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Taiwanese semiconductor veteran Chiang Shang-yi comes out of retirement to join Foxconn as top chip adviser

  • Chiang joined the world’s largest iPhone maker a year after he resigned as vice-chairman of China’s top foundry SMIC in November 2021 to ‘enjoy retirement life’
  • Hon Hai did not disclose the terms of Chiang’s employment, but said he will provide ‘advice on global semiconductor expansion and technical guidance’

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People riding a motorcycle pass the logo of Foxconn Technology Group outside the company’s building in Taipei on November 10, 2022. Photo: Reuters
Che Panin Beijing
Chiang Shang-yi, the 76-year-old Taiwanese semiconductor industry veteran, has joined Hon Hai Precision Industry, which trades as Foxconn Technology Group, as a chip adviser to help with the world's top iPhone assembler's push into integrated circuits, according to a statement on the company's website.
Chiang joins the Apple supplier a year after he resigned from China’s top foundry, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), in November 2021, citing the desire to spend more time with his family in California. At the time, Chiang said he did not “have any plan other than enjoying retirement life”.
He later called the decision to join SMIC “one of the foolish things” he had done, according to the transcript of an oral history interview he conducted with the California-based Computer History Museum.

In a statement issued on Tuesday, Hon Hai did not disclose the terms of Chiang’s employment as an adviser, but said he will provide the company "with advice on global semiconductor expansion and technical guidance”.

Liu Young-way, chairman and president of Hon Hai, said in the statement that the company was grateful to Chiang for recognising its  plans and capabilities in the semiconductor industry, and that Chiang was set to make an “extraordinary contribution” to the firm's global semiconductor development.

Chiang, a US citizen, on Tuesday confirmed to the South China Morning Post that he has returned to Taiwan from Silicon Valley.

The former Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) executive, who headed the company’s research and development until 2006, was seen as a key figure behind its rise as a leading wafer foundry. Following his retirement from TSMC, Chiang served as an independent non-executive director at Shanghai-based SMIC from December 2016 to June 2019.
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