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Singapore chip makers become US-China trade war casualty as firms cut jobs
- Making microchips for everything from mobile phones to cars has long been central to the success of Singapore
- Singapore’s exports dropped to a six-year low in June, mainly due to a 31.9 per cent contraction in electronics exports
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Caught in the middle a US-China trade war while trying to address political concerns over Chinese telecoms firm Huawei and slowing consumer demand, chip makers in Singapore have started slowing production and laying off hundreds of jobs.
The slump in a sector that made up nearly a third of Singapore’s manufacturing output last year is reinforcing expectations that the export-driven economy could slide into recession in the coming months.
Making microchips for everything from mobile phones to cars has long been central to the success of Singapore, the tiny trading island seen as a bellwether for the global economy.
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“We are already seeing that this downturn is different,” said Ang Wee Seng, executive director for the Singapore Semiconductor Industry Association (SSIA).
Ang said he was “preparing for the worst” and putting his staff on standby to help any laid off workers try and find new jobs.
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