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The AI boom makes these economic implications impossible to ignore. Compute demand is rising at an unprecedented pace, and the cost of compute depends heavily on the competitive structure of the leading-edge foundry market. The risk is that the strategic center of gravity[1] in the chip industry shifts further away from the United States, leaving U.S. fabless leaders exposed to tighter supply, less predictable pricing, and reduced leverage over this foundational input to the AI era. As the only U.S.-based company with a credible path to leading-edge domestic foundry capacity, Intel holds a unique position in this discussion, and its continuing viability is crucial.
This paper examines the global semiconductor supply chain and the growing monopoly risk in leading-edge manufacturing, the cost of compute in the age of AI, the implications of compute constraints for the broader economy, and how industrial policy and trade mechanics can improve market stability.
[1] Matt Kimball, “The Future Geography of Semiconductors: AI Demand, Manufacturing Reality, and the Strategic Center of Gravity,” Moor Insights & Strategy, January 5, 2026
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Summary
The Semiconductor Supply Chain and Monopoly Risk
The Cost of Compute in the Age of AI
The Impacts of AI and Compute on the Global Economy
Industrial Policy and Trade Mechanics
Call to Action
COMPANIES CITED
Intel Foundry
Intel
Apple
NVIDIA
Broadcom
Cadence
Synopsys
Qualcomm
AMD
Marvell
Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA)
U.S. Department of Commerce
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