Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2025

Democratic Legitimacy and EU Semiconductor Policy

Presentation by Julia Rone & Mario Angst - Hybrid Event

 

Measures to foster semiconductor chips innovation and production across the EU have been among the key elements of the bloc’s new turn to digital industrial policy. Such measures are very much in line with industrial policies introduced in the US and other parts of the world. Yet, crucial aspects of EU semiconductor policies - such as the conditionalities of awarding state aid, who decides on these conditionalities, and the way in which state aid relates to EU’s broader cohesion and sustainability objectives - have remained outside of public scrutiny and debate. This is very different from the US, where the Chips Act has provoked intense debates, with both Republicans and Democrats problematizing a) whether the Act is not an example of corporate welfare and b) scrutinising the conditions under which companies can receive state aid and their resulting obligations to the public. Starting from the classical theoretical framework of input, throughput and output legitimacy of EU policy, our paper investigates the legitimacy of the EU’s semiconductor policy. To this end we analyse parliamentary questions and answers in the European Parliament, as well as in six member states’ parliaments, the European Commission’s public consultation on the Chips Act Package, as well as open letters and opinion pieces by EU civil society and experts on the progress of the policy so far. Preliminary results suggest that questionable output legitimacy of current semiconductor policies is accompanied by an almost complete lack of input and throughput legitimacy. From a critical perspective, our findings on the deficiencies in the legitimacy of the EU’s semiconductor policy lead us to question the EU’s current approach on industrial policy and digital infrastructure more generally.

 

Julia Rone is an Assistant Professor in comparative politics at the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at the VU Amsterdam. Before joining VU, Julia was a Research Associate at the University of Cambridge, where she pursued a project exploring the democratisation of digital sovereignty. In 2019-2020, Julia was a Wiener-Anspach postdoctoral researcher for the project “Conflicts of Sovereignty in a European Union in crisis” at the Université libre de Bruxelles and the University of Cambridge. Her current research focuses on democratizing digital governance and the distributive conflicts around the EU’s notion of digital sovereignty. She is the author of the book "Contesting Austerity and Free Trade in the EU" (London: Routledge).

Mario Angst is a postdoc and project lead at the Digital Society Initiative of the University of Zürich. A political and sustainability scientist by training, his research focuses on the governance and narratives of sustainability transformations and sustainable digitalization.

 

 

The event is part of the Seminar Series “Platform Politics and Policy”.

Researchers from outside the WZB who would like to attend may email the organizer, robert.gorwa [at] wzb.eu, to be put onto the seminar series mailing list.