While researching the semiconductor shortages, I heard a theory that the COVID-19 pandemic wasn't
really the root cause. This idea suggests that the pandemic only exposed inherent weaknesses in our supply chains. Similar to how an iceberg exposed flawed design in the Titanic. One explanation for how these weaknesses were introduced turned out to be a fascinating story involving Toyota's history.
Meanwhile, I happened to be reading a book about the creation of America's Army Air Force and a particular strategy it developed. According to the book, a flood in Pittsburg in 1936 wiped out a certain factory that made a certain spring for propellers used in airplanes. For want of a little spring, airplane manufacturing took a nosedive for years. This gave the officers developing air tactics at Maxwell Field an idea which became "Industrial Choke Point Theory". They believed it could win future wars with limited ground combat. I couldn't help but see the parallels between the 2021 chip crisis and the new (old) USAA strategy. When the new theory was tested on the Germans in WWII, it didn't get the result they were looking for because supply chains in the 1940s were so much more robust than todays.
Now in 2021, America and other industrialized countries around the world are thinking differently about supply chains and their potential effect on national security. But this leads to the question... What unintended consequences can we expect from this new reality of government intervention into the chip business?
This article is my effort to tell this story. Full disclosure, I'm no expert in supply chains or the semiconductor business. But in researching and writing the facts as I understood them, I found the string of connections from history to today's situation fascinating and I hope other's will too.
From 2021 Semiconductor Shortages to Global Chip Glut
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