Semiconductor giant TSMC has revealed that subsidies obtained from the Japanese and Chinese governments reached NT$47.545 billion ($1.51 billion) in 2023, marking a 5.74-fold increase year-on-year, according to Taiwanese media outlet Economic Daily News. With its ongoing expansion of overseas facilities, TSMC anticipates further subsidies from Japan this year, along with potential new subsidies from the US and Germany.

Why it matters: As nations compete to enhance their domestic semiconductor manufacturing sectors via subsidies, TSMC has become a key target for government investment in local facilities.

Details: In 2023, TSMC’s Japanese subsidiary JASM and its mainland Chinese counterpart in Nanjing secured subsidies from the respective governments of Japan and China, which primarily for real estate, building factories, purchasing equipment, and funding production facility costs.

  • In 2022, subsidies from the Japanese and Chinese governments reached around NT$7.051 billion ($220 million), soaring 574% to NT$47.545 billion ($1.51 billion) in 2023. Although TSMC did not specify the exact breakdown of the subsidies, previous data indicates that the Japanese government decided to grant TSMC’s Kumamoto Fab 1 JPY 476 billion ($3.2 billion) in phased subsidies, as reported by Chinese media outlet Icsmart
  • TSMC’s 2023 subsidies from mainland China primarily originated from the expansion project at its Nanjing plant, the Icsmart report added. In April 2021, TSMC announced a plan to invest $2.88 billion in expanding its 28nm process manufacturing at the Nanjing facility, to meet a rising demand for automotive chips and the global chip shortage.
  • TSMC is currently investing $40 billion to construct a semiconductor fab in Arizona, with plans to manufacture 4nm and 3nm chips. A recent Bloomberg report suggests that Intel may receive around $10 billion in subsidies under the US’s CHIPS Act. According to analysis by Icsmart, using Intel’s investment and estimated subsidy amount as a reference point, TSMC could potentially receive nearly $10 billion in subsidies as well.
  • TSMC is also collaborating with Infineon, NXP Semiconductors, and Bosch to invest €10 billion in constructing a semiconductor factory in Dresden, a city in eastern Germany. The German government is also expected to give about €5 billion in subsidies, according to news agency Focus Taiwan.

Context:TSMC’s Kumamoto Fab 1 started operations on Feb. 24 and is aiming to mass-produce 28/16/12nm chips in the fourth quarter of 2024. By the end of this year, TSMC plans to establish a second fab in Kumamoto, targeting production by late 2027, with a focus on 7/6nm processes.

  • After the opening ceremony of Kumamoto Fab 1, Japan’s Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry, Ken Saito, announced that the government will subsidize TSMC with JPY 732 billion ($4.94 billion) for the construction of Kumamoto Fab 2 on the site.

Jessie Wu is a tech reporter based in Shanghai. She covers consumer electronics, semiconductor, and the gaming industry for TechNode. Connect with her via e-mail: jessie.wu@technode.com.