Symbiotic relationship between semiconductor & IT - system thinking analysis for the future
System thinking analysis for the future of the symbiotic relationship between semiconductor and IT
1. FRAMING
Since mankind invented the computer,
transistors have been continuously evolving. Now, transistors have evolved into
semiconductors based on ultra-high-density integrated circuits, and they have
become the most important component that enables absolutely all computing tasks
around us, not just simple computers. In fact, semiconductors are essential not
only in mainframe computers, personal computers, and mobile devices, but also
in various electronic machines. Moreover, in recent years, it has become a key
component that enables connection/communication between electronic devices.
Another great recent change is taking place
in the automotive industry. The internal combustion engine vehicle, which has
been pointed out as one of the main culprits of global warming due to CO2
emissions, is rapidly being replaced by electric vehicles that operate based on
computing technology and battery technology. In addition, the characteristic of
electric vehicles is that they operate not only on battery power, but also that
they are equipped with an artificial intelligence function that analyzes the
surroundings through various sensors and drives the machine alone without human
intervention.
This electric vehicle market is even just
entering the early stages of growth. Accordingly, as the demand for
semiconductors for automobiles is rapidly increasing, the supply shortage of
semiconductors, which has been suffering from shortages in recent years, is
becoming more serious. Such global semiconductor production and supply is
monopolized by a very small number of countries such as Taiwan, Korea, China
and the United States, and the IT industry and the automobile industry are in
serious competition to occupy this volume. Moreover, the trade war between
countries is intensifying due to the “domestic priority” that is spreading
centering on the United States and China, and semiconductors are in the middle
of this trade war (especially between the United States and China).
Therefore, this Foresight analysis focuses on
the dynamics of semiconductor demand and supply centered on the IT industry and
electric vehicle industry, which are rapidly increasing in recent years, and
the impact of trade wars between countries. The initiative of this analysis
activity was started by referencing the following article.
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/07/chip-shortage-is-starting-to-have-major-real-world-consequences.html |
2. HISTORY AND CURRENT CONDITIONS / CURRENT STATE OF PLAY
What are the main
components of the issue – the actors, organizations, resources, etc., and their
relationships and interactions? This is equivalent to your exploratory influence
map.
2.1. Early semiconductors period:
This was the period when the global
semiconductor industry was first formed. In fact, while there were many
different chip makers in the market, there were not many customers who needed
semiconductors. At best, calculators and basic machine makers needed simple
semiconductors. The Japanese and American companies were leading the way. As of
1995, the proportion of non-memory chips was high among semiconductor
companies. Chip producers receive orders from customers, establish a production
plan limited to the order quantity, produce chips and supply them to customers.
2.2. Semiconductor medium term:
Over time, there was more and more demand for
chips within the market. With the rapid use of chips in various machines such
as personal computers and mainframes, market demand is starting to exceed chip
production. It wasn't long before the semiconductor supercycle began, centered
around memory chips. Within the market, chip shortages began to occur. The
first game of chicken between chip suppliers occurred around 2007, with Taiwan
and Korea winning. (Unfortunately, in this business war, Germany's Qimonda went
bankrupt, and Korea's Hynix and US' Micron suffered serious losses.) In the
second chicken game in 2010, Japan's Elpida went bankrupt. Now, the memory
semiconductor market has been reorganized into Samsung, SK, and Micron's Big
Three.
2.3. Recent Chips Market:
Semiconductors are no longer just used for IT
products. In the automobile industry, as the internal combustion engine
disappears and electric vehicles appear, the demand for the foundry
semiconductor market is exploding. With the recent rapid growth of the electric
vehicle market, electric vehicle manufacturers such as Ford, BMW and Volkswagen
are sucking up most of the world's chip supply.
As a result, chip makers are increasing the
production/supply ratio of high-value-added electric vehicle chips instead of
lowering the supply ratio of existing electronics manufacturers. At the same
time, each chipmaker is struggling to capture more market share. It's unclear
how the market will play out in the future, but in any case, chipmakers are
trying their best to expand their production lines first to boost production.
Fortunately, Taiwan's TSMC, which has been steadily increasing its production
capacity since the mid-80s, occupies more than half of the market share. In
addition, in recent years, existing semiconductor manufacturers such as Intel
have also entered the foundry business, and eventually some EV manufacturers
(Apple, Tesla, etc.) are preparing their own chip production.
On the other hand, major Korean chip makers
(Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix) account for a very large portion of the global
chip supply. However, due to political issues, Japan recently decided to
completely ban the export of core semiconductor materials to Korea. As a
result, the global semiconductor market is concerned about the risk of a
serious supply shortage.
Electric vehicle manufacturers are increasing
car production in response to the exponentially increasing market demand, but
the shortage of chip makers is deteriorating the utilization rate of car
factories. Due to worsening factory conditions, automakers are reducing their
factory workforce. The advent of electric vehicles is changing not only the
automotive retail market, but also the rental car market. Car rental companies
are starting to replace their service vehicles with electric vehicles from
internal combustion engines. This is making it even more difficult for electric
vehicle manufacturers and chipmakers who are experiencing a supply shortage.
The global electric vehicle market is
dominated by the US and China. The United States is striving to secure a stable
supply of automotive chips by continuing strategic partnerships with Taiwan and
Korea. At the same time, it is putting pressure on Taiwanese and South Korean
chip makers to restrict exports to China to keep China in check.
Consumer purchasing power has declined
significantly as the recent global pandemic of COVID-19 has prevented many
people from engaging in economic activity. This recession has reduced demand in
almost every area, including IT devices and EVs.
3. ISSUE STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS
Within the overall
system, are there areas of runaway growth or runaway decline, that is,
reinforcing loops that are amplifying changes?
Within the overall
system, are there goal-seeking structures, that tend to pull the system back to
certain outcomes, or tend to stabilize around specified values, that is,
goal-oriented balancing loops?
Are their familiar
sounding problem stories that indicate one of the archetype structures may be
present in this system, eg, escalation, limits to growth, fixes that fail?
3.1. Reinforcing System #1: Apple's TSMC (Global Largest Foundry Company) Supply Monopoly
Background
Currently, the global market is suffering
from a severe shortage of semiconductor chips. The biggest reason for this is
that the demand for semiconductors is increasing as the proportion of
semiconductor parts in electric vehicles and SET IT products (such as TVs,
mobiles, home appliances, etc.) increases. Global semiconductor production is
monopolized by a few companies in Korea and Taiwan, and competition among
manufacturers is intensifying to receive their supply.
Most of the production capacity of TSMC, the
world's largest chip supplier, is under contract with Apple. While global
semiconductor demand is increasing, TSMC's production capacity is not
increasing.
Description
- The higher stable and sufficient chip supply from TSMC, the higher the chip supply shortage of Apple's competitors, which is being pushed back in the chip supply priority.
- The more Apple's competitors' chip supply shortage, the less the market supply of these companies' products.
- The less the market supply of Apple's competitors, the higher Apple's global market share.
- The higher Apple's global market share, the more Apple's sales.
- The more Apple's sales, the higher Apple's chip purchasing power.
- The higher Apple's chip purchasing power, the more TSMC’s supply of Apple's orders.
3.2. Reinforcing System #2: Impact of changes in semiconductor supply on the market
Background
The semiconductor components produced by the
chip makers are supplied to many manufacturers (such as refrigerators and
washing machine manufacturers) all over the world. Many of these suppliers not
only manufacture and sell their products, but also employ a large number of
people. If there is a problem with the supply of semiconductor components, it
could have an impact not only on the final electronic product, but on the
entire market.
Description
- Starting point: Semiconductor chip production and supply do not meet demand.
- The less semiconductor supply, the more supply shortage the SET electronics producers make.
- The worse the production disruption of SET electronic products, the less the factory utilization rate of electronic product manufacturers.
- The less the factory utilization rate of electronics manufacturers, the higher the number of layoffs of employees within these companies.
- The higher the number of electronic product producers' layoffs, the less the unemployed people’s (and also consumers') disposable income.
- The less the disposable income of consumers, the less the purchasing power of consumers.
- The less consumers' purchasing power, the less the demand for SET electronic products.
- The less the demand for SET electronics products, the less the quantity of orders to be produced by electronics manufacturers.
3.3.
Balancing System #1: Balanced Relationship Between Shortage of Chips for
Electric Vehicles and Inflation
Background
Currently,
the global automobile market is rapidly moving from conventional internal
combustion engine vehicles to electric vehicles. As a result, the purchase
demand for electric vehicles is growing rapidly, but the supply of
semiconductors, a key component of electric vehicles, is not meeting the
demand. On the other hand, the supply shortage of electric vehicles is raising
the prices of electric vehicle products, and according to The Wall Street
Journal, this increase in electric vehicle prices is pointed out as one of the
main reasons for the increase in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) in May 2021. A
rise in the CPI raises the risk of inflation, and the FED is considering at
least one rate hike this year to prevent inflation. If rapid rate hikes are
repeated in the future, EV manufacturers are likely to cancel their investments
in R&D/production, and the financial conditions of these companies are
expected to deteriorate further. In the worst case, large-scale unemployment
could occur, which would worsen consumer purchasing power in the market.
Ultimately, there is a risk that the demand for electric vehicles and the
demand for bar conductors will decrease.
Description
- The more Electric Vehicle demand, the more EV semiconductor demand.
- The more EV semiconductor demand, the less chip supply rate of EV manufacturers.
- The less chip supply rate, the less EV production amount.
- The less EV production amount, the higher EV product price in the market.
- The higher EV product price, the higher market inflation %.
- The higher market inflation %, the more likely to increase interest rate from FED.
- The higher interest rate from FED, the less likely to borrow money for (R&D/production) investment from EV manufacturers.
- The less (R&D/production) investment from EV manufacturers, the less competitive EV companies become.
- The less competitive EV companies become, the more layoffs from EV companies.
- The more layoffs from EV companies, the less purchasing power of consumers.
- The less purchasing power of consumers, the less EV demand.
3.4. Balancing System #2: Chip makers’ production capacity expansion to achieve semiconductor target supply
Background
Due
to the current shortage of semiconductors in the market, major semiconductor
manufacturers around the world are making rapid investments to expand their
factory lines. If the production capacity of major manufacturers increases in
the future, the current semiconductor shortage is expected to be resolved to
some extent.
Description
- Starting point: Chip suppliers desire (certain) chip supply amount.
- However, the current supply does not achieve the target supply, so a GAP occurs between the desired chip supply and the actual supply amount.
- Chip manufacturers decide production plants and lines expansion to minimize GAP.
- At the same time, chip suppliers extend existing chip production operation hour to minimize GAP.
- Due to the expansion of chip production lines and extended operating hours, chip suppliers are producing and supplying more chips.
4.
COMPLEXITY, ADAPTABILITY, EMERGENCE
Is this a complex adaptive system? Describe it in terms of the characteristics of a complex adaptive system – intelligent actors; rule-based interactions; distributed decision-making; goal-setting; manipulates its environment; etc. Over time, what emergent properties have evolved? How has this system adapted in the face of change in the past?
The biggest stress factor that runs through
this report is 'shortage of supply in the semiconductor market due to a surge
in global demand'. It can be defined as an unstable state in which there is an
imbalance between supply and demand. This imbalance/stress condition will never
be resolved unless demand decreases or supply increases. In other words, there
is a risk that these massive and complex systems will evolve in the direction
of increasing stress. In fact, demand for IT and EV products accounts for the
largest portion of global semiconductor demand. Among them, the EV market is in
the very early stages of its development, and it is difficult to even approximate
how much it will grow in the future.
Fortunately, however, a number of areas
within the market are making various efforts to increase supply. Existing chip
design companies (Fabless) are applying various techniques to achieve
sufficient performance with minimal production. Integrating as many circuits as
possible within a chip or attempting to stack existing single-layered chips
into vertical multi-layers are representative examples of new technologies.[1] In addition, chip makers
are investing heavily in the construction of new factories and new lines to
meet the explosively growing demand. Finally, some of the existing chip
demanding customers such as Tesla and Apple are preparing to produce their own
chips and supply them on their own.[2]
These various efforts can be interpreted as a
movement to stabilize the system in response to large changes in the overall
market, which falls under the category of 'self-stabilizing' from the
perspective of Complex Adaptive Systems. In a situation where there is a huge stress
of a global chip shortage, various players in the market try to come up with
various countermeasures to relieve this stress. For example, chip designers are
working to bring chips to the world that can deliver improved performance in
fewer production steps. In addition, chip producers build additional production
facilities to prevent shortage across the market. Finally, some of the chip
consumers are no longer looking to produce their own chips to reduce their
dependence on producers for supply and demand.
5. EMERGING CHANGE
Be a futurist – identify 6-8 trends or emerging changes that could potentially affect or disrupt this system. Looking at your system map, identify where each change would ‘hit’ the system – what relationships (causal arrows) might each change disrupt? would any of the changes disrupt actors or components of the system – render them obsolete or transform them in any way?
5.1.
Change #1: COVID-19 will be prolonged
As the corona pandemic prolongs, people are
limited in their production activities. Many businesses experience declining
sales, and many people lose their jobs. Consumers who have lost their income
will lose their purchasing power.
Currently, internal combustion vehicles
occupy most of the roads, and electric vehicles that are newly launched on the
market are still considered a luxury consumption. Therefore, EV demand does not
increase due to consumers with reduced purchasing power.
On the other hand, as most of our daily life
is done non-face-to-face due to the corona pandemic, people buy more IT
devices. In the end, chipmakers decide to produce more chips for IT devices
instead of chips for EVs, and the overall semiconductor shortage does not
deepen.

5.2. Change #2: Evolution of AI autonomous driving function
Most of the electric vehicles currently on
the market are equipped with the autonomous driving function of stage 2 out of
the final 5 stages. The current AI-based autonomous driving function will
continue to evolve, and autonomous vehicles that require no human intervention
will be released around 2030.
When driverless cars are commercialized,
there will be major changes in almost all industries that require human
driving. In fact, trucking, food delivery and taxi drivers will lose their
jobs, and even those without a driver's license will be able to freely use the
rental car service.
Those at risk of losing their jobs due to the
unmannedness of these cars will fiercely resist and oppose change, but
eventually they will be reabsorbed into other industries.

5.3.
Change #3: China’s absorption of Taiwan by force and unification
Currently, Taiwan's TSMC accounts for more
than 50% of the total foundry supply. On the other hand, China, located right
next to Taiwan, has also made many efforts to improve semiconductor
competitiveness for a long time, but most of these efforts were unsuccessful.
Moreover, the United States imposes strong restrictions to prevent China from
supplying semiconductors from overseas suppliers. In this situation, China is
meeting domestic demand for IT and EV through its own semiconductor supply.
Currently, China has a huge IT device market, and the EV market is also growing
rapidly.
Recently, China forcibly absorbed Hong Kong
as part of its Chinese territory, and recently, various pressures and efforts
have been made to forcibly absorb Taiwan. If Taiwan is incorporated into
Chinese territory, TSMC, the largest supplier of the foundry market, will also
come under Chinese control. In this scenario, TSMC is likely to become a
Chinese state-owned enterprise.
The US, which has been supplied with a large
number of chips from TSMC, may experience serious supply disruptions and may
seek to improve relations with the Chinese government. This means that the
long-running trade war between the US and China could develop into a new phase.
In addition, for major US customers who do not receive chips from TSMC, chip
makers in Korea and the US can become alternative suppliers. Nevertheless,
these alternative suppliers will not be able to sufficiently fill TSMC's chip
supply gap.

5.4. Change #4: Sudden collapse of the Chinese government and civil war
Currently, China is ruled by a permanent
dictatorship led by Xi Jinping. Since Xi Jinping recently became China's ruler,
the Chinese government has increased its surveillance and pressure inside
China. Given the similar history of the past, the possibility that this
dictatorship will be overthrown by sudden opposition cannot be ruled out.
If China's current Xi Jinping government is
overthrown by a coup d'état by opposition forces, China is likely to plunge
into sudden chaos. In the midst of chaos, it is possible that anti-government
forces will dissolve the Chinese government and become China's new regime.
However, the possibility that the present single China will be divided into
several countries cannot be ruled out. In fact, considering that the Chinese
government has forcibly annexed various ethnic groups (such as Tibet) and
countries (Hong Kong and Taiwan) around China, China's division is one of the
most feasible scenarios.
If China were to be divided into several
local government-centered countries, each local government could not handle the
debt it had accumulated over the years and could cause a series of defaults.
China's economy will be in trouble in the short term, and consumer demand in
the market will disappear quickly. This economic shock will lead to a decrease
in IT and EV production, and the demand for semiconductors will also disappear.
In addition, major producers remaining in
China (IT/home appliance companies such as Haier, EV manufacturers such as BYD,
etc.) are eventually poured out for sale in the global M&A market due to
the sudden deterioration of profitability due to unrest in domestic demand and
disruption of supply chains. Existing semiconductor chip makers in Europe, the
US, Korea and Japan do not miss this opportunity and acquire these companies in
China.

5.5.
Change #5: Emergence of entirely new computing technologies
Current semiconductors and processors operate
on transistor-based binary computing technology. Such semiconductor integration
technology is almost reaching its limit with current technology. To overcome
these technological limitations, leading tech companies such as IBM, Intel, and
Google and numerous universities have been researching quantum computing
technology.
If a quantum semiconductor with a structure
different from that of the current chip is commercialized, major changes may
occur in most markets using information technology. If this scenario becomes a
reality, foundry companies such as TSMC and Samsung will enter into a new production
line investment competition to respond to a new type of semiconductor supply
market. Moreover, TSMC, which has been continuously expanding its production
facilities since the 1980s, and currently owns the world's largest
transistor-based chip production facility, will have the burden of replacing
its existing production facilities with a new type of quantum chip production
facility.
Amid the rapid turmoil in the new type of
semiconductor market, numerous chip-to-order start-ups may find business opportunities.
In the market, competition between the established strong chipmakers and new
competitors will begin. It is also possible to consider the possibility that
some of the new entrants will receive large investments and grow into global
quantum chip manufacturers.

5.6. Change #6: Huge damage to semiconductor manufacturing plants due to sudden climate change/natural disaster
As the “Ring of Fire” around the Pacific
begins to act rapidly, mega-earthquakes occur in neighboring Japan and Taiwan.
The national roads of these two countries will be devastated, and in
particular, Taiwan's chip manufacturing plants such as TSMC and Japan's major
chip core material manufacturing plants such as Showa Denko of Japan are highly
likely to be severely destroyed.
In the near future, the global semiconductor
market will not be able to avoid a direct hit from chip supply interruptions
from Japan/Taiwan. Actual world chip production will drop by about half or
less. Global semiconductor prices are rising rapidly, and IT manufacturers and
EV manufacturers, which are major consumers of semiconductors, are struggling
with serious chip supply shortfalls.
Major semiconductor companies in Japan and
Taiwan decide to build new factories in other countries while repairing damage
to existing manufacturing plants that have been destroyed. The EU, China, and
US governments lure these companies by offering large-scale national investment
support to build new factories in their countries.
However, at least five years are required for
the factories of these companies to be restored or newly built and to reach
stable production, during which all industries using semiconductors are
stagnant.
In the end, most industries stagnate in
growth and a serious global recession occurs as a large number of unemployed
people are created.

6. COMPLEX ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS +
DISRUPTIVE CHANGE = CHAOS
Which of the emerging changes identified in your horizon scan is most disruptive for your system? How might that disruptive change tip the system into chaos? How might the system respond or adapt or reorganize?
Among the disruptive changes listed above, if
the [Change 6: Huge damage to semiconductor manufacturing plants due to sudden
climate change/natural disaster] scenario becomes a reality, it could plunge
the global economy into extreme chaos. Currently, one of the largest areas
driving the global economy is information technology, and it is semiconductors
that process this information. In other words, human civilization, one of the
largest ecosystems of the planet Earth, operates based on information and
maintains a balance through interworking based on information and communication
technology. If a sudden change or shock is applied to the current global
civilization, the great order can suddenly collapse. This disruption of order
could affect the entire global economy, not just a few specific industries
involved.
In the short term, our world will not be able
to avoid enormous stress from the collapse of the semiconductor-driven global
economy. Various scientific technologies and civilizations, including
information technology, which had grown like crazy just before, will suddenly
stop growing. Humanity will be very embarrassed that the world is no longer
growing like a runaway. However, they will not give up on responding to sudden
stress and trying to make the world a better place. They will struggle for a
long time to create a substitute for semiconductors that can advance
information and communication/mechanical technology. As such a market for
substitutes for semiconductors is formed, there is a possibility that the
relationship between suppliers, consumers, and helpers in the semiconductor
market will be formed into a new post-semiconductor market structure.
After all, rapid change/chaos can happen in
all areas such as economy, politics, and society that surround us, and the
direction and scale of this chaos cannot be predicted by anyone.
[1]
The world’s short
on chips, the semiconductor industry is up for the challenge (ASML)
https://www.asml.com/en/news/stories/2021/global-chip-shortage-challenge
[2] Tesla is making its
own AI chips (MIT Technology Review)
https://www.technologyreview.com/2018/08/02/66667/tesla-is-making-its-own-ai-chips/
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