Recipient
Who receives the public support and who owns the completed asset?
Policy
Awards, loans, tax incentives, company plans, and customer commitments are different fields. This edition publishes only the policy claims present in the registry; it does not fabricate a complete awards database.
Who receives the public support and who owns the completed asset?
Separate awards, loans, tax-credit eligibility, and private commitments.
Track announced cost, expected production, changes, delays, and completion independently.
Distinguish the asset owner from anchor customers and intended end users.
Amkor’s Arizona advanced-packaging project was supported by up to $400 million of U.S. CHIPS funding and was expected to cost about $2 billion.
Registry exception. The supplied registry labels this claim Corroborated but provides one source. Independent corroboration remains pending; the original state is preserved rather than silently rewritten.
Caveat. Use final award document when available.
Texas Instruments announced plans to invest more than $60 billion across seven U.S. fabs.
Registry exception. The supplied registry labels this claim Corroborated but provides one source. Independent corroboration remains pending; the original state is preserved rather than silently rewritten.
Caveat. Investment plan; execution, timing, and utilization remain uncertain.
Direct U.S. manufacturing incentives predominantly accrue to companies building or expanding physical manufacturing assets.
Caveat. Fabless companies can benefit indirectly and through R&D; avoid saying they receive no benefit.