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by maeil 607 days ago
The star of this article, as well as the main target of the comment you were replying to, is Boeing, so forgive me for interpreting it as a broader point than just semiconductors, especially since you named conglomerates which have dozens of subsidiaries in orthogonal industries.

> I'm only talking about the semiconductor industry, and yes, the China at trying to develop a private sector in the entire Semiconductor supply chain via the Big Fund [0].

Interesting! Even then, I can see that only lasting until they get semi-succesful, just like Tencent et. al.

Your main point seems to boil down to "subsidizing semiconductors makes sense", and I think you're absolutely right there! But I don't see many here argue against that. It doesn't contradict the message of the first comment you replied to: "We should let failing businesses fail. Everyone would have learned their lessons a long time ago and we would have less corporate greed/corpo-political corruption". Both can be true at the same time.

One note though, borrowing from your other reply:

> This "capitalist doctrine" of shareholder return is alive and well in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. Take a look at KOPSI or Nikkei sometime.

The KOSPI is generally seen both by domestic as well as international investors as a complete joke, and a big reason behind it is in fact the main argument the parent comment was arguing for; unlike the US, shareholder returns are not put above all else by the conglomerate subsidiaries. Investors don't like this, and so see the market as completely unreliable.