Analysis-Engineer shortage may harm US plan to turn Vietnam into chips powerhouse
FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Biden awards Medals of Honor to Vietnam War veterans during White House ceremony in Washington · Reuters

By Francesco Guarascio

HANOI (Reuters) - A chronic shortage of engineers in Vietnam is emerging as a major challenge to the growth of its semiconductor industry and to U.S. plans of fast-tracking the Southeast Asian nation as a chips hub to hedge against China-related supply risks.

Semiconductors are expected to be a focal point when U.S. President Joe Biden visits Hanoi from Sept. 10 with the goal of formally elevating ties between the two countries. He will offer Vietnam support to boost its chips production, U.S. administration officials said.

"Friendshoring" segments of the strategic semiconductors industry has been one of Washington's key inducements to persuade Vietnam's communist leaders to agree to formally upgrade relations. Hanoi was initially reluctant about the move over fears of an adverse reaction from China.

The boost to formal ties could bring billions of dollars of new private investment and some public funds to Vietnam's semiconductor industry. But industry officials, analysts and investors said that the small pool of trained experts will be a crucial hurdle for the rapid development of the chip industry.

"The number of available hardware engineers is way below what is needed to support multi-billion-dollar investments," about one-tenth of expected demand over the next 10 years, said Vu Tu Thanh, head of the Vietnam office of the US-ASEAN Business Council.

The 100-million-people country has only 5,000 to 6,000 trained hardware engineers for the chip sector, against expected demand of 20,000 in five years and 50,000 in a decade, Thanh said, citing estimates from companies and engineers.

There's also a risk of inadequate supply of trained chips software engineers, said Hung Nguyen, senior program manager on supply chains at RMIT University Vietnam.

Vietnam's ministries in charge of labour, education, information, technology and foreign affairs did not reply to requests for comment.

CHINA'S COMMANDING POSITION

The Southeast Asian nation's semiconductor industry, whose exports to the U.S. are worth more than half a billion dollars annually, according to Vietnam government figures, is currently focused on the back-end manufacturing stage of the supply chain - that is assembling, packaging and testing of chips - though it is slowing broadening out into areas such as designing.

The White House has not specified which segments of the chips industry in Vietnam will be prioritised, but U.S. industry executives have indicated that the back-end is a key growth sector.