AMD Receives $683M for Dresden Plant 277
Cocooner writes "Infoworld has an article explaining how AMD received $683 million in grants from Germany and the state of Saxony for its next-generation microprocessor wafer facility. The new plant will be located in Dresden, adjacent to Fab 30 and will be called Fab 36. It will be the first AMD 300mm manufacturing facility."
ROI? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would the government give a $683M break to AMD to get 1000 jobs? That's two thirds of a million bucks per job. It's amazing that a $2B facility can be staffed by only 1000 people.
-B
Re:ROI? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
So these jobs may not require a Ph.D, but they are highly skilled non-the-less.
Re:ROI? (Score:3, Interesting)
Most of these jobs will likely not need to have much special skills, chip fab work is in some way just another form of assembly line work. I guess it is at most 200 of them that needs to be highly skilled.
Other than that I think your argument of an ecomony knock-off effect do hold.
Re:ROI? (Score:5, Insightful)
So the govermnet spends 600millon,
to put a total of 2.5 billion in the ecconomy.
you are right, its not 1 becomes 2,
its 1 becomes 4.
Re:ROI? (Score:3, Informative)
I really doubt that. Most of that 2 billion will be going to companies like Applied Materials [yahoo.com]. Sure there will be local contractors involved in constructing the buildings (i.e. the grunt work), but all the really expensive bits that go inside will come from foreign multinationals.
What Saxony is really paying all that money for is the creation of jobs. When you do the math 600k per job ain't all that bad. Lets say
Re:ROI? (Score:4, Insightful)
And what do they do with that 50 million a year? Stuff it under their mattresses? No, they spend it in the local economy, buying food, clothes, etc. for their families... and the local government gets a cut via the sales tax. Further, this increased spending on necessities and luxuries of life spawns the need for new workers, who receive a paycheck... and the government gets a cut via the income tax. And with this money, they spend it in the local economy... and the local government gets a cut via the sales tax. And so forth. So yes, money is magical as far as the government is concerned, since they get a cut out of any transaction.
Now, the above assumes that all new workers have to move to Dresden from other areas. But the same statements are true if the new workers are local residents who are receiving a lower salary (in which case it's less than 50 million, of course) or unemployed, which actually doubles the benefit, as they're no longer receiving public assistance.
Re:ROI? (Score:5, Informative)
As Germany is in a depressed economic position (lots of deflationary pressures) such fiscal stimulus is useful (this was the argument for the Bush tax cuts - but that was probably unnecessary in the US (and was not 'directed' to undercapacity areas of the economy), but is much more necessary in Germany), not that this is a cure-all as German is suffering really bad structural problems too.
Then there is the money multiplier concept (a not very good definition here [digitaleconomist.com]) which explains how money increases as the definition broadens - is cash money, but the amount of money on deposit is greater than all cash in circulation and in bank tills This is a seperate issue and not relevant to this discussion, but a fine demonstation that of all things in life, money is one ofthe finest examples of something which multiplies.
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
Too good to be true... (Score:2)
Every Euro the government pumps into the Dresden economy is one that it has taken out of some other part of Germany. Any multiplying effects it may have when paid out will be matched by the opposite effect where it was taken from.
And thanks for the articles, but if you read the first one it clearly points out
Re:Too good to be true... (Score:2)
Is that "Double Data Rate" or "Dance Dance Revolution"?
Re:ROI? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would the government give a $683M break to AMD to get 1000 jobs? That's two thirds of a million bucks per job.
Well, first of all it's in grants and allowances, so the governemnt probably doesn't look at it as "real money" - and I'm guessing it's probably spread out over a long period of time, ie tax breaks for the next x years.
Secondly, they are probably figuring that the plant will make suppliers and customers of AMD move nearby, thus providing more jobs and taxes. It's debateable if this actually works, but that's probably their thought process.
Re:ROI? (Score:5, Interesting)
they are probably figuring that the plant will make suppliers and customers of AMD move nearby
Wafer fabs usually spend a relatively small amount of money in local economies. The bulk of the cost of a new fab is allocated to new equipment, which is mostly imported from the U.S. and Japan.
Still, there are the 1000 local permanent jobs, local jobs for construction of the actual building, money spent by equipment vendors support personnel in hotels, local costs for water and power, and local taxes.
A fun anecdote regarding water consumption: I write software for wet benches. I shipped a bug once to a fab in Phoenix that caused their DI water consumption to skyocket. The fab's DI water plant hit max capacity, and the City of Chandler had problems keeping up with the plant's consumption.
Here in Boise, local philanthropist J.R. Simplot built the city a park with a dozen or so soccer fields. The real purpose behind this park - a place to distribute processed waste water from the Micron plant. Not that I have any problem with that.
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
AMD is a big company with money to spend (not bribes, but you know how it works). Being a single company, they also present a unified front for negotiations. The local government (or federal, I don't know with this deal) has few motivations to look unfavorably on AMD's requests.
On the other hand, income tax payers, sales tax payers, and property tax payers, do not have
Taxes... (Score:2)
Dan East
Re:Taxes... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Taxes... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Taxes... (Score:3, Flamebait)
Worse, to help offset the massive government debt, there is talk about raising pension contributions and corporate taxes. These will hurt the economy further, making the country less competitive and decreasing investment.
Germany is falling into a t
Re:Taxes... (Score:2)
To which I say: A different world is possible. Smash capitalism!
Socialism doesn't work. Germany has done very well because it is only somewhat socialist. It still has large, sucessful corporations that are the backbone of the econo
Re:Taxes... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Taxes... (Score:2)
Right now, some unionists are rallying behind warning strikes, because the metall industry is offering an 1,2 increase (just around the inflation rate, after years of no increases), but only if the employees accept an unpaid increase in the working hours fr
Re:Taxes... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not against private property and a capitalist system, I am however deeply concerned, that huge corporations and few individuals accumulate too much power simply because they are insanely rich. I think this has already happened.
By the way, in ancient Sparta, when a person became to wealthy (and thus too powerful) it was exiled. Think about it for a second.
Re:Taxes... (Score:2)
The discrepancy in wealth will continuously increase under capitalism. There is no way around it because capitalism is an elitist system. All elitist systems result in a
Re:Taxes... (Score:2)
Sivaram Velauthapillai
Re:ROI? (Score:2, Interesting)
The economy lobbyists have such a strong influence on politics.. that's really sad.
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
That will always be true IMO. Just like how space and time cannot be seperated and hence is called spacetime, you cannot seperate politics and economics. That's why I call it econopolitics.
I can see why people like to seperate them. Over 90% of the world is capitalist. And capitalism is a purely economic system (whereas most other systems are economics+politics). So it might seem that you can seperate them. But in re
That's nothing... (Score:5, Funny)
Dan East
Re:That's nothing... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That's nothing... (Score:2)
Re:ROI? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:ROI? (Score:3, Interesting)
I too, live in Washington State. We have one of the worst tax climates for businesses in the country, hence Boeing's eagerness to relocate. Basically, we taxed the living hell out of Boeing. When they decidided they wanted to move, the state government gave them ridiculous incentives to get them to stay. But, it was basically too late anyway. Many of the jobs have already relocated to Chicago and Kansas. We'll just
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
Re:ROI? (Score:4, Insightful)
Germans don't care about the 1000 people working there, they care about:
- the other $1.4B that will come and will be spent in Germany for a good part,
- the thousands people needed to build a high-tech plant,
- the hundreds of firms and thousands people needed to provide (high tech) "raw" materials, and provide outsourced services to the plant (food, cleaning, software, maintenance, tools...) : do not forget that Germans are good at making tools and chemical products (which such a plant really need),
- the money that will go through their banks,
- the fact that this part of country really need jobs (previous Eastern Germany, 20% unemployment).
BTW: If you have an opportunity to visit this part of Germany, do no hesitate. Dresedn was totally destroyed in February 1945, but the Communists really succeeded in building it again [about their only success], and the area is very nice.
Possibly illegal too (Score:3, Interesting)
The EU recently decided that it was illegal [bbc.co.uk] for local governments to subsidise private companies to do business in their region. Could be that AMD haven't quite thought this through...
Re:Possibly illegal too (Score:2, Informative)
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
IBM [ibm.com] does a similar thing in New York. This [ibm.com] is another interesting link.
Re:ROI? (Score:2)
I wonder what the millions of folks in the rest of Germany think about their tax money going to a mutlinational corporation just to build one plant with a thousand jobs? If they're like Americans, as long as they can fight over same sex marriage and the National Endowment for the Arts, they probably don't even notice.
Re:ROI? (Score:3, Insightful)
Avoid production stop (Score:3, Insightful)
Probably also because it would for a longer time block the main production facility for Athlon and Optoron chips.
If you have many fabs doing the same kind of chip process like Intel it is much easier to temporary stop one of them.
What about returns ?? (Score:3, Interesting)
How much new revenues will this new plant bring into Dresden? 600 million plus seems an awful lot of money to get just 1000 additional jobs.
Unless the city going to get substantial revenues from taxes, or increased business opportunities for vendors, it seems like a huge waste of money.
Re:What about returns ?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Creating jobs and building an industry should be the #1 East German priority. The government did the right thing.
Socialistic contradiction of Free Trade. (Score:2, Interesting)
This is a threat to Globalism!
The period between 1950 and 1973 was by far the most successful of the century. This was an era characterised by capital controls, fixed exchange rates, strong trade unions, a large public sector and a general acceptance of government's role in demand management. The average annual growth in "per capita real GDP" throughout the world was 2.9% - precisely twice as high as the average rate in the two decades since then.
Except in the US (Score:2)
think back! (Score:5, Insightful)
it's not like AMD is gonna change the money into
euro coins and stack them to make a nice looking
factory made from coins, no sir.
the question really is:
who owned the land before AMD bought it (tax?).
who is building the factory(tax?).
who is supplying power(tax?).
who is building the generators that produce
the needed electricity(tax?).
who gets to have a peek at the technology (know-how) once complet(no tax!)
who gets know-how for building a chip
producing factory? (def. more to come!)
etc.
this is a micro investment and the reward is def.
going to pay off as long as people have to use
computers (e.g. no telepathy available).
Re:think back! (Score:2)
Micro investment? A micro investment is when you give $50 to a woman in bangladesh so that she can start her own business. Giving $683 million to a major corporation looks pretty damn macro to me. You are probably right that it will pay off for Germany and Saxony though. Having the factory there will generate a lot of taxable economic activity.
Re:think back! (Score:3, Interesting)
Sometimes these things work out, sometimes they don't. There is a growing body of evidence in the US that cutting sweetheart deals to bring in some corporate facility can be a losing proposition. This one seems of a managable size, but in cases of large facilities employing thousands, there can be serious ripple effects as the local governments must build new roads, new schools, expand water trea
In other news.... (Score:2, Funny)
Ever notice (Score:2, Flamebait)
"Huge new manufacturing facility to be constructed in $US_STATE?"
or
"$BLOATED_CORPORATION to hire 12,000 new workers?"
It's rarely remarkable (Score:5, Insightful)
In the same way it would not be remarkable when a German company built a German factory, nor when an Indian company built an Indian factory.
It is a bit more remarkable when the US business drones without brains build another facility outside the US, then complain that US consumers arent buying it's products. Everyone is worried about the "jobless recovery", but they fail to point the fingers at themselves for shipping the jobs ( and salaries ) overseas. Mind you, I am not nessesarily of the "protectionist" mindset, but it does seem that some moderation is called for.
Re:Ever notice (Score:2)
For instance, huge news in Buffalo recently: Geico is going to build a big regional center, 2500 jobs within a few years, plus other peripheral development.
Sure, "insurance" isn't as sexy as "chip manufacturing", but hey, they're jobs, aren't they?
Re:Ever notice (Score:2)
Re:Ever notice (Score:2)
"Huge new manufacturing facility to be constructed in $US_STATE?"
Most of us don't care. They come and they go, but as a counterexample, KEZI TV in Eugene, Oregon, had a top news story not a week ago about Intel's announcment that it was building a new fab in Oregon.
Just because it's not on Slashdot doesn't mean it isn't happening. I'd suggest you don't use Slashdot as your only news source, or you will suffer permanent brain damage.
Fab 36 (Score:5, Funny)
Advancements are a wonderful thing (Score:3, Interesting)
I've been using the Athlon64 chips and couldn't be happier. Hopefully the new plant will help them nibble away another part of Intel's market share.
wafer size (Score:5, Informative)
www.tomshardware.com/cpu/20040201/prescott-05.html [tomshardware.com]
Well (Score:2, Interesting)
Glad they got a plant, (Score:3, Interesting)
Did nobody else do a double take? (Score:5, Funny)
Wow. (Score:2)
Good for the city (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, this will certainly help bring a little more 'balance' to the country (the Dresden VW plant also helps). 1000 high-paying jobs means potentially 1000 families...lots of little kids that need schoolteachers, food, clothes. I'm sure that the AMD plant will bring in way more money than this in taxes after a few years anyway...
Old news, and they got more (Score:3, Informative)
May they have better luck than Eugene, Oregon did (Score:2, Interesting)
The Enterprise Zones were areas designated for industrial development that would receive special tax breaks for the first five years or so. It looked really good on paper, and politicians could say they were doing something about the high unemployment, which looked really good to them.
The two biggest projects were a CD-pressing plant owned by Sony in
Re:AMD 300mm? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:AMD 300mm? (Score:5, Informative)
The die size of an Athlon XP is about 129mm^2, so at 3/4 surface usage about 410 Athlons would fit on a single wafer. Must be really cheap to produce those things...
Re:AMD 300mm? (Score:2)
And don't call them Piza wafers would you? It's about diner time out here.
Re:AMD 300mm? (Score:2)
Re:AMD 300mm? (Score:2)
-B
Re:AMD 300mm? (Score:2)
Re:AMD 300mm? (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, it isn't. 300mm is the diamaeter of a complete wafer, from which multiple die are cut.
Re:300mm? (Score:2)
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:3, Interesting)
And to think of how socialists in the U.S. piss and moan when the federal government awards contracts to oil firms. Double standard, anyone? Who's to say that there's not something going on behind the scenes between AMD and Schroeder(sp)?
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2, Informative)
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2)
I trust that you're not from around here, otherwise you wouldn't ask. The German government has cut down on income from the corperate sector for the last 25 years.
Also, while I agree to your hypothesis, that the 600+ million is a small investment to the potential future income by taxes, the point is moot, because large companies in Germany simply don't pay taxes anymore.
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:3, Interesting)
Let me reiterate a point here: despite what Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh would
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:5, Interesting)
And about the philosophy; even if you don't filthy rich most people have other motivations besides money for working hard. As long as people feel they get an appropriate share of the material growth they are happy.
So I don't think much of the ambition is removed from the individual as there is no signs that the progress of society halts in these countries.
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2)
Ultimately; the decision is up to the voters. Whether they really influence the outcome is off course something to think off, but I don't think the democratic systems are any weaker in these countries than in USA.
And this is not the case in USA?
According to Transparenc [transparency.org]
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2)
Capitalism and communism are ideals, they may have little to do with reality. To say one or the other failed is therefore bung. Especially because the SU had little to do with communism. You could call China a communist state... are they failing?
All this said, I think they made the right decission too. There is no reas
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2)
It's obvious, just giving the money to the people shows people that they do not have to work, and the government will just give them money. Atleast with this they are more productive then just sitting at home and watching television and getting fat. I believe that Germany's obese population is going to double within the next 10 years and just giving them money will not help it.
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2)
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:5, Insightful)
It is the job of the government, after all, to improve the lot of its people.
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2, Flamebait)
I STRONGLY disagree! In a truly free society, one is given equal opportunity to improve his OWN (and family's) life. Whether or not he succeeds at that is in his own hands, not the government's.
The only role government should play in that is ensuring opportunity remain equally available to its citizens. It is not the job of government to force successful citizens to pick up the slack for those who aren't as successful.
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:3, Insightful)
If, the voters does set the goal of it's govenment to be improvement of the lot of the people, then so be it. Who are you to disagree - unless you live there and have a right to vote, in which case you can make your views heard just fine.
Thankfully... (Score:2)
No serious politicial party would subscribe to such reidiculous statement.
Re:Thankfully... (Score:2)
Would you want to live that way, just because those who are rich have the power to rob you?
Socialists think that if you are robbed on a daily basis, it't better to be robbed by a democratic government,
Re:Thankfully... (Score:2)
Re:Thankfully... (Score:2)
I don't know the english term, but the fraction of the GDP that is government money is more or less constant.
The problem with the usual economic theories like neoliberalism or communism (I'm referring to Marx here, not what Lenin, Stalin and alii made of it), is that they don't really work.
Still, at least we live in an age where democratic governments (usually) at least try to improve life
Re:In Socialist Germany (Score:2)
Actually, no. (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually, no. In a -free- republic the job of government is to manage the rule of law, provide for the common defence of the nation, and enforce contracts. Other than that they are supposed to stay out of the road and let people get on with their lives.
Anything else is just the forced redistributuion of wealth,otherwise known as stealing. Which is why East Germany is such a basket case in the first place. People are not insp
Re:lower costs vs. intel (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not really (Score:2)
Re:AMD is a charity ? (Score:2, Funny)
IF you want money grubbing execs, try Halliburton scheming with their best bud DICK Cheney to invade a country so they can rebuild it.
1. Look around for new target in War on Terrorism
2. DICK Cheney suggests Iraq. Bush goes "duh..OK"
3. Invade Iraq. Destroy everything. Make sure the oil ministry is the only safe building in Bagdad. Dont guard anything else, no matter how p
Re:Just in time for the next B-17 raid (Score:2)
Re:Just in time for the next B-17 raid (Score:2)
Mod down (Score:5, Informative)
Opteron X -> isnt planed
5Ghz Fsb -> Opteron has no fsb
500mm -> even intel says that the next 5 years they wont TRY creating bigger than 300mm wafers,
65nm -> 2008 65nm will be old stuff...
Re:See, Communism works!! Thanks, Germany! (Score:3, Insightful)
This is usual economic policy in most states around the globe. Anti-Capitalists and Communists will critzise it though because they prefer state run chip production, haha.
It's better than paying 520m to a patent privateer [eolas.com] via a stated granted monopoly system.
But I believe a 600 Million German Free Software Fund would be a better investment.
Flamebait my ass. Explain this one, moderators. (Score:3, Funny)
It's a simple fact that Germans are, by way of their taxes, subsidizing the cost of these chips -- Germany's government is giving huge amounts of money to AMD to establish their plant and that
Re:Dresden (Score:2)
Re:outsourcing (Score:2)