased before the legislation passed.

The CHIPS Act led to more investment

Semiconductors, sometimes referred to as integrated circuits or microchips, are "the brains of modern electronics," the Semiconductor Industry Association says. They are often made from silicon and are used in medical devices, communications devices, computing, defense, transportation, clean energy, artificial intelligence and advanced wireless networks, the association says.

The CHIPS and Science Act, which U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, introduced in 2021, passed as a rare example of bipartisanship, with 17 Republicans voting for it in the Senate and 24 in the House joining Democrats in support. Biden signed it into law in August 2022. Lawmakers wanted to pass the bill amid a global semiconductor shortage and to help the U.S. compete with China.

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Analysts at the consulting company McKinsey said the CHIPS Act is a $280 billion spending package over 10 years that includes research money and $53 billion for manufacturing.

A Semiconductor Industry Association analysis updated Feb. 26 said that $256 billion in private investments had been announced across 22 states since 2020, when precursor legislation to the CHIPS and Science Act was proposed. 

For example, news outlets reported that GlobalFoundries, a semiconductor manufacturer, said in February it would invest more than $12 billion over the next 10-plus years after the U.S. Commerce Department agreed to give the New York-based company $1.5 billion. GlobalFoundries will use the money to expand and create manufacturing capacity to produce more chips.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce wrote in August that the private sector and federal government have made "significant strides" in implementing the law. But the chamber called for additional steps to expand the talent pipeline, including investing in K-12 education. The chamber added that "immigration reform is also necessary to meet current and future talent needs for the semiconductor industry."

We found multiple instances when Biden or the White House described the $640 billion figure as stemming from his broader agenda — not just the CHIPS and Science Act: 

  • The White House’s website says that during the Biden administration, "private companies have announced $649 billion so far in commitments to invest in 21st century industries like $235B Semiconductors & Electronics." It then lists other industries, too. The website says that the White House arrived at that dollar amount by looking at press releases, information from industry associations and news articles. The website notes several bills passed during the Biden administration including the Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

  • In Raleigh, North Carolina, on Jan. 18 Biden said, "Thanks to the Investing in America agenda, private companies have invested over $640 billion — let me say it again — $640 billion in advanced manufacturing here in America."

  • A Jan. 29 press release said, "Since President Biden took office, private companies have announced more than $640 billion in clean energy and manufacturing investments, including over $230 billion in semiconductor manufacturing." 

  • A Feb. 14 White House press release said, "To date, the administration has now launched over 50,000 infrastructure and clean energy projects and mobilized over $640 billion in private sector clean energy and manufacturing investments."

Biden’s numbers are based on announcements

Three economists told us that Biden’s numbers are based on what companies have announced. That’s not the same as dollars already spent.

"These are announcements and announcements are great but are not actual investments," said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the center-right American Action Forum. Some of these investments may never happen, he said, and if they happen we won’t know when that will be.

Dean Baker, co-founder of the liberal Center for Economic and Policy Research, said that if the economy-stimulating effects of all three bills are considered, Biden’s numbers seem reasonable. He added that estimating how much bills spur private investment is hard because no one knows how much investment there might have been absent the legislation.

"There clearly has been a huge uptick in investment and we know this will continue into the future, based on companies' commitments," he said. "Of course, the latter are never hard data until their investment is actually carried out. Companies are always free to change their plans, and they do."

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Sanjay Patnaik, an economist at the Brookings Institution, a Washington. D.C., think tank, said some investments will take a long time to manifest because they involve building new plants. Also, he said, it is hard to separate the CHIPS Act’s effects on investments in semiconductor manufacturing and jobs from other factors, such as rising demand from the artificial intelligence boom.

There are geopolitical considerations, too: Companies want to rely less on China and worry about a military conflict arising between China and Taiwan, a noted chip manufacturing hub. So, to diversify their manufacturing, these companies may consider making chips in the U.S. 

"Based on the limited analysis and data out there, announced investments in the semiconductor industry appear to have increased somewhat following the enactment of the CHIPS Act," and other legislation, Patnaik said. "However, in some cases, investments already seemed to have ramped up before passage of the act (this could have been companies investing in anticipation of the bill being approved or it could have been a trend that was reinforced by the bill)."

Our ruling

Biden said the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act "attracted $640 billion in private companies’ investments."

The White House website says private companies have announced investments in semiconductors and electronics manufacturing worth $235 billion, not $640 billion, since Biden was elected. 

Biden didn’t mention that the $640 billion investment refers to projects shaped by CHIPS and two other bills he signed —  the Inflation Reduction Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

It’s also important to note that the $640 billion is based on companies’ announcements. Not every project will come to fruition, and those that do may not materialize for years. Biden or the White House have described the $640 billion figure more accurately before.

In this instance, however, we rate the statement Mostly False.

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Our Sources

White House, Investing in America, Feb. 6, 2024

White House, Remarks by President Biden on High-Speed Internet Investments | Raleigh, N.C., Jan. 18, 2024

White House, Remarks by President Biden at the National Association of Counties Legislative Conference, Feb. 12, 2024

White House, Fact sheet: Biden-⁠Harris administration to kick off fourth investing in America tour to highlight how the president is delivering for communities in every corner of America, Feb. 14, 2024

Congress.gov, CHIPS and Science Act, Became law Aug. 9, 2022

U.S. Chamber of Commerce, CHIPS and Science Act anniversary: progress made but work remains, Aug. 28, 2023

Semiconductor Industry Association, The CHIPS Act has already sparked $200 billion in private investments for U.S. semiconductor production, Feb. 26, 2024

McKinsey and Company, The CHIPS and Science Act: Here’s what’s in it, Oct. 4, 2022

Congressional Research Service, Semiconductors and the CHIPS Act: The Global Context, Sept. 28, 2023

AnandTech, GlobalFoundries to receive $1.5 billion in funding from CHIPS Act, Feb. 20, 2024

GlobalFoundries, GlobalFoundries and Biden-Harris administration announce CHIPS and Science Act funding for essential chip manufacturing, Feb. 19, 2024

Politico, Biden has a high-tech problem in Michigan, Feb. 20, 2024

PolitiFact, ​​Fact-checking Joe Biden on auto jobs gained and lost on his watch and Trump’s, Jan. 29, 2024

Email interview with Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, Feb. 23, 2024

Telephone interview, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, American Action Forum president, Feb. 26, 2024

Email interview, Sanjay Patnaik, director of the Center on Regulation and Markets,Bernard L. Schwartz Chair in Economic Policy Development, Senior Fellow – Economic Studies, Feb. 26, 2024

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Fact-checking Joe Biden’s statement about semiconductor investments and CHIPS Act

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