Tech war: China pumps up state subsidies for chip industry to counter US sanctions

Government subsidies received by leading players in China’s semiconductor industry – including foundries, chip design and packaging firms – jumped significantly last year, as Beijing doubled down on efforts to boost technological self-sufficiency amid growing tensions with Washington.

The South China Morning Post examined financial statements from 25 of the country’s best known semiconductor companies, including its top two contract chip makers – Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) and Hua Hong Semiconductor. They showed that state backing for those companies amounted to 20.53 billion yuan (US$2.82 billion) last year, a 35 per cent increase from 2022.

Those subsidies made up only a portion of the total government support granted to the Chinese chip sector, which includes privately-held companies that do not disclose financial figures. Neither do they encompass other forms of state support, such as direct investments and low-interest loans.

Still, the numbers underscore the urgency of Beijing’s drive to boost the nation’s semiconductor industry, as the US tightened its export controls to restrict China’s access to advanced processors and chip-making technologies.

Among the 25 firms analysed by the Post, Huawei Technologies, which is privately held but voluntarily discloses key financial data, received the most government subsidies. The US-sanctioned company obtained 7.3 billion yuan in government subsidies in 2023, compared with 6.5 billion yuan in 2022 and 2.6 billion yuan in 2021.

In recent weeks, Huawei has been allowing potential clients to try out its Ascend 910C chips, successor to the 910B that is benchmarked against Nvidia’s H100, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday, citing unnamed sources.

Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD, which owns a car-chip foundry, came in second on the list, having secured 4.6 billion yuan in government subsidies in 2023, up 176 per cent year on year.

SMIC, which ranked third, was awarded about 2.6 billion yuan in government subsidies last year, up by 32 per cent year on year, while its rival Hua Hong, in sixth place, received 778.9 milllion yuan in government subsidies in 2023, around 9 per cent more than the previous year.

In fourth place was Sanan Optoelectronics, a major manufacturer of epitaxial wafers and chips, which collected 1.7 billion yuan in government subsidies last year, an increase of 60 per cent year on year.

Companies lower down the list reported significant growth in government backing. Subsidies given to Kingsemi, which produces lithography coating and development systems, more than doubled last year, while those for Piotech, which specialises in plasma-enhanced chemical vapour deposition tools, rose 93 per cent.

While the Chinese semiconductor industry has made steady progress in less advanced technologies, bottlenecks persist in some areas, such as lithography systems, inspection and metrology tools.

To counter mounting pressure from US tech sanctions, China in May set up its largest-ever chip investment fund. The third phase of the China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, also known as the “Big Fund”, is expected to bolster Beijing’s support for the nation’s leading contract semiconductor manufacturers and other enterprises in the value chain, including equipment and material suppliers.

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