
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A primary driver of early-pandemic inflation came from a shortage of semiconductor microchips, a technology essential to everyday items like automobiles and personal electronics that is both expensive and time-intensive to produce. While semiconductor manufacturing has since managed to narrow the gap between supply and demand, US policymakers have taken steps to increase domestic independence in this burgeoning industry. In this episode, we talk with Annie Rothrock, Vice President of the firm ATREG, about how the semiconductor microchip industry changed throughout the pandemic and how recent Federal legislation will shape its future.
By Will Compernolle5
2020 ratings
A primary driver of early-pandemic inflation came from a shortage of semiconductor microchips, a technology essential to everyday items like automobiles and personal electronics that is both expensive and time-intensive to produce. While semiconductor manufacturing has since managed to narrow the gap between supply and demand, US policymakers have taken steps to increase domestic independence in this burgeoning industry. In this episode, we talk with Annie Rothrock, Vice President of the firm ATREG, about how the semiconductor microchip industry changed throughout the pandemic and how recent Federal legislation will shape its future.

32,103 Listeners

30,680 Listeners

8,786 Listeners

3,072 Listeners

4,352 Listeners

2,194 Listeners

1,986 Listeners

5,467 Listeners

2,037 Listeners

9,528 Listeners

292 Listeners

10,186 Listeners

326 Listeners

271 Listeners

151 Listeners