Why Chip Sovereignty Is No Longer About Chips—But Systems
As AI reshapes computing, strategic advantage is shifting from manufacturing to system architectures, advanced packaging, and control over critical supply chain chokepoints.
By Pat Brans, EE Times | 04.23.2026

Governments around the world are pouring tens of billions into semiconductor manufacturing in the name of chip sovereignty. From the U.S. to Europe to Asia, the assumption is clear: Control the fabs, and you control the future of computing.
But as AI reshapes the semiconductor landscape, that assumption no longer captures where value is created. Strategic advantage is shifting toward a broader—and more complex—stack: AI accelerators, high-performance CPUs, advanced packaging, memory bandwidth, and the software and data that tie them together.
The result is a growing disconnect between how policymakers define strategy and how the industry actually builds and deploys AI. In practice, industry is moving from a chip-centric model to a system-centric one.
To read the full article, click here
Related Chiplet
- DPIQ Tx PICs
- IMDD Tx PICs
- Near-Packaged Optics (NPO) Chiplet Solution
- High Performance Droplet
- Interconnect Chiplet
Related News
- Why There Are Still No Commercial 3D-ICs
- Why China is betting big on chiplets
- Cadence and Samsung Foundry Accelerate Chip Innovation for Advanced AI and 3D-IC Applications
- Why UCIe is Key to Connectivity for Next-Gen AI Chiplets
Latest News
- Lightmatter Names Roy Kim Vice President of Product to Lead Global Deployment of Photonic Interconnects
- Why Chip Sovereignty Is No Longer About Chips—But Systems
- Wave Photonics PDKs Now Support Photonic Circuit Simulation in Cadence Spectre
- NLM Photonics and Spark Photonics Partner to Advance Organic Hybrid Solutions
- Marvell Announces Acquisition of Polariton Technologies, Advancing Optical Performance Scaling to 3.2T and Beyond