About
Publication Information
Subscriptions
Permissions
Advertising
Journal Rankings
Best Article Award
Press Releases
Resources
Access Options
Submission Guidelines
Reviewer Guidelines
Sample Articles
Paper Calls
Contact Us
Submit & Review
Browse
Current Issue
All Issues
Featured
Latest
Topics
Videos
Cases
Subscribe
California Management Review
California Management Review is a premier academic management journal published at UC Berkeley
Search
Article Information
Reversal of Fortune? The Recovery of the U.S. Semiconductor Industry
Macher, Jeffrey T., David C. Mowery, and David A. Hodges
41
/
1
(
Fall
1998
):
107
-
136
For most of the semiconductor industry's history, U.S. producers were undisputed leaders in market share, product introduction, and process technology advance. After losing this dominant position and enduring significant market share losses during the early 1980s, U.S. semiconductor firms and the federal government took corrective actions on several fronts. A concerted effort in improving product quality and manufacturing process yields narrowed the gaps between U.S. and foreign competitors. U.S. firms also exited from product lines in which their historic skills at product innovation provided limited competitive advantage. Federal government initiatives, ranging from trade policy to financial support for university research and R&D consortia, also played a role of uncertain magnitude in the industry's revival. The resurgence of the industry is an impressive feat, but the unexpected nature of this revival, its complex causes, and the fragility of its foundation suggest that U.S. semiconductor firm strength cannot be taken for granted.