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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Overview

The first five years of the 1990s were a period of tremendous growth for the semiconductor materials industry. The increase in production of computers swelled the need for semiconductors, as did the significant increase in semiconductor orders from the communications industry, various consumer products manufacturers, and the automotive industry. The U.S. re-emerged over Japan as the largest producer of semiconductors in 1995. As a result, most segments of the U.S. semiconductor materials industry -- manufacturing equipment, components and parts, and raw materials -- were healthier in 1995 than they were in 1991.

The 1990s also witnessed the increased globalization of the semiconductor manufacturing and semiconductor materials industry. Japan remains the second most important producer, but major new industry centers emerged in such nations as South Korea and Taiwan, and nascent but important industries appeared in Singapore, Malaysia, and Hong Kong. This increased competition and the rising costs of research and development forced some smaller U.S. companies to join larger corporate entities, domestic or foreign, to win needed capital for expansion.

Global competition has impaired one significant area of the U.S. semiconductor materials industry. Total shipments of domestic packaging materials declined in several important areas between 1991 and 1995, the time period studied for all aspects of this assessment. In addition, total research and development in this area fell a dramatic 94 percent between 1991 and 1995. The decline in R&D was indicative of the abandoned effort by two U.S. companies to challenge the foreign domination of the U.S. ceramic materials industry. The episode demonstrates that even in a time of sharply increasing demand for semiconductors, global competition has itself also correspondingly increased.

Background

Participants

Manufacturing Base

Cooperative Agreements

Financial Data

Employment

Shipping Information

Defense Shipments

Research and Development

Sourcing and Dependency

Competitiveness

Category

Product

Foreign Share

 

PM2

 

Ceramic Packages

95 percent

 

TM2

 

Die/Package Burn-In Fixtures

85 percent

 

WF1ai

 

Single-Crystal Silicon Wafers

77 percent

 

PM2a

 

Glass/Frit or Epoxy Seal Ceramic Package

70 percent

 

PM6

 

Die Attach Materials

70 percent

 

PM1a

 

Etched/Stamped Lead frames

65 percent

 

PM2biv

 

Pin Grid Arrays

65 percent

 

PM3a

 

Molding Compounds

65 percent

 

WF3c

 

Photo blanks

65 percent

 

PM2aii

 

Cerquad Ceramic Packages

60 percent

 

AM4b

 

Dicing Saw Blades

60 percent

 

HT1

 

Quartz Products

60 percent

 

PM1b

 

Lead frame Plating Chemicals

55 percent

 

WF7b

 

Sputtering Targets

51 percent

 

PM4ai

 

Gold Bonding Wire

40 percent

 

HT4b

 

Boron Nitride Crucibles

35 percent

 

TM1b

 

Probing Materials

29 percent

 

PM8

 

Hybrid Packaging Materials

20 percent

 

WF4a

 

Positive Resists

16 percent

 

WF4c

 

Advanced Resists

16 percent

 

CR

 

Clean Room/Antistatic/Antipart

15 percent

 

WF7d

 

Spin-on-Glass

10 percent

Conclusions