"Vietnamese Engineers Can Build the World's Most Advanced Chips" — Marvell and the 50,000-Engineer Semiconductor Ambition

Vietnam is steadily transforming from an electronics assembly hub into a genuine chip design center. Marvell Vietnam, a subsidiary of the semiconductor giant Marvell — valued at over $270 billion — currently employs more than 600 domestic engineers on cutting-edge chip projects.
Contributing to 3nm and 2nm chip designs
According to Dr. Le Quang Dam, CEO of Marvell Vietnam, the company's local engineers participate in every stage of the chip development pipeline — from architectural concept and circuit design to chip verification — for 3nm and 2nm products. These represent the most advanced process nodes currently in production at TSMC and Samsung, placing Vietnamese engineers on equal technical footing with counterparts in Silicon Valley, Taiwan, and South Korea.
Prof. Konrad Young, former R&D Director at TSMC, said Vietnam has top-tier young talent in both quantity and enthusiasm — among the best in the world.
70 IC design firms and the 50,000-engineer target
Approximately 70 IC design companies now operate in Vietnam, including Marvell, Renesas, Ampere, Synopsys, and Infineon. The government targets training 50,000 semiconductor engineers by 2030, scaling to 100,000 personnel over 2030–2040. Associate Professor Pham Bao Son, Deputy Director of Vietnam National University, stressed that achieving this requires tight cooperation between universities, research institutions, and industry. (Source: VnExpress.)