Surging demand for high-power AI chips is diverting scarce resources away from traditional chips that are used in broadband equipment. For example, the price of DDR4 memory – ubiquitous in broadband – has risen 700-800% year-over-year. NCTA – The Internet & Television Association has also emphasized that the problem extends beyond memory chips to substrate, the foundational materials on which chips are built.
An NCTA-led coalition of groups involved in deployment and operation of broadband services sent a letter on June 2 to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick urging certain policy actions to expand chip production: “Ease constraints on alternative sourcing and product redesign by offering expedited validation and approvals for regulated products, along with flexibility for necessary hardware, firmware, or software changes. . . Identify and remove regulatory barriers that slow the expansion of memory manufacturing capacity, both domestically and internationally, to increase overall global supply.”
Promising policies under NCTA’s recommendations may include: streamlining regulatory and permitting requirements; reforming the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) to speed up the review of new chemicals and substances necessary for innovation; allowing immediate expensing of foreign research and development costs; easing trade frictions by cutting unnecessary tariffs and customs barriers, expedite customs clearance procedures, and ensuring that semiconductor data can move freely across borders; and reforming high-skilled immigration for a robust workforce.
Broadband providers rely heavily on semiconductors to capture, process, and transmit data across their networks, making these shortages a direct constraint on their ability to operate, expand, and improve Internet service. And broadband providers are not alone. The coalition includes other sectors experiencing supply constraints, including automotive, medical technology, and retail associations.
State and federal policy responses to the shortages largely have relied on interventions in the form of grants, loans, and tax credits for domestic chip making and research. These interventions, like the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, may indeed alleviate chip shortages but are subject to the typical flaws of government subsidies – they risk favoring selected companies and taxing Americans in the form of mounting government debt.
Encouragingly, there have also been some wins for more free-market oriented approaches to boost supply and slow the growth of increasing costs. In June, the FCC granted a waiver of certain router requirements that NCTA had petitioned for – I blogged about it here. The 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act restored expensingrequirements for research and development (affecting all industries, not just chip-making). The OBBBA also let companies deduct the full cost of most new equipment and machinery in the year they buy it, particularly valuable for a capital-intensive industry like chip production.
Congress and regulatory agencies should build on NCTA’s recommendations and expand market-oriented approaches already supported by parts of the semiconductor industry, including the Semiconductor Industry Association.
Ultimately, persistent chip shortages translate into higher costs paid by consumers. When supply is stretched thin across industries, everyday products and services become more expensive – particularly in memory-heavy markets like broadband.
Congress and regulators must focus on finding market-oriented ways to bring these costs down for Americans.









