星空无限传媒

漏 2025 星空无限传媒
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Former staff member remembers President Jimmy Carter as honest, caring and hardworking
Business & Economy

Intel's $20 billion investment in Ohio promises thousands of jobs, but can the state and company deliver?

A 3D rendering of the two chip fabs that will be built in central Ohio. The fabs are set to begin construction later in 2022, with production set to kickoff in 2025.
Courtesy of Intel
/
Intel
A 3D rendering of the two chip fabs that will be built in central Ohio. The fabs are set to begin construction later in 2022, with production set to kickoff in 2025.

Intel鈥檚 $20 billion investment just east of Columbus promises thousands of jobs and economic benefits for Central Ohio. It鈥檚 a massive commitment from the state and company to deliver on these promises.

Intel has also lagged behind its competitors in recent years but plans to address that with a new strategy, which includes Ohio.

Intel projects that two microchip factories, or fabs as they call them, will create 7,000 construction jobs and 3,000 permanent positions with an average salary of about $130,000. The deal was announced in January, when Governor Mike DeWine called it a major win for Ohio.

Governor Mike DeWine speaking at an event announcing Intel's $20 billion investment in central Ohio.
Courtesy of Walden Kirsch/Intel Corporation
Governor Mike DeWine speaking at an event announcing Intel's $20 billion investment in central Ohio.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really a game changer; a game changer for our economic future," DeWine said. "We won. They chose Ohio."

Maybe a game changer for the local economy, but it also cost the state a lot- more than $2 billion in total incentives for things like tax breaks and infrastructure upgrades.

But not all deals go according to plan. Speaking at a Ohio State adjunct professor and economist raised some questions about the state and Intel鈥檚 investment. Shkurti pointed to the competitive and changing nature of the semiconductor market.

鈥淲hat we have to hope is Intel鈥檚 management is on top of that as they seem to be and if they aren鈥檛 it could ripple backwards," he said. "The point I鈥檓 making here is Intel could be a big win for Ohio, but it鈥檚 not guaranteed.鈥

Shkurti and OSU researcher , just looking at Intel鈥檚 promises and comparing them to similar projects from Ohio鈥檚 past and others like it across the country. It ends with proposed questions for future governors, like how they will maintain the promise of more jobs.

鈥淚ntel Comes to Ohio: Prospects and Challenges,鈥 compares Intel鈥檚 promises to other large manufacturer commitments in other states. It also examines Ohio鈥檚 history with other manufacturers like Honda and General Motors.

Shkurti and Stewart show how the GM Lordstown plant employed 10,500 workers at its peak in 1985. It enjoyed a successful 20-year run, but employment 鈥渄ropped steadily to fewer than 1,500 workers,鈥 before it closed in 2019. Meanwhile, Honda continued to surge and provided higher paying jobs.

But Ohio鈥檚 growth in terms of jobs and 鈥減er capita鈥 income continued to lag the rest of the nation. As Shkurti and Steward said, 鈥渢his is not a reflection on GM or Honda,鈥 and that the decline would have been worse without them. But it 鈥渦nderscores the challenges of turning around a 鈥渓arge and complex state economy.鈥

Those are juxtaposed to the Intel commitment and how all deals could come with big benefits, but don鈥檛 always work out.

A statement from Intel says they plan to invest up to $100 million to develop partnerships

Kristina M. Johnson, president of The Ohio State University, speaking at the Intel announcement evemt.
Courtesy of Walden Kirsch/Intel Corporation
Kristina M. Johnson, president of The Ohio State University, speaking at the Intel announcement event.

with Ohio colleges and the National Science Foundation to, 鈥渄evelop and attract a pipeline of skilled talent in the region.鈥

Intel is working with local academic partners to develop resources geared towards semiconductor courses, research projects and lab equipment upgrades at different schools.

It鈥檚 also worth noting that in recent years Intel fell behind its chip competitors, like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company or TSMC, AMD and Samsung. Ohio State professor of business and operation analytics, Elliot Bendoly, said the company had dropped the ball.

鈥淭hey viewed themselves as the one dominant player and that was a flawed approach to innovation,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t took a while to figure that out for them, and to recognize it, and change what they鈥檙e doing.鈥

Intel struggled in 2021. The company experienced , according to Gartner Research. In a report published by Raymond James financial services in February, the company鈥檚 stock is down by 30% compared to last year. It also charts downturns in the market in previous years.

Apple with Intel in 2020 over chip size and efficiency concerns. They鈥檙e now making their own chips and partnering with other companies.

Intel mass produces chips at 10 nanometers. A nanometer is a measuring unit that defines how large the chip is and its efficiency. Samsung and TSMC produce chips at 5 nanometers which are much smaller. In the world of semiconductors, smaller is better.

However, Bendoly said that Intel has shown recently that it can be flexible in terms of innovation.

鈥淭he semiconductor industry is a very large industry," he said. "It鈥檚 not all about iPhone, it鈥檚 not all about any one product. Intel is a diverse group. It does a lot of things now, maybe things they wouldn鈥檛 have considered 10 years ago. Their portfolio is much broader than it ever has been before.鈥

Intel last year to advance and innovate semiconductor research, development, and manufacturing. It announced partnerships with Amazon and Qualcomm last year to produce chips for those companies.

At an annual event last summer, Intel announced a strategy committed to chip building. The company will makefive process node transitions over the next four years,鈥 achieving 鈥減arity performance鈥 by 2024 and 鈥渓eadership" by 2025.

Intel currently ships 10nanometer chips. It expects the newer and faster Intel 20A chips to be in mass production by 2025.
Intel Accelerate 2021
Intel currently ships 10nanometer chips. It expects the newer and faster Intel 20A chips to be in mass production by 2025.

Ohio鈥檚 two chip fabs are set to begin production in Licking County that same year. County Commissioner Tim Bubb said he is confident that Intel can deliver on its promises, but the proof is in the pudding.

An aerial look at the farm land in Licking County where Intel plan on building two semiconductor chip factories.
Intel
Licking County annexed over 1,000 acres of land from Jersey Township into New Albany for the proposed Intel chip factories.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a fairly quick timetable," Bubb said. "The state of Ohio has made a huge commitment and time will tell how this works out. It鈥檚 a brave new world for us here having literally [one of the] state-of-the-art chip making campus facilities in the world. I think we鈥檙e still trying to get our arms around that.鈥

The company has made similar investments elsewhere, including a $20 billion commitment in Arizona to build two new chip fabs. That project broke ground last year.

There鈥檚 also a substantial bill in Congress, the , that would create a $52 billion subsidy for U.S semiconductor manufacturers. If that passes, Intel could invest another $100 billion in Ohio and build a total of eight chip fabs in the county.

Construction on the two fabs is set to start later this year.

Outside of infrastructure, the $2 billion in incentives provided by Ohio will be performance based. If Intel fails to deliver, any disbursed funds

Tyler Thompson was a reporter and on-air host for 89.7 NPR News. Thompson, originally from northeast Ohio, has spent the last three years working as a Morning Edition host and reporter at NPR member station KDLG Public Radio and reporter at the Bristol Bay Times Newspaper in Dillingham, Alaska.
Related Content