Global chip shortage likely to last through 2021 and even into 2022 as industry grapples with increasingly complex market forces

  • The crunch, which began with automotive chips that control car brakes, has spread to consumer electronics
  • US-China tech war and pandemic have complicated demand curve in a capital-intensive industry with global supply chains

US President Joe Biden is pushing domestic production of semiconductors amid a global chip shortage. Photo: Reuters

A global shortage of chips, the tiny devices at the heart of every electronics gadget, is having a ripple effect across the wider consumer electronics industry and analysts say the squeeze could last through 2021 and into 2022 given the multiple factors at play.

The crunch, which began with automotive chips that control car brakes, doors and windscreen wipers, is now being felt in the supply of chips used for smartphones, laptops, washing machines and refrigerators. The issue highlights the disruptive effects of both the China-US tech war and the Covid-19 pandemic on a supply chain that is truly global.

Print option is available for subscribers only.
SUBSCRIBE NOW
Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.