White House Working To Address Semiconductor Shortage Hitting Auto Production - Reviews
"General Motors Co said the global semiconductor chip shortage could shave up to $2 billion from profit in 2021"
The White House said Thursday that administration officials are working to address the growing shortage of semiconductor chips that has slowed down auto production around the world.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the Biden administration is "currently identifying potential chokepoints in the supply chain and actively working alongside key stakeholders in industry and with our trading partners to do more now."
This is one reason Biden plans to sign an executive order in the coming weeks to conduct a comprehensive review of supply chain issues for critical goods.
On Wednesday, General Motors Co. said the global semiconductor chip shortage could shave up to $2 billion from profit in 2021. On Tuesday, the largest U.S. automaker extended production cuts to three North American plants and said that it would partially build and later finish assembling vehicles in two other factories due to chip shortages.
Ford Motor Co. has previously said that it has lost production of its top-selling F-150 pickup truck. In the United States and around the world, and several other automakers have cut production.
The official added it is critical "to identify more durable solutions to addressing the longstanding issues faced by the semiconductor industry and the end users of these goods."
In a Jan 19 letter to Biden adviser Brian Deese, the United Auto Workers union and the heads of associations representing automakers, auto dealers and parts manufacturers asked the Biden administration to consider "urging major silicon wafer foundries to ramp up production of automotive grade wafers."
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