MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INC
DEF 14A, 1997-06-23
SEMICONDUCTORS & RELATED DEVICES
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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
                                (Amendment No. )

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [  ]

Check the appropriate box:

[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ] Confidential,  for  Use  of  the  Commission  Only  (as  permitted  by  Rule
    14a-6(e)(2))
[X] Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12

                       MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X] No fee required.
[ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction  computed pursuant to
   Exchange  Act Rule 0-11  (set  forth the  amount on which the  filing  fee is
   calculated and state how it was determined):

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

5) Total fee paid:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[ ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange  Act Rule
    0-11(a)(2)  and  identify the filing for which the  offsetting  fee was paid
    previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration  statement number,
    or the form or schedule and the date of its filing.

    1) Amount previously paid:

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    2) Form, Schedule or Registration No.
 
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    3) Filing party:

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    4) Date filed:

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<PAGE>
                                [GRAPHIC OMITTED]
                                    MICROCHIP

                      MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                JULY 28, 1997
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   The Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Microchip  Technology  Incorporated,  a
Delaware  corporation (the  "Company"),  will be held at 9:00 a.m. local time on
Monday,  July 28,  1997,  at the  Company's  facility at 1200 South 52nd Street,
Tempe, Arizona, for the following purposes:

   1. To elect  directors to serve until the next annual meeting of stockholders
and until their successors are elected and qualified;

   2. To vote on a proposed amendment to the Company's  Restated  Certificate of
Incorporation, as amended, to increase the number of authorized shares of Common
Stock,  par value  $0.001 per share (the "Common  Stock"),  from  65,000,000  to
100,000,000;

   
   3. To  approve an  amendment  to the  Company's  1993  Stock  Option  Plan to
increase by 2,000,000 the number of shares of Common Stock reserved for issuance
thereunder;
    

   4. To approve an amendment to the Company's  Employee  Stock Purchase Plan to
increase by 300,000 the number of shares of Common  Stock  reserved for issuance
thereunder;

   5. To ratify the  appointment  of KPMG Peat  Marwick  LLP as the  independent
auditors of the Company for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1998; and

   6. To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting or
any adjournment thereof.

   The  foregoing  items of  business  are more  fully  described  in the  Proxy
Statement accompanying this Notice.

   Only  stockholders  of record at the  close of  business  on June 2, 1997 are
entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting.

   All stockholders are cordially invited to personally  attend the meeting.  To
assure your representation at the meeting, however, you are urged to mark, sign,
date  and  return  the   enclosed   proxy  as   promptly   as  possible  in  the
postage-prepaid  envelope enclosed for that purpose.  Any stockholder  attending
the  meeting  may vote in person  even if he or she  previously  has  returned a
proxy.


                                        Sincerely,


                                        /S/ C. Philip Chapman


                                        C. Philip Chapman
                                        Secretary

   
Chandler, Arizona
June 20, 1997
    
<PAGE>
                                [GRAPHIC OMITTED]
                                    MICROCHIP

                        MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
                          2355 WEST CHANDLER BOULEVARD
                          CHANDLER, ARIZONA 85224-6199
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 PROXY STATEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                            VOTING AND OTHER MATTERS

GENERAL

   The  enclosed   proxy  is   solicited  on  behalf  of  Microchip   Technology
Incorporated,  a Delaware corporation (the "Company"), by the Company's board of
directors  (the  "Board  of  Directors")  for  use  at  the  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders  to be held at 9:00 a.m.  local time on Monday,  July 28, 1997 (the
"Meeting"),  or at any adjournment  thereof,  for the purposes set forth in this
Proxy   Statement  and  in  the   accompanying   Notice  of  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders.  The Meeting will be held at the Company's  facility at 1200 South
52nd Street, Tempe, Arizona.

   These proxy  solicitation  materials  were first  mailed on or about June 20,
1997, to all stockholders entitled to vote at the Meeting.

   
   Unless  otherwise noted, all references in this Proxy Statement to numbers of
shares of the Company's  Common  Stock,  $0.001 par value per share (the "Common
Stock") and stock  option  information  have been  restated to reflect a 3-for-2
stock split of the Common Stock effected on January 6, 1997.
    

VOTING SECURITIES AND VOTING RIGHTS

   Stockholders  of record at the close of business on June 2, 1997 (the "Record
Date") are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Meeting. On the Record Date,
53,347,285 shares of Common Stock were issued and outstanding.

   
   The  presence,  in person or by proxy,  of the  holders of a majority  of the
total  number  of  shares  of  Common  Stock  outstanding  on  the  Record  Date
constitutes a quorum for the transaction of business at the Meeting. Shares that
are voted "FOR",  "AGAINST",  or  "WITHHELD  FROM" a matter are treated as being
present  at the  Meeting  for  purposes  of  establishing  a quorum and are also
treated as shares  entitled  to vote at the  Meeting  (the  "Votes  Cast")  with
respect to such matter. Each stockholder voting at the Meeting, either in person
or represented by proxy, may cast one vote per share of Common Stock held on all
matters to be voted on at the Meeting.  Assuming  that a quorum is present,  the
affirmative vote of the Votes Cast is required:  (i) to amend the Company's 1993
Stock  Option Plan,  as proposed;  (ii) to amend the  Company's  Employee  Stock
Purchase Plan, as proposed; and (iii) for the ratification of the appointment of
the Company's  independent  auditors.  The affirmative vote of a majority of the
shares of Common Stock outstanding on the Record Date is required to approve the
proposed amendment to the Company's  Restated  Certificate of Incorporation (the
"Certificate of Incorporation"). In the election of directors, the five nominees
receiving the highest number of affirmative votes shall be elected as directors.
Votes  withheld  from any director are counted for purposes of  determining  the
presence of a quorum, but have no other legal effect under Delaware law.
    

VOTING OF PROXIES; ABSTENTIONS; BROKER NON-VOTES

   
   Votes  cast in person or by proxy at the  Meeting  will be  tabulated  by the
election  inspector(s)  appointed  for the  Meeting.  When a proxy  is  properly
executed and returned, the shares it represents will
<PAGE>
be voted at the Meeting as directed.  Any proxy that is returned  using the form
of proxy enclosed and that is not marked as to a particular  item will be voted:
(i)  "FOR"  the  election  of each  of the  nominees  set  forth  in this  Proxy
Statement;  (ii)  "FOR"  approval  of each of the  other  matters  presented  to
stockholders  in this  Proxy  Statement;  and  (iii) as the proxy  holders  deem
advisable on other matters that may come before the Meeting.  A stockholder  may
indicate on the enclosed  proxy or its  substitute  that it is  abstaining  from
voting on a particular  matter (an  "abstention").  A broker may indicate on the
enclosed proxy or its substitute that it does not have  discretionary  authority
as to  certain  shares to vote on a  particular  matter (a  "broker  non-vote").
Abstentions  and broker  non-votes are each tabulated  separately.  The election
inspector(s)  will  determine  whether a quorum is  present at the  Meeting.  In
general,  Delaware law provides that a majority of the shares  entitled to vote,
present in person or represented by proxy, constitutes a quorum. Abstentions and
broker  non-votes of shares that are entitled to vote are treated as shares that
are present in person or represented  by proxy for purposes of  determining  the
presence  of a quorum.  In  determining  whether a proposal  has been  approved,
abstention  of shares  that are  entitled to vote are treated as Votes Cast with
respect to such proposal, but not as voting for such proposal and hence have the
same effect as votes against such proposal;  broker non-votes of shares that are
entitled  to vote are not treated as Votes Cast with  respect to the  particular
proposal on which the broker has expressly  not voted,  and hence have no effect
on the outcome of the voting on a proposal that requires a majority of the Votes
Cast (such as the  approval of a plan  amendment).  However,  with  respect to a
proposal  that  requires a majority of the  outstanding  shares of Common  Stock
(such as an amendment to the  Certificate of  Incorporation),  a broker non-vote
has the same effect as a vote against the proposal.
    

REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES

   Any person  giving a proxy may revoke the proxy at any time before its use by
delivering to the Company  written notice of revocation or a duly executed proxy
bearing a later date or by attending the Meeting and voting in person.

SOLICITATION

   The Company will pay all  expenses of this  solicitation.  In  addition,  the
Company may reimburse brokerage firms and other persons representing  beneficial
owners of shares for expenses incurred in forwarding  solicitation  materials to
such  beneficial  owners.  Proxies  also  may be  solicited  by  certain  of the
Company's  directors  and  officers,  personally  or by  telephone  or telegram,
without  additional  compensation.  The Company may also,  at its sole  expense,
retain  a proxy  solicitation  firm  to  assist  in the  distribution  of  proxy
solicitation  materials  and in the  collection  of proxies.  If so, the Company
believes that the expense will not exceed $15,000.
                                        2
<PAGE>
                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

NOMINEES

   A board of five directors is to be elected at the Meeting.  Unless  otherwise
instructed, the proxy holders will vote the proxies received by them for each of
the nominees  named below.  All of the nominees are  currently  directors of the
Company.  In the event that any such nominee is unable or declines to serve as a
director at the time of the  Meeting,  the proxies will be voted for any nominee
designated  by the current  Board of Directors  to fill the  vacancy.  It is not
expected that any nominee will be unable or will decline to serve as a director.
The term of office of each  person  elected as a director  at the  Meeting  will
continue until the next annual meeting of stockholders and until a successor has
been elected and qualified.

   
   The following table sets forth certain information regarding the nominees for
director of the Company:
    

 NAME                              AGE      POSITION(S) HELD
 ----                              ---      ----------------
Steve Sanghi ................      41       Chairman of the Board, President and
                                            Chief Executive Officer
Albert J. Hugo-Martinez(1)(2)      51       Director
Jon H. Beedle(1) ............      64       Director
L.B. Day(2) .................      52       Director
Matthew W. Chapman ..........      46       Director
- ------------------
(1) Member of the Compensation Committee
(2) Member of the Audit Committee

   Mr. Sanghi is currently,  and has been since August,  1990,  President of the
Company,  since October,  1991, Chief Executive Officer and since October, 1993,
Chairman of the Board of  Directors.  He has served as a director of the Company
since  August,  1990. He served as the Company's  Chief  Operating  Officer from
August,  1990 through  October,  1991 and as Senior Vice President of Operations
from  February,  1990 through  August,  1990.  Mr.  Sanghi is also a director of
ADFlex Solutions,  Inc., a U.S. supplier of flexible circuit-based  interconnect
solutions.

   Mr.  Hugo-Martinez  has served as a director  of the Company  since  October,
1990. Since March,  1996, he has served as President and Chief Executive Officer
of GTI Corporation, a manufacturer of ISDN and local area network subcomponents.
From 1987 to 1995, he served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Applied
Micro Circuits Corporation,  a manufacturer of high-performance  bipolar and bi-
CMOS gate arrays.

   Mr.  Beedle has served as director of the Company  since  October,  1993.  In
1995,  Mr.  Beedle  retired  as  President  of  IN-STAT,  Inc.,  a leading  high
technology  market  research firm, a position in which he had served since 1981.
Mr.  Beedle is also a director  of Bell  Microproducts,  a regional  electronics
distributor.

   Mr. Day has served as a director  since  December,  1994.  Since 1976, he has
served as President of L.B. Day & Company, Inc. (formerly Day-Floren Associates,
Inc.), a management  consulting firm specializing in  organizational  structure,
development and strategic planning.

   
   Mr.  Chapman has served as a director  since May,  1997.  Since 1988,  he has
served as Chief  Executive  Officer of CFI  ProServices,  Inc.,  a  supplier  of
integrated software solutions and services to financial institutions  throughout
the United States ("CFI") and since 1991, he has also served as Chairman of CFI.
Mr.  Chapman  is also a director  of Phoenix  Gold  International,  a  Portland,
Oregon-based manufacturer of automotive audio equipment.
    

MEETINGS AND COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

   
   The Company's  By-Laws authorize the Board of Directors to appoint from among
its members one or more committees composed of one or more directors.  The Board
of  Directors  has  appointed  a  standing   Audit   Committee  and  a  standing
Compensation Committee. The Company does not have a nominating
                                        3
<PAGE>
committee  or  any  committee  that  performs  the  functions  of  a  nominating
committee.  The Audit  Committee is primarily  responsible  for  appointing  the
Company's  independent  accounting  firm and for  reviewing and  evaluating  the
Company's accounting principles and its systems of internal controls.  The Audit
Committee also reviews the annual financial statements,  significant  accounting
and tax issues and the scope of the annual audit with the Company's  independent
auditors. The Compensation Committee reviews and acts on all matters relating to
compensation  levels and benefit  plans for the Company's  key  executives.  See
"Board Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation," below.

   The Board of Directors  met five times during the fiscal year ended March 31,
1997. The Company's  Audit Committee met twice,  and the Company's  Compensation
Committee met four times, during the fiscal year ended March 31, 1997.
    

   DIRECTOR COMPENSATION AND OTHER INFORMATION

Director Fees

   Directors receive a $10,000 annual retainer,  paid in quarterly installments,
and $1,000 per meeting for each regular and special Board of Directors  meeting.
No compensation is paid for telephonic meetings of the Board of Directors or for
meetings of committees of the Board of Directors. 

Stock Options

   
   Under the terms of the Company's  1993 Stock Option Plan,  each  non-employee
director is automatically  granted an option to purchase 10,000 shares of Common
Stock upon his or her first election to the Board of Directors and, for 1996 and
earlier years, an additional  option to purchase 5,000 shares of Common Stock at
the meeting of the Board of Directors  held  immediately  following  each annual
stockholders' meeting. Commencing with the Meeting,  non-employee directors will
each automatically be granted an option to purchase 5,000 shares of Common Stock
as of the first  business  day of the month in which  the  annual  stockholders'
meeting is held.  Following the 1996 annual meeting of  stockholders on July 26,
1996,  each of Messrs.  Hugo-Martinez,  Beedle and Day was  granted an option to
acquire  5,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise  price of  $30.75(1),  such
options  to vest in a series of 12 equal  and  successive  monthly  installments
commencing one month after the grant date.  Following his initial appointment to
the Board of  Directors on May 19,  1997,  Mr.  Chapman was granted an option to
acquire  10,000  shares of Common  Stock at an exercise  price of  $31.5625  per
share.  This  option  vests  in a  series  of 36 equal  and  successive  monthly
installments commencing one month after the grant date.
    

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

SUMMARY OF CASH AND OTHER COMPENSATION

   
   The following  table sets forth the  compensation  for the three fiscal years
ended March 31,  1997,  1996 and 1995 earned by the  Company's  Chief  Executive
Officer and each of the Company's five other most highly  compensated  executive
officers whose salary plus bonus for fiscal 1997 exceeded  $100,000 for services
rendered in all capacities to the Company  (collectively,  the "Named  Executive
Officers"):  
    

- ----------------
(1)  Neither the number of shares nor the option  exercise price set forth above
     have been  adjusted to reflect the 3-for-2  stock split of the Common Stock
     effected  on January  6, 1997.  To the  extent  such  options  had not been
     exercised  on January 6, 1997,  the number of  unexercised  options and the
     exercise price were adjusted to reflect the 3-for-2 stock split. 
                                       4
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
                                ANNUAL COMPENSATION         LONG-TERM
                           --------------------------      COMPENSATION
                                                          --------------
                                                              AWARDS
                                                          --------------
                                                            SECURITIES     ALL OTHER
                                                 BONUS      UNDERLYING    COMPENSATION
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION  YEAR  SALARY ($)   ($)(1)    OPTIONS/SARS(#)    ($)(2)
- ---------------------------  ----  ----------   ------    ---------------    ------
<S>                          <C>    <C>        <C>          <C>             <C>
Steve Sanghi,                1997   $342,693   $11,346      165,000         $272,542
 President and Chief         1996    329,423     9,807       75,000          168,723
 Executive Officer           1995    295,384    84,308      225,000          233,587
Robert A. Lanford,           1997    176,632    46,489       39,000           37,267
 Vice President,             1996    170,985    50,886       18,000           28,958
 Worldwide Sales             1995    159,015    73,794       56,250           25,725
George P. Rigg,              1997    172,299     5,692       47,250           63,540
 Vice President,             1996    166,730     4,952       22,500           49,148
 Advanced                    1995    152,583    51,854       67,500           52,618
 Microcontroller and
 Technology Division
Timothy B. Billington,       1997    171,267    72,681       56,250                0
 Vice President,             1996    165,790    50,554       22,500                0
 Manufacturing               1995    153,424    99,224       67,500                0
 Operations
C. Philip Chapman,           1997    155,097     5,145       45,750           62,683
 Vice President,             1996    148,240     4,414       19,500           37,125
 Chief Financial Officer     1995    134,093    32,322       45,000           33,750
Mitchell R. Little,          1997    154,760    33,237       45,000           33,785
 Vice President,             1996    148,077     4,423       18,000           40,350
 Standard Microcontroller    1995    138,715    40,531       56,250           37,001
 and ASSP Division
</TABLE>
- ------------------
(1)   Includes  MICP bonus earned in year shown but not paid until the following
      year,  and cash bonus  payments  under the Company's  cash bonus plan. See
      "Board Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation," below for
      descriptions of the MICP bonus program and the cash bonus plan.
(2)   Except  as  otherwise  noted,   consists  of:  (i)  the   Company-matching
      contributions to the Company's 401(k) retirement  savings plan, which were
      $3,792 for Mr. Sanghi, $2,706 for Mr. Lanford, $2,689 for Mr. Rigg, $0 for
      Mr.  Billington,  $1,760 for Mr. Chapman,  and $2,285 for Mr. Little;  and
      (ii)  an  additional   payment  by  the  Company  in  connection   with  a
      split-dollar   life  insurance  program  which  is  distributable  to  the
      individual  executive  officer  when he is no  longer an  employee  of the
      Company,  in the  amount  of  $268,750  for Mr.  Sanghi,  $34,561  for Mr.
      Lanford,  $60,851 for Mr.  Rigg,  $0 for Mr.  Billington,  $60,923 for Mr.
      Chapman and  $31,500 for Mr.  Little.  See "Board  Compensation  Committee
      Report  on  Executive  Compensation,"  below  for  a  description  of  the
      split-dollar life insurance program.

   
EQUITY COMPENSATION PLANS
    

1993 Stock Option Plan (The "Plan")

   The Plan is the Company's primary equity incentive program for key employees,
non-employee  members of the Board of Directors and independent  contractors who
provide valuable services to the Company. The Plan is more fully discussed below
at "Proposal To Amend The Company's 1993 Stock Option Plan."
                                        5
<PAGE>
Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the "Purchase Plan")

   The Purchase Plan allows eligible employees of the Company to purchase shares
of Common Stock at semi-annual  intervals  through periodic payroll  deductions.
The purchase price per share for an eligible  employee who  participates  in the
Purchase  Plan is the  lower of (i) 85% of the fair  market  value of a share of
Common Stock on the employee's entry date into the then-current  offering period
under  the  Purchase  Plan or (ii)  85% of the fair  market  value of a share of
Common Stock on the  semi-annual  purchase date. The Purchase Plan is more fully
discussed  below at "Proposal To Amend The  Company's  Employee  Stock  Purchase
Plan."

OPTION GRANTS

   The  following  table  contains  information  concerning  the  grant of stock
options to the Named  Executive  Officers during the fiscal year ended March 31,
1997:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                                      INDIVIDUAL GRANTS
                      ----------------------------------------------------
                                     PERCENT                                 POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                       NUMBER OF     OF TOTAL                                  VALUE AT ASSUMED
                       SECURITIES    OPTIONS                                 ANNUAL RATES OF STOCK
                       UNDERLYING   GRANTED TO                              PRICE APPRECIATION FOR
                        OPTIONS     EMPLOYEES    EXERCISE OR                      OPTION TERM
                        GRANTED     IN FISCAL    BASE PRICE    EXPIRATION -------------------------
NAME                      (#)          YEAR        ($/SH)         DATE      5% ($)(3)   10% ($)(3)
- ----                      ---          ----        ------         ----      ---------   ----------
<S>                  <C>              <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>         <C>        
STEVE SANGHI ......... 37,500(1)        1.8%       $17.00       04/30/06   $  400,920  $ 1,016,011
                      127,500(2)        6.1%        16.83       07/02/06    1,349,738    3,420,502
ROBERT A. LANFORD  ...  9,000(1)        0.5%        17.00       04/30/06       96,221      243,843
                       30,000(2)        1.4%        16.83       07/02/06      317,586      804,824
GEORGE P. RIGG ....... 11,250(1)        0.5%        17.00       04/30/06      120,276      304,803
                       36,000(2)        1.7%        16.83       07/02/06      381,103      965,789
TIMOTHY B. BILLINGTON. 11,250(1)        0.5%        17.00       04/30/06      120,276      304,803
                       45,000(2)        1.7%        16.83       07/02/06      476,378    1,207,236
C. PHILIP CHAPMAN  ...  9,750(1)        0.5%        17.00       04/30/06      104,239      264,163
                       36,000(2)        1.7%        16.83       07/02/06      381,103      965,789
MITCHELL R. LITTLE  ..  9,000(1)        0.5%        17.00       04/30/06       96,221      243,843
                       36,000(2)        1.7%        16.83       07/02/06      381,103      965,789
</TABLE>


(1)   Each stock option becomes  exercisable over a one-year vesting period,  in
      12 successive monthly installments commencing on October 21, 1999, and has
      a  maximum  term of 10  years  from  the  date of  grant.  Vesting  may be
      accelerated under certain  circumstances in connection with an acquisition
      of the Company or a change of control.  The exercise  price may be paid in
      cash,  in shares  of  Common  Stock  valued  at fair  market  value on the
      exercise  date or  through  a  cashless  exercise  procedure  involving  a
      same-day  sale  of the  purchased  shares.  See  "Proposal  to  Amend  The
      Company's 1993 Stock Option Plan -- Description of the Plan," below, for a
      further description of the material provisions of the Plan.
(2)   Each stock option becomes  exercisable over a one-year vesting period,  in
      12 successive monthly  installments  commencing on July 2, 2000, and has a
      maximum  term  of 10  years  from  the  date  of  grant.  Vesting  may  be
      accelerated under certain  circumstances in connection with an acquisition
      of the Company or a change of control.  The exercise  price may be paid in
      cash,  in shares  of  Common  Stock  valued  at fair  market  value on the
      exercise  date or  through  a  cashless  exercise  procedure  involving  a
      same-day  sale  of the  purchased  shares.  See  "Proposal  to  Amend  The
      Company's 1993 Stock Option Plan -- Description of the Plan," below, for a
      further description of the material provisions of the Plan.
(3)   No assurance  can be given that the actual stock price  appreciation  over
      the 10-year option term will be at the assumed 5% and 10% levels or at any
      other defined level.  The rates of appreciation  are specified by rules of
      the   Securities  and  Exchange   Commission   (the  "SEC")  and  are  for
      illustrative  purposes only; they do not represent the Company's  estimate
      of future stock price. Unless the market price of the Common Stock does in
      fact  appreciate  over the option term, no value will be realized from the
      option grant.  The exercise  price of each of the options was equal to the
      closing  sales  price of the Common  Stock as quoted on the  NASDAQ  Stock
      Market on the date of grant.
                                        6
<PAGE>
OPTION EXERCISES AND HOLDINGS

   The following  table provides  information on option  exercises in the fiscal
year  ended,  and option  holdings  at,  March 31,  1997 by the Named  Executive
Officers and the value of such officers' unexercised options at March 31, 1997:

                 AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                        AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        NUMBER OF SECURITIES           VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                       UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED
                           SHARES         VALUE                OPTIONS                 IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS
                         ACQUIRED ON    REALIZED        AT MARCH 31, 1997 (#)        AT MARCH 31, 1997 ($)(1)
NAME                    EXERCISE (#)     ($)(2)      EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE  EXERCISABLE(1)  UNEXERCISABLE
- ---------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------- --------------- -------------- ---------------
<S>                      <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>             <C>            <C>
Steve Sanghi ..........        0               0     513,281       525,469         $12,357,077    $7,689,369
Robert A. Lanford  ....   62,481       1,811,831      13,714       128,015             345,646     1,889,485
George P. Rigg ........  103,500       2,118,822      37,482       158,343             857,914     2,336,836
Timothy B. Billington     87,975       1,436,327      27,932       167,484             724,019     2,469,139
C. Philip Chapman  ....   30,000         693,953      55,542       120,093           1,501,802     1,686,164
Mitchell R. Little  ...   45,564         905,543       7,595       133,593             189,715     1,950,895
</TABLE>

- ---------------
(1)   Calculated  based on $30.00 per share,  which was the closing  sales price
      per share of the  Common  Stock as quoted on the  NASDAQ  Stock  Market on
      March 31, 1997, multiplied by the number of applicable shares in-the-money
      less the total exercise price for such shares.
(2)   Calculated based on the market price per share of the Common Stock at date
      of exercise  multiplied  by the number of shares issued upon exercise less
      the total exercise price of the options exercised.

EMPLOYMENT   CONTRACTS,   TERMINATION   OF  EMPLOYMENT  AND  CHANGE  IN  CONTROL
ARRANGEMENTS

   
   The Company has not entered into  employment  contracts with any of the Named
Executive  Officers.  Each of the Named  Executive  Officers has entered into an
Executive  Officer   Severance   Agreement  with  the  Company  (the  "Severance
Agreement").  The Severance Agreement provides for the automatic acceleration in
vesting  of all  unvested  stock  options  upon the first to occur of any of the
following events:  (i) as of the date immediately  preceding a change of control
in the  event any such  stock  options  are or will be  terminated  or  canceled
(except by mutual  consent) or any  successor to the Company fails to assume and
agree to perform all such stock  option  agreements  at or prior to such time as
any  such  person  becomes  a  successor  to the  Company;  (ii) as of the  date
immediately preceding such change of control in the event the executive does not
or will not receive upon  exercise of such  executive's  stock  purchase  rights
under any such stock option agreement the same identical securities and/or other
consideration  as  is  received  by  all  other   stockholders  in  any  merger,
consolidation,  sale,  exchange or similar  transaction  occurring upon or after
such  change  of  control;  (iii)  as of  the  date  immediately  preceding  any
involuntary  termination  of such  executive  occurring  upon or after  any such
change of control;  or (iv) as of the date six months  following  the first such
change of control,  provided that the executive  shall have remained an employee
of the Company  continuously  throughout such six-month period.  For purposes of
the Severance Agreement,  "change of control" means the occurrence of any of the
following  events:  (a) any "person" (as such term is used in Sections 13(d) and
14(d) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended [the "Exchange  Act"])
is or  becomes  the  "beneficial  owner" (as  defined  in Rule  13d-3  under the
Exchange Act), directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company representing
50% or  more  of the  total  voting  power  represented  by the  Company's  then
outstanding voting  securities;  or (b) a change in the composition of the Board
of  Directors  as a result of which fewer than a majority of the  directors  are
"Incumbent  Directors." "Incumbent Directors" means directors who either (A) are
directors  of the  Company as of the date the  Severance  Agreement  was entered
into, or (B) are elected,  or nominated for election,  to the Board of Directors
with the  affirmative  votes  (either by a specific  vote or by  approval of the
proxy  statement  of the  Company in which such person is named as a nominee for
election  as a  director  without  objection  to such  nomination)  of at  least
three-quarters  of the  Incumbent  Directors  at the  time of such  election  or
nomination (but shall not include an individual  whose election or nomination is
in  connection  with an actual  or  threatened  proxy  contest  relating  to the
election of directors of the Company); or (c) the
                                        7
<PAGE>
stockholders  of the Company  approve a merger or  consolidation  of the Company
with any other  corporation,  other than a merger or  consolidation  which would
result in the voting  securities of the Company  outstanding  immediately  prior
thereto  continuing to represent  (either by remaining  outstanding  or by being
converted  into voting  securities of the surviving  entity) at least 50% of the
total voting power  represented by the voting  securities of the Company or such
surviving entity outstanding immediately after such merger or consolidation,  or
the  stockholders of the Company  approve a plan of complete  liquidation of the
Company or an  agreement  for the sale or  disposition  by the Company of all or
substantially all the Company's assets.
    

BOARD COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

 The Compensation Committee; General

   The Board of Directors  maintains a Compensation  Committee (the "Committee")
comprised of one or more outside directors. The Committee is presently comprised
of Messrs.  Hugo-Martinez and Beedle. The Committee, with input from Messrs. Day
and Sanghi, conducted performance reviews for fiscal 1997, and made compensation
decisions  for fiscal 1998,  with respect to the  Company's  executive  officers
other than Mr.  Sanghi.  The Committee,  with input from Mr. Day,  conducted the
performance  review for fiscal 1997, and made compensation  decisions for fiscal
1998,  with  respect  to  Mr.  Sanghi.   Mr.  Sanghi  does  not  participate  in
deliberations  relating to his own compensation.  Mr. Chapman was elected to the
Board of Directors  on May 19, 1997.  He did not  participate  in any  decisions
related to fiscal 1997  compensation  for the executive  officers and, as of the
date of this Proxy Statement, has not participated in any compensation decisions
for fiscal 1998.

  The Stock Option Committee

   The Board of Directors also maintains a Stock Option  Committee  comprised of
two or more outside directors.  The Stock Option Committee  administers the Plan
and determines,  within the confines of the Plan, the timing, amount and vesting
of stock  options to be granted to the  Company's  executive  officers.  Messrs.
Hugo-Martinez and Beedle currently comprise the Stock Option Committee.

  Compensation Policy

   The Company bases its compensation policy on a pay-for-performance philosophy
for  all  corporate  officers  and key  employees.  This  philosophy  emphasizes
variable  compensation,  primarily  by setting base  salaries  after a review of
average  base  salary  levels  of  comparable  companies  in  the  semiconductor
industry,  with an opportunity  to enhance total  compensation  through  various
incentives.  The Company  believes that this philosophy  successfully  aligns an
executive's  total  compensation  with the  Company's  business  objectives  and
performance and the interests of the stockholders, and serves to attract, retain
and reward  individuals  who  contribute  both to the Company's  short-term  and
long-term success. Compensation decisions also include subjective determinations
and a  consideration  of various  factors  with the weight given to a particular
factor varying from time to time and in various  individual  cases.  The Company
believes  that  its  overall  pay-for-performance   philosophy  fosters  a  team
environment  among  the  Company's  management  that  focuses  their  energy  on
achieving the Company's  financial and performance  objectives,  consistent with
the Company's guiding values.

   The Committee believes that the overall compensation levels for the Company's
executive   officers  for  fiscal  1997  are   consistent   with  the  Company's
pay-for-performance  philosophy  and are  reasonable  in light of the  Company's
fiscal 1997 performance.  Fiscal 1997 was an unusual and  unprecedented  year in
the semiconductor  industry as a whole, which manifested itself in industry-wide
inventory  correction  activities and an overall industry revenue growth rate of
- -6%.1 Despite industry conditions, the Company's net sales increased 17% and 38%
in fiscal 1997 and 1996,  respectively;  its net income increased 17% and 21% in
fiscal 1997 and 1996, respectively; and its return on average equity was 23% and
28% in fiscal 1997 and 1996, respectively.

- ------------------
(1)Source -- Semiconductor Industry Association.
                                        8
<PAGE>
Elements of Compensation

   There  are  currently  four  major   elements  of  the  Company's   executive
compensation program:  annual base salary,  incentive cash bonuses and long-term
compensation  programs,  stock options,  and compensation and employee  benefits
generally available to all Company employees.

   
   Base  Salaries.  The  Committee  establishes  annual  base  salaries  for the
Company's executive officers at the beginning of each fiscal year,  primarily by
considering  the  salaries  of  executive  officers  in similar  positions  with
comparably-sized   companies  (the  "Reference  Group").   The  Reference  Group
currently  consists of six  companies  that have annual sales of $300 million to
$1.0  billion,  have market  capitalizations  of between  $400  million and $4.0
billion,  and operate in recognized market segments,  such as logic,  memory and
mixed-signal,  within the semiconductor industry. Monitoring the Reference Group
provides a stable and  continuing  frame of reference  for reviewing and setting
base salary  compensation.  The composition of the Reference Group is subject to
change from year to year based on the Committee's  assessment of  comparability,
including the extent to which the Reference  Group  reflects  changes  occurring
within  the  Company  and in the  semiconductor  industry  as a  whole.  The six
Reference  Group  companies also comprise the Peer Group used in the performance
graph.  See  "Performance  Graph,"  below.  In  addition,  consistent  with  the
Company's pay-for-performance  philosophy, the Committee reviews the performance
objectives for the Company as a whole for the immediately  preceding fiscal year
and the upcoming fiscal year, as well as the performance  objectives for each of
the individual officers relative to their respective areas of responsibility for
both periods.  Performance  objectives are initially developed by the individual
officers,  in  conjunction  with  their  respective  operating  units,  and then
discussed  with and  approved by the Chief  Executive  Officer to  generate  the
Company's annual operating plan ("AOP"). The Board of Directors then reviews and
approves  the AOP.  In setting  base  salaries,  the  Committee  also  considers
subjective factors such as an executive's  experience and tenure in the industry
and perceived value of the executive's position to the Company as a whole. After
consideration of all of the above-described  factors,  average base salaries for
the Company's executive officers increased 3.85% in fiscal 1997.
    

   Incentive Cash Bonuses and Long-Term  Compensation  Programs.  Incentive cash
bonuses  may be  payable  to the  Company's  officers,  managers  and  other key
employees under the Company's Management  Incentive  Compensation Plan ("MICP").
The Board of  Directors  approved the MICP for fiscal 1997 as part of the fiscal
1997 AOP at the  beginning of fiscal 1997.  The MICP is an aggregate  bonus pool
derived from a percentage of the Company's annual operating  profit.  This bonus
pool may then be  allocated  among  the  eligible  participants  based  upon the
achievement  of  individual   performance   objectives  and  various  subjective
determinations,  with no particular weight being assigned to any one factor. The
Board of Directors and the Committee  generally give Mr. Sanghi wide  discretion
with respect to the designation of employees eligible to participate in the MICP
and the amount of any MICP bonus to be  awarded to each  participant,  including
executive  officers other than himself.  The Committee  determines the amount of
the  MICP  bonus,  if  any,  to be  awarded  to  Mr.  Sanghi.  In  fiscal  1997,
approximately  214  employees,  including the  executive  officers and the Chief
Executive Officer, participated in the MICP.

   
   In  conjunction  with the  MICP,  the  executive  officers  are  eligible  to
participate  in a program  designed to provide longer term  compensation  to the
executive  officers.  In light of the  importance  of  retaining  the  executive
officers  in  the  Company's  long-term  employ  and  in  order  to  provide  an
alternative  to immediately  taxable cash bonuses,  in fiscal 1995 the Committee
created a longer term benefit for key  executives in the form of a  split-dollar
life insurance  program.  The split-dollar  life insurance  program provides key
officers with an incentive to remain in the long-term employ of the Company,  an
insurance  benefit,  and a cash value  benefit  payable  in the future  when the
executive is no longer in the Company's  employ.  The Committee  determines what
portion of an  executive's  overall MICP cash bonus will be paid in cash or into
the  split-dollar  life  insurance  program.  During  fiscal  1997,  two  of the
executive  officers  received a cash MICP bonus; all of the MICP bonuses for the
other  executive  officers,  including  Mr.  Sanghi,  were  contributed  to  the
split-dollar life insurance program.  See the "Summary  Compensation  Table" and
the footnotes thereto, above.
    

   Numerous objective and subjective factors were considered in establishing the
total MICP bonus compensation for fiscal 1997, including the Company's sales and
net income growth, and return on equity.
                                        9
<PAGE>
MICP  bonuses  for  fiscal  1997 were paid at the rate of 80% of the total  MICP
bonus pool  established  in the fiscal 1997 AOP. As a result,  the average  MICP
bonus for the Company's  six  executive  officers,  excluding  Mr.  Sanghi,  was
approximately 33.7% of base salary, an increase of approximately 45.6% in fiscal
1997 as compared to fiscal 1996 when the average  MICP bonus for such  officers,
excluding Mr. Sanghi,  was  approximately  24% of base salary.  See the "Summary
Compensation  Table" and footnotes  thereto,  above. The Committee believes that
the MICP bonus  compensation  for fiscal 1997 is  consistent  with the Company's
pay-for-performance  philosophy and is commensurate  with the Company's  overall
performance, as well as the fiscal 1997 AOP objectives.

   Stock Options. The Company believes that executive officers,  other corporate
officers and key employees should hold  substantial,  long-term equity stakes in
the Company so that their collective  interests will coincide with the interests
of the stockholders. Thus, stock options constitute a significant portion of the
Company's incentive  compensation program. At March 31, 1997,  approximately 56%
of the Company's  employees  worldwide held options to purchase Common Stock. In
granting  stock options to executive  officers  under the Plan, the Stock Option
Committee  considers  numerous  factors,  such as the individual's  position and
responsibilities   with  the  Company,  the  individual's  future  potential  to
influence the Company's mid- and long-term  growth,  the vesting schedule of the
options awarded and the number of options  previously  granted. A description of
the Plan is set forth  below at  "Proposal  To Amend The  Company's  1993  Stock
Option Plan." See the table under "Option Grants -- Option Grants in Last Fiscal
Year," above, for information regarding options to purchase Common Stock granted
to the Named Executive Officers during fiscal 1997.

   
   As  described  above,  the grant of stock  options to employees is a critical
element  in  the  Company's  pay-for-performance,   variable  compensation-based
philosophy  that  provides a  competitive  incentive to remain in the  Company's
service.  In April,  1996,  as a response to the  Company's  performance  in the
fourth  quarter of fiscal  1996,  and that of the  semiconductor  industry  as a
whole, the Company eliminated MICP bonuses for all employees for the second half
of fiscal 1996,  and cash bonus plan  payments for all  employees for the fourth
quarter of fiscal 1996. In light of these  actions,  the Committee  reviewed the
terms of stock option grants to employees and determined that a large portion of
such  grants  were of little or no  incentive  value to the  affected  employees
because the exercise prices were well in excess of the then-current value of the
Common Stock. The Committee concluded that a significant and serious competitive
disadvantage would result to the Company if that situation were not remedied. To
counteract  this  competitive  disadvantage,  the  Committee  adopted  an option
exchange  program  (the  "Exchange   Program").   Under  the  Exchange  Program,
employees,  excluding the Named Executive  Officers,  certain corporate officers
and  directors  and  non-employee  directors,  who held options with an exercise
price in excess of $20.00 per share issued between November,  1994 and February,
1996 were given the  opportunity  to exchange  those  options for a stock option
grant dated April 30,  1996 at an exercise  price of $17.00 per share,  the fair
market value of the Common Stock on April 30,  1996.  If an employee  elected to
exchange his or her options under the Exchange Program, the vesting commencement
date was extended by 90 days from the original  vesting date.  Options  covering
654,395 shares of Common Stock were exchanged under the Exchange Program.

   Other  Compensation  and  Employee  Benefits  Generally  Available to Company
Employees.  The Company  maintains  compensation and employee  benefits that are
generally available to all Company employees, including medical, dental and life
insurance  benefits,  the Purchase  Plan, a 401(k)  retirement  savings  plan, a
supplemental  retirement  savings  plan  (an  unfunded,  non-qualified  deferred
compensation plan maintained  primarily for the purpose of providing deferral of
compensation  for a select  group of  management  employees  as defined in ERISA
Sections  201, 301 and 401),  and a cash bonus plan.  The cash bonus plan awards
each eligible  employee  with up to two and one-half days of pay,  based on base
salary,  every  quarter,  if the Company meets certain  operating  profitability
objectives established by the Board of Directors. For fiscal 1997, each eligible
employee received 85% of the maximum cash bonus payment permitted under the cash
bonus plan.
    

Chief Executive Officer Compensation

   The Committee  uses the same factors and criteria  described  above in making
compensation  decisions regarding the Chief Executive Officer.  For fiscal 1997,
Mr. Sanghi's base salary was increased by 4.0%. The
                                       10
<PAGE>
Committee believes this is an appropriate increase considering the base salaries
of chief  executive  officers in the Reference  Group,  and the Company's  sales
growth and performance in an unprecedented and difficult  industry  environment.
Mr.  Sanghi's  aggregate  MICP  bonus  for  fiscal  1997  was  determined  after
considering  numerous objective and subjective factors,  including the Company's
performance in an unusual and unprecedented  industry environment as compared to
that of the  semiconductor  industry  as a whole,  and  resulted in a total MICP
bonus  payment  for  fiscal  1997  (which  was  made  as a  contribution  to the
split-dollar life insurance program) of approximately  78.4% of his base salary.
As a result,  Mr.  Sanghi's  fiscal 1997 MICP bonus  represented  an increase of
approximately  62.9% in fiscal 1997 as compared to fiscal 1996 when Mr. Sanghi's
MICP  bonus  was  approximately  50.0%  of his  base  salary.  See the  "Summary
Compensation  Table" and footnotes  thereto,  above. The Committee believes that
Mr.  Sanghi's  fiscal  1997 MICP  bonus was (i)  consistent  with the  Company's
pay-for-performance  philosophy and is commensurate  with the Company's  overall
performance,  as well as the fiscal  1997 AOP  objectives;  and (ii)  reasonable
based on the Company's  overall  performance in fiscal 1997, its  performance as
compared to the Reference Group and Mr.  Sanghi's  leadership and influence over
the Company's  performance.  See the table under  "Option  Grants in Last Fiscal
Year," above, for information regarding options to purchase Common Stock granted
to Mr. Sanghi during  fiscal 1997.  The April 30, 1996 grant became  exercisable
over a one-year vesting period in 12 successive monthly installments  commencing
October 21,  1999;  the July 2, 1996 grant  became  exercisable  over a one-year
vesting period in 12 successive  monthly  installments  commencing July 2, 2000.
The amount of these grants and the vesting  terms were  determined to provide an
appropriate long-term incentive for Mr. Sanghi.

Deductibility Of Executive Compensation

   
   Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"),
limits the  deductibility  by the  Company for  federal  income tax  purposes of
compensation  paid to the Company's Chief  Executive  Officer and to each of the
Company's other four most highly  compensated  executive  officers to $1 million
each, subject to certain exceptions.  The Company anticipates that a substantial
portion  of  each   executive   officer's   compensation   will  be   "qualified
performance-based  compensation," that is not limited under Code Section 162(m).
The  Committee,  therefore,  does not  currently  anticipate  that any executive
officer's  compensation  will exceed that limitation of  deductibility in fiscal
1998.  The  Committee   intends  to  review  the   deductibility   of  executive
compensation from time to time to determine  whether any additional  actions are
advisable to maintain deductibility.

   By The Compensation and Stock Option Committees of the Board of Directors:

                  Albert J. Hugo-Martinez      Jon H. Beedle
    

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

   
   The Board of Directors maintains a Compensation Committee, which is currently
comprised of Messrs.  Hugo-Martinez and Beedle. Neither of Messrs. Hugo-Martinez
or Beedle had any  contractual or other  relationship  or  transaction  with the
Company  during  fiscal 1997 except as a director and neither has ever served as
an officer or employee of the Company.
    
                                       11
<PAGE>
PERFORMANCE GRAPH

   
   The following graph shows a comparison of cumulative total stockholder return
for: (i) the Common Stock; (ii) a self-constructed Peer Group Index comprised of
six companies that operate in recognized market segments,  such as logic, memory
and mixed-signal,  within the semiconductor  industry and that have annual sales
between  $300 and $1.0  billion  and a market  capitalization  of  between  $400
million and $4.0  billion  (the "Peer  Group");  and (iii) the CRSP Total Return
Index for the NASDAQ Stock Market (U.S.).  The Peer Group is comprised of Altera
Corporation, Atmel Corporation,  Linear Technology Corporation, Maxim Integrated
Products, Inc., Xilinx, Inc., and Zilog, Inc.
    

   The Peer Group is identical to the  Reference  Group used by the Committee in
reviewing executive  compensation.  See "Board Compensation  Committee Report on
Executive Compensation."

   
   In preparing  the following  graph,  it was assumed that $100 was invested in
the Common Stock at the initial  public  offering  price on March 22, 1993,  the
date on which  shares  of Common  Stock  were  first  publicly  traded.  No cash
dividends have been declared or paid with respect to the Common Stock.
    

   NOTE THAT HISTORIC STOCK PRICE  PERFORMANCE IS NOT NECESSARILY  INDICATIVE OF
FUTURE STOCK PERFORMANCE.

                       Cumulative Stock Performance Graph
    Among Microchip Technology Inc., Peer Group Index and Broad Market Index
                                [GRAPHIC OMITTED]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         03/23/93  03/31/93  05/28/93  07/30/93  09/30/93  11/30/93  01/31/94  03/31/94  05/31/94  07/29/94  
<S>                       <C>        <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>      <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>        <C>   
Microchip Technology      $100.00    113.16    163.16    200.00    364.91    449.12    557.89    536.84    652.61    673.67    
Peer Group Index          $100.00    105.13    121.01    130.08    159.82    143.19    177.07    178.06    181.08    160.77
Broad Market Index        $100.00    102.03    103.51    104.11    112.75    111.85    118.45    110.13    108.97    107.13

                         09/30/94  11/30/94  01/31/95  03/31/95  05/31/95  07/29/95  09/29/95  11/30/95  01/31/96  03/29/96  
Microchip Technology       826.29    939.47    706.58    888.16    939.47   1215.79   1196.05   1278.95   1050.00    868.42
Peer Group Index           196.34    213.24    214.05    256.31    305.86    418.22    463.37    420.58    435.72    384.72
Broad Market Index         113.67    112.06    113.01    122.51    129.63    150.43    157.01    159.77    159.76    166.35

                         05/31/96  07/31/96  09/30/96  11/29/96  01/31/97  03/31/97
Microchip Technology       813.16   1006.58   1180.26   1507.89   1805.92   1421.05
Peer Group Index           393.86    334.91    382.90    490.06    563.65    489.43
Broad Market Index         188.43    163.91    186.34    195.72    209.36    183.89
</TABLE>
                                       12
<PAGE>
                  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS,
                        DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

   
   The following table sets forth certain  information  regarding the beneficial
ownership  of the Common  Stock as of April 27, 1997 by: (i) each  director  and
nominee  for  director;  (ii) each of the Named  Executive  Officers;  (iii) all
directors and executive  officers as a group;  and (iv) each person who is known
to the Company to own beneficially more than five percent of the Common Stock:


            NAME AND ADDRESS               NUMBER OF SHARES          PERCENT OF
           OF BENEFICIAL OWNER          BENEFICIALLY OWNED(1)(2)    COMMON STOCK
           -------------------          ------------------------    ------------
The Kaufmann Fund(3) ...................          3,575,000             6.72%
Steve Sanghi(4) ........................          1,356,332             2.5%
George P. Rigg(5) ......................            154,236              *
Robert A. Lanford(6) ...................            102,691              *
C. Philip Chapman(7) ...................             63,284              *
Albert J. Hugo-Martinez(8) .............             41,686              *
Timothy B. Billington(9) ...............             40,608              *
L.B. Day(10) ...........................             21,042              *
Mitchell R. Little(11) .................             19,448              *
Jon H. Beedle(12) ......................              6,875              *
Matthew W. Chapman(13) .................                278              *
All directors and executive officers as 
 a group (ten persons)(14) .............          1,806,480             3.4%

- ---------------
 *    Less than 1% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.
(1)   Except as otherwise  indicated in the footnotes to this table and pursuant
      to applicable  community  property  laws,  the persons named in this table
      have sole voting and investment power with respect to all shares of Common
      Stock.
(2)   Includes shares of Common Stock issuable to the identified person pursuant
      to stock options and stock purchase rights that may be exercised within 60
      days of April 27, 1997. In calculating  the percentage of ownership,  such
      shares are deemed to be  outstanding  for the  purpose  of  computing  the
      percentage  of shares of Common  Stock  owned by such  person  but are not
      deemed to be  outstanding  for the purpose of computing the  percentage of
      shares of Common Stock owned by any other stockholder.
(3)   140 East 45th Street, 43rd Floor, New York, NY 10017. Information is based
      on a Schedule  13G filed with the SEC by The  Kaufmann  Fund,  Inc.  dated
      January 31, 1997. Such Schedule 13G indicates that The Kaufmann Fund, Inc.
      has the sole power to vote or direct the vote and to dispose of and direct
      the disposition of such Common Stock.
(4)   Includes  546,328 shares issuable upon exercise of options.  Also includes
      312,369  shares held of record by Steve  Sanghi and Maria  Sanghi as joint
      tenants  and 201,646  shares  held of record by Steve  Sanghi and Maria T.
      Sanghi as Trustees of Declaration of Trust.
(5)   Includes 48,028 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
(6)   Includes 22,784 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
(7)   Includes 61,588 share issuable upon exercise of options.
(8)   Includes  35,765 shares  issuable upon exercise of options.  Also includes
      5,921  shares  held of  record  by  Albert  J.  Hugo-Martinez  and S.  Gay
      Hugo-Martinez as trustees of the Martinez Family Trust.
(9)   Includes 39,674 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
(10)  Includes 21,042 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
(11)  Includes 15,610 shares issuable upon exercise of options.  All shares held
      of record  are held by  Mitchell  R.  Little  and Jean E.  Little as joint
      tenants.
(12)  Includes 6,875 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
(13)  Includes 278 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
(14)  Includes 797,972 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
                                       13
<PAGE>
             SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

   Section  16(a) of the  Exchange  Act requires  the  Company's  directors  and
executive officers and persons who own more than 10% of a class of the Company's
equity  securities  registered  under  the  Exchange  Act  to  file  reports  of
securities ownership and changes in ownership with the SEC. Officers,  directors
and greater than 10%  stockholders are required by SEC regulation to furnish the
Company with copies of all Section 16(a) forms they file.

   Based solely on the Company's  review of the copies of such forms received by
it during the fiscal year ended March 31, 1997, and written representations that
no other reports were required,  the Company believes that,  except as described
below, each person who, at any time during fiscal 1997, was a director,  officer
or  beneficial  owner of more than 10% of the Common  Stock,  complied  with all
Section 16(a) filing requirements. Director Hugo-Martinez filed two late reports
of two  transactions  covering an  aggregate  of 2,600  shares of Common  Stock.
Executive Officer  Billington filed one late report of one transaction  covering
an aggregate of 455 shares of Common Stock.
    

              PROPOSAL TO AMEND THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO
            INCREASE THE NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES OF COMMON STOCK

   The  Certificate  of  Incorporation  currently  provides  that the Company is
authorized  to issue two classes of stock  consisting  of  65,000,000  shares of
Common  Stock and  5,000,000  shares of  Preferred  Stock,  $0.001 par value per
share.  In April,  1997,  the Board of Directors  authorized an amendment to the
Certificate  of  Incorporation  to increase the number of  authorized  shares of
Common Stock to 100,000,000  shares. At the Meeting,  the stockholders are being
asked to approve the proposed amendment. Under the proposed amendment, paragraph
(A) of Article IV of the Certificate of  Incorporation  would be amended to read
as follows:  

    "(A) Classes of Stock.  This  corporation  is  authorized  to issue two
    classes of stock to be  designated,  respectively,  'Common  Stock' and
    'Preferred  Stock.' The total number of shares which the corporation is
    authorized  to issue is one  hundred  and  five  million  (105,000,000)
    shares. One Hundred Million (100,000,000) shares shall be Common Stock,
    par value $0.001 per share and five million (5,000,000) shares shall be
    Preferred Stock, par value $0.001 per share."

   
   The Company currently has 65,000,000 authorized shares of Common Stock. As of
the Record Date,  53,347,285 shares of Common Stock were issued and outstanding.
In addition,  as of the Record Date,  and without  giving effect to the proposed
amendments to the Plan and the Purchase Plan described in this Proxy  Statement,
7,931,090  shares  were  reserved  for  future  issuance  upon the  exercise  of
outstanding options under the Company's employee stock option and stock purchase
plans.
    

PURPOSE AND EFFECT OF THE AMENDMENT

   
   The Board of Directors believes that it is in the Company's best interests to
increase  the  number of  authorized  shares  of  Common  Stock in order to have
additional  authorized  but  unissued  shares  available  for  issuance  to meet
business  needs  as they  arise.  The  Board  of  Directors  believes  that  the
availability of such additional shares will provide the Company with flexibility
to issue  Common  Stock for  possible  future  financings,  stock  dividends  or
distributions,  acquisitions,  stock  option  plans  or other  proper  corporate
purposes that may be identified in the future by the Board of Directors, without
the  expense  and delay of a special  stockholders'  meeting.  Depending  on the
price,  the  issuance of  additional  shares of Common Stock may have a dilutive
effect on earnings  per share and,  for persons who do not  purchase  additional
shares to maintain their pro rata interest in the Company, on such stockholders'
percentage voting power.
    

   The  authorized  shares of Common  Stock in  excess of those  issued  will be
available  for  issuance  at such times and for such  corporate  purposes as the
Board of Directors may deem  advisable,  without further action by the Company's
stockholders, except as may be required by applicable law or by the rules of any
stock exchange or national  securities  association  trading system on which the
Common Stock may be listed or traded.  Upon issuance,  such shares will have the
same rights as the outstanding  shares of Common Stock.  Holders of Common Stock
have no preemptive rights.
                                       14
<PAGE>
   
   The Company has no arrangements,  agreements or understandings at the present
time for the issuance or use of the  additional  shares of Common Stock proposed
to be  authorized.  The Board of  Directors  does not intend to issue any Common
Stock  except  on terms  that the  Board  of  Directors  deems to be in the best
interests  of the Company and its  stockholders.  Any future  issuance of Common
Stock will be subject  to the  rights of  holders of  outstanding  shares of any
preferred stock that the Company may issue in the future.
    

POTENTIAL ANTI-TAKEOVER EFFECT

   The  increase  in the  authorized  number of  shares of Common  Stock and the
subsequent  issuance  of such  shares  could  have the  effect  of  delaying  or
preventing  a change in control of the  Company  without  further  action by the
stockholders.  Shares of authorized and unissued  Common Stock could (within the
limits  imposed by applicable  law) be issued in one or more  transactions  that
would make a change of control of the Company  more  difficult  and,  therefore,
less likely.  Any such issuance of additional Common Stock could have the effect
of diluting the  earnings per share and book value per share of the  outstanding
shares of Common Stock,  and such additional  shares could be used to dilute the
stock  ownership or voting rights of a person  seeking to obtain  control of the
Company.  The Company has previously  adopted certain measures that may have the
effect of helping to resist an unsolicited  takeover attempt,  including:  (i) a
Preferred  Share  Rights  Agreement  dated as of February  13, 1995 (the "Rights
Plan"),  providing  for the  distribution  of rights to  purchase  shares of the
Company's  Series  A  Participating   Preferred   Stock,   which  rights  become
exercisable in the event of certain  attempts to acquire control of the Company;
(ii) provisions in the Plan providing for the acceleration of  exercisability of
outstanding  options  in the  event of a sale of  assets  or  merger;  and (iii)
provisions  of  the  Certificate  of  Incorporation  authorizing  the  Board  of
Directors  to issue up to 5,000,000  shares of  Preferred  Stock with the terms,
provisions and rights fixed by the Board of Directors.

   The Board of Directors  adopted the Rights Plan in February,  1995 and issued
under the Rights Plan, as a dividend to the holders of Common  Stock,  rights to
purchase Series A Participating  Preferred Stock. The Rights Plan is designed to
protect  stockholders  against the adverse consequences of partial takeovers and
other abusive takeover  tactics that the Board of Directors  believes are not in
the best interests of the Company's  stockholders.  Until certain  contingencies
set forth in the Rights Plan occur,  each issued and outstanding share of Common
Stock carries such a right and the right is not separable from the Common Stock.
Certain  circumstances  described  in the Rights Plan  (including  an attempt to
acquire the Company  without the approval of the Board of Directors)  may result
in the rights  becoming rights to purchase shares of Common Stock of the Company
or of the  acquiring  entity at a fraction of the market  price,  thus  possibly
deterring any such  transaction  and thus possibly  having an adverse  impact on
stockholders in the ways described above.

   The Rights Plan is embodied in the Preferred Share Rights  Agreement  between
the Company and Harris Trust Company  (successor to Bank One,  Arizona,  NA), as
Rights Agent. A copy of the Rights  Agreement was filed with the SEC on February
14, 1995 as an exhibit to the Company's  Registration Statement on Form 8-A with
respect  to  the  rights  covered  by  the  Rights  Plan.  The  foregoing  brief
description  of the Rights Plan is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
text of the Rights Agreement.

   In the event rights become  exercisable  for Common Stock,  the Company might
have to issue a substantial number of new shares of Common Stock. Although under
the Rights  Plan the  Company is not now  required  to reserve  shares of Common
Stock for issuance  thereunder,  a failure to have sufficient  shares  available
could  result in a delay or  failure  of  implementation  of all  aspects of the
Rights  Plan.  An increase in the  authorized  number of shares of Common  Stock
could  therefore  make a change in  control of the  Company  more  difficult  by
facilitating the complete operation of the Rights Plan.

   Other potential  anti-takeover  measures are also available to management and
the  Board of  Directors  under  the laws of  Delaware,  where  the  Company  is
incorporated,  and Arizona,  where the Company is headquartered.  Under Delaware
statutes,  a change in control may be delayed  unless  holders of a  substantial
percentage of the outstanding  voting  securities  approve the change of control
transaction.  Arizona law provides  certain  protections  to ward off or prevent
non-negotiated takeover attempts by
                                       15
<PAGE>
third parties. Under Arizona statutes, among other matters, certain restrictions
are  placed  on the  ability  of a  company  to  enter  into  transactions  with
interested  stockholders  (generally  those  holding  10% or more of a company's
stock)  unless  consented to by the  company.  Although the Delaware and Arizona
statutes may protect stockholders against partial takeovers and abusive takeover
tactics,  the effects of the statutes  may  negatively  affect the  stockholders
desiring a change of control in the ways set forth above.

   In  addition,  the  Severance  Agreements  between  the Company and the Named
Executive  Officers  provide for the  automatic  acceleration  in vesting of all
unvested  stock  options in the event of certain  transactions  that result in a
change of control of the  Company,  which  could make a change in control of the
Company less  attractive to a potential  acquiror.  See  "Employment  Contracts,
Termination  of Employment  and Change In Control  Arrangements,"  above,  for a
description of the terms of the Severance Agreements.

REQUIRED VOTE

   
   The approval of the foregoing  amendment to the Certificate of  Incorporation
requires the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of Common Stock issued
and outstanding on the Record Date. Accordingly,  the effect of an abstention is
the  same  as  that  of  a  vote  against  the  proposal.  If  approved  by  the
stockholders, the proposed amendment to Article IV(A) will become effective upon
the filing of a certificate of amendment to the  Certificate  of  Incorporation,
which will occur as soon as reasonably practicable. If the proposed amendment is
not  approved  by the  stockholders,  the  authorized  number  of  shares of the
Company's stock will not change.
    

   THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  THAT THE  STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE  "FOR" THIS
PROPOSED   AMENDMENT  TO  THE  CERTIFICATE  OF  INCORPORATION  TO  INCREASE  THE
AUTHORIZED NUMBER OF SHARES OF COMMON STOCK.

             PROPOSAL TO AMEND THE COMPANY'S 1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN

   
PROPOSED PLAN AMENDMENT

   The Board of Directors has approved an amendment to the Company's  1993 Stock
Option Plan (the "Plan"),  subject to approval by the stockholders,  to increase
the  number of shares  of Common  Stock  reserved  for  issuance  thereunder  by
2,000,000 (the "Plan Amendment").  Since the Plan's initial adoption, a total of
14,897,477  shares  of Common  Stock  (without  considering  the  proposed  Plan
Amendment)  have been reserved over time for issuance  under the Plan. As of the
Record Date,  without  giving effect to the proposed Plan  Amendment,  7,179,394
shares of Common  Stock have been  previously  issued upon  exercise of options,
7,039,871  shares of Common Stock are currently  subject to outstanding  options
and 678,212  shares of Common  Stock may be issued with  respect to options that
may be granted in the future.

REASONS FOR THE PLAN AMENDMENT
    

   The  Plan is  intended  to  promote  the best  interests  of the  Company  by
providing key  employees,  non-employee  members of the Board of Directors,  and
other independent  contractors who provide valuable services to the Company with
the opportunity to acquire, or otherwise increase,  their equity interest in the
Company as an  incentive  to remain in service to the Company and to align their
collective interests with those of the stockholders. The proposed Plan Amendment
acknowledges  the  significant  growth  of the  Company's  operations,  and  the
increase in the number of outstanding  shares of Common Stock resulting from the
Company's  initial public offering in March,  1993, its three  follow-on  public
offerings, as well as the Company's four stock splits effected since the Company
went public in March, 1993.

   
   The participation of key employees (including officers) in stock option plans
has always been an  essential  component  of the  Company's  pay-for-performance
compensation  program.  See "Board  Compensation  Committee  Report on Executive
Compensation,"  above.  The Board of  Directors  believes  that the stock option
program  should  continue to function as the Company's  key long-term  incentive
compensation  program.  Stock option programs are a standard employee benefit in
the high  technology  industry  in which the  Company  competes,  enabling  such
companies to ultimately attract and then retain
                                       16
<PAGE>
talented employees.  As a result, many other companies,  including the Company's
competitors,  maintain stock option  programs.  The Board of Directors  believes
that such  plans  are  necessary  and  important  in  attracting  and  retaining
employees  with  outstanding   capabilities  and  that  a  serious   competitive
disadvantage  would result if the Company were unable to continue granting stock
options.  Thus, the Board of Directors  believes that it is in the best interest
of the Company to increase  the number of shares of Common  Stock  reserved  for
issuance under the Plan.


BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDATION
    

   At the Meeting,  the stockholders are being requested to approve the proposed
Plan Amendment.

   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE PROPOSED PLAN AMENDMENT.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PLAN

   
   The Plan is the Company's primary equity incentive  program.  The Plan, which
is a successor  plan to the Company's  1989 Stock Option Plan (the "1989 Plan"),
was  adopted by the Board of  Directors  in  January,  1993 and  approved by the
stockholders in February, 1993.
    

   The Plan is divided  into the  Discretionary  Option  Grant  Program  and the
Automatic  Option Grant Program.  Option grants under the  Discretionary  Option
Grant Program may be made to employees  (including officers and directors),  and
consultants and independent  contractors  who provide  valuable  services to the
Company. As of April 25, 1997, the Company's 1,879 employees and its independent
contractors  and consultants  would have been eligible to participate  under the
Plan's Discretionary Option Grant Program. The Plan is administered by the Stock
Option  Committee,  which is presently  comprised of Messrs.  Hugo-Martinez  and
Beedle.

   
   Options  granted under the  Discretionary  Option Grant Program may be either
incentive  stock  options  meeting  the  requirements  of  Code  Section  422 or
non-statutory options. If any outstanding option (including options incorporated
from the 1989 Plan) expires or terminates prior to exercise,  the shares subject
to that option may become the subject of subsequent  grants under the Plan.  The
expiration date,  maximum number of shares  purchasable and the other provisions
of the options granted under the Discretionary  Option Grant Program,  including
vesting provisions, are established at the time of grant. Options may be granted
for terms of up to 10 years and  become  exercisable  in whole or in one or more
installments  at such time as may be  determined  by the Stock Option  Committee
upon the grant of the options.  The exercise prices of options are determined by
the Stock  Option  Committee,  but may not be less than 100% of the fair  market
value of the  Common  Stock at the time of the grant for both  nonstatutory  and
incentive  options  (in the case of  incentive  options,  110% if the  option is
granted  to a  stockholder  who at the time the  option is  granted  owns  stock
possessing  more than 10% of the total  combined  voting power of all classes of
stock of the Company or of its subsidiaries). The per share closing price of the
Common Stock on the NASDAQ Stock Market was $31.3125 on June 11, 1997.
    

   If the  Company is  acquired by merger,  consolidation  or asset  sale,  each
outstanding  option under the  Discretionary  Option  Grant  Program that is not
assumed by the  successor  corporation  or otherwise  replaced with a comparable
option will automatically accelerate and become exercisable in full. Any options
so assumed may be accelerated if the optionee's  employment is terminated within
a designated  period following the  acquisition.  In connection with a change in
control of the Company by tender  offer or proxy  contest for board  membership,
the Stock Option Committee can accelerate  outstanding options. The Stock Option
Committee also has authority to extend these  acceleration  provisions to one or
more outstanding options under the 1989 Plan incorporated into the Plan.

   
   The Plan's Automatic Option Grant Program provides for the automatic grant of
stock options to non-employee  directors, of which there are currently four. The
non-discretionary  feature is  intended  to satisfy  the  requirements  of rules
adopted under the Exchange Act.  Under the Automatic  Option Grant  Program,  an
option to acquire 5,000 shares of Common Stock is automatically  granted to each
non- employee director at the meeting of the Board of Directors held immediately
after each annual  meeting of  stockholders,  effective as of the first business
day of the month in which the annual  stockholders'  meeting is held,  with such
options to vest in a series of 12 equal and successive monthly installments
                                       17
<PAGE>
commencing one month after the annual  automatic  grant date. In addition,  each
new non-employee member of the Board of Directors receives an automatic grant of
an option to acquire  10,000  shares of Common  Stock on the date of their first
appointment  or  election  to the  Board  of  Directors.  Those  options  become
exercisable and vest in a series of 36 equal and successive monthly installments
commencing one month after the automatic  grant date. A  non-employee  member of
the Board of  Directors  is not  eligible to receive  the 5,000 share  automatic
option  grant if that option  grant date is within 30 days of such  non-employee
member  receiving the 10,000 share  automatic  option  grant.  If the Company is
acquired by merger,  consolidation or asset sale, or in connection with a change
in control of the Company by tender offer or proxy contest for board membership,
each   outstanding   option  under  the  Automatic  Option  Grant  Program  will
automatically accelerate and immediately vest in full.
    

   Options granted under the Plan are  nontransferable  other than by will or by
the laws of descent and  distribution  upon the death of the option  holder and,
during the lifetime of the option holder,  are  exercisable  only by such option
holder.  Termination of employment at any time for cause immediately  terminates
all options held by the terminated employee.

   
   The Plan will remain in force until January 19, 2003.  The Board of Directors
at any time may suspend,  amend or terminate  the Plan except that,  without the
approval of the  stockholders,  the Board of Directors  may not:  (i)  increase,
except in the case of certain organic changes to the Company, the maximum number
of shares of Common Stock subject to the Plan; (ii) reduce the exercise price at
which  options may be granted or the  exercise  price for which any  outstanding
option may be  exercised;  (iii)  extend the term of the Plan;  (iv)  change the
class of persons  eligible to receive  options;  or (v) materially  increase the
benefits  accruing  to  participants  under  the Plan.  The Board of  Directors,
however,  may amend the Plan from time to time as it deems necessary in order to
meet the  requirements  of any  amendments  to Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act
without the consent of the stockholders of the Company.

PLAN PARTICIPATION
    

   The grant of options under the Discretionary Option Grant Program,  including
grants to the Named  Executive  Officers,  is subject to the  discretion  of the
Stock Option Committee.  As of the date of this Proxy Statement,  there has been
no  determination  by the Stock Option  Committee  with respect to future awards
under the Plan. Accordingly, future discretionary awards are not determinable.

   The future  award of options  under the  Automatic  Option  Grant  Program to
non-employee  directors is subject to the  (re)election  of such  individuals as
directors  and the fair market value of the Common  Stock on the first  business
day of the month in which the annual stockholders' meeting is held.
                                       18
<PAGE>
   
   The  following  table sets  forth  information  with  respect to the grant of
options  during the fiscal year ended  March 31,  1997 to: (i) all  non-employee
directors;  (ii)  each  of the  Named  Executive  Officers;  (iii)  all  current
executive officers as a group; and (iv) all other employees as a group:
    

                              AMENDED PLAN BENEFITS
                             1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
            NAME OF INDIVIDUAL OR                NUMBER OF
            IDENTITY OF GROUP AND            SHARES SUBJECT TO
                 POSITION                    OPTIONS GRANTED(#)    EXERCISE PRICE($)
                 --------                    ------------------    -----------------
<S>                                             <C>                    <C>   
   
Steve Sanghi, Director, Chairman, President 
 and Chief Executive Officer ...............        165,000             $ 16.87   
Robert A. Lanford, Vice President,                                            
 Worldwide Sales ...........................         39,000               16.87    
George P. Rigg, Vice President,                                               
 Advanced Microcontroller and Technology             
 Division ..................................         47,250               16.87    
Timothy B. Billington, Vice President,                                        
 Manufacturing Operations ..................         56,250               16.87    
C. Philip Chapman, Vice President,                                            
 Chief Financial Officer ...................         45,750               16.87    
Mitchell R. Little, Vice President,                                           
 Standard Microcontroller and                        
 ASSP Division .............................         45,000               16.87    
All current executive officers as a group                                     
 (6 people) ................................        398,250               16.87    
All current directors who are not executive                                   
 officers as a group (4 people) ............         22,500               20.50 (2)
All other employees as a group .............      1,672,202               17.86 (2)
</TABLE>
- -------------------                                                 
(1)   See  also  the  table  under  "Option   Grants,"  above,   for  additional
      information regarding options granted to to the Named Executive Officers.
(2)   Represents weighted average price share exercise price.
    

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES FOR STOCK OPTIONS

   Certain  options  granted  under  the Plan will be  intended  to  qualify  as
incentive  stock options under Code Section 422.  Accordingly,  there will be no
taxable  income to an employee when an incentive  stock option is granted to him
or her or when that  option is  exercised.  The amount by which the fair  market
value of the shares at the time of exercise  exceeds the option price  generally
will be treated as an item of preference in computing  the  alternative  minimum
taxable income of the  optionholder.  If an optionholder  exercises an incentive
stock  option and does not dispose of the shares  within  either two years after
the date of the  grant of the  option  or one year of the date the  shares  were
transferred to the optionholder, any gain or loss realized upon disposition will
be taxable to the  optionholder  as a capital gain or loss. If the  optionholder
does not satisfy the applicable holding periods, however, the difference between
the option price and the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise
of the option will be taxed as ordinary income,  and the balance of the gain, if
any,  will be taxed as capital  gain.  If the shares are  disposed of before the
expiration of the one-year or two-year  periods and the amount  realized is less
than the fair market value of the shares at the date of exercise, the employee's
ordinary income is limited to the amount realized less the option exercise price
paid.  The Company  will be entitled to a tax  deduction  only to the extent the
optionholder  has  ordinary  income  upon the sale or other  disposition  of the
shares.

   Options issued under the Plan also may be  nonqualified  options.  The income
tax consequences of nonqualified  options are governed by Code Section 83. Under
Code Section 83, the excess of the fair market value of the shares of the Common
Stock  acquired  pursuant to the exercise of any option over the amount paid for
such stock  (hereinafter  referred to as "Excess Value") must be included in the
gross
                                       19
<PAGE>
income of the  optionholder.  In calculating  Excess Value, fair market value is
generally determined on the date of the acquisition. Generally, the Company will
be entitled to a federal  income tax deduction in the same taxable year that the
optionholder  recognizes  income. The Company will be required to withhold taxes
with respect to income reportable pursuant to Code Section 83 by an optionholder
who is also an employee of the Company.  The basis of the shares  acquired by an
optionholder  will be equal to the option  price of those shares plus any income
recognized  pursuant to Code Section 83. Subsequent sales of the acquired shares
will produce capital gain or loss. Such capital gain or loss will be a long-term
gain or loss if the  stock  has  been  held  for one  year  from  the  date  the
substantial risk of forfeiture,  if any, lapsed, or, if a Section 83(b) election
is made, one year from the date the shares were acquired.

   PROPOSAL TO AMEND THE COMPANY'S EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

   
PROPOSED PURCHASE PLAN AMENDMENT

   The Board of Directors  has approved an amendment to the  Company's  Employee
Stock Purchase Plan (the "Purchase Plan"),  subject to approval by the Company's
stockholders,  to  increase  by  300,000  the  number of shares of Common  Stock
reserved for issuance  thereunder  (the  "Purchase Plan  Amendment").  Since the
initial  adoption of the Purchase  Plan,  a total of 3,006,000  shares of Common
Stock have been reserved over time for issuance under the Purchase Plan. Of this
amount  and as of the  Record  Date,  2,826,914  shares  of  Common  Stock  have
previously  been  issued,  and a total of  179,086  shares of  Common  Stock are
presently  available for future issuance,  without giving effect to the proposed
Purchase Plan Amendment.

REASON FOR THE PURCHASE PLAN AMENDMENT

   The Purchase Plan is intended to promote the best interests of the Company by
providing all eligible  employees,  including  officers,  who participate in the
Purchase  Plan with the  opportunity  to become  stockholders  of the Company by
purchasing  the Company's  Common Stock at  discounted  prices  through  payroll
deductions.  The  Board  of  Directors  believes  that the  Purchase  Plan is an
incentive  to  employees  to remain in the  Company's  employ,  and  aligns  the
collective  interests of employees with those of the  stockholders.  As of April
25, 1997,  approximately 1,028 employees were eligible for the Purchase Plan, of
whom 829 were participants.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDATION

   At the Meeting,  the stockholders are being requested to approve the proposed
Purchase Plan Amendment.
    

   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE  PROPOSED  PURCHASE  PLAN
AMENDMENT.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PURCHASE PLAN

   The Purchase Plan was initially adopted by the Board of Directors in January,
1993 and approved by the stockholders in March,  1993. Since the Purchase Plan's
initial  inception,  and without  giving  effect to the proposed  Purchase  Plan
Amendment,  3,006,000  shares of Common  Stock has been  reserved  over time for
issuance under the Purchase Plan.

   The  Purchase  Plan,  and  the  rights  of  participants  to  make  purchases
thereunder, is intended to qualify under the provisions of Code Sections 421 and
423.  See the  discussion  below  under  "Federal  Income Tax  Consequences  for
Purchase of Common Stock Under the Purchase  Plan," for a summary of the general
rules  regarding  the federal tax  treatment  of the purchase and sale of Common
Stock under the Purchase  Plan. The Purchase Plan is currently  administered  by
the Board of Directors.  The Board of Directors has full authority to administer
the  Purchase  Plan,  including  the  authority  to  interpret  and construe any
provision of the Purchase Plan and to adopt such rules and  regulations it deems
necessary for administration of the Purchase Plan.

   Any person who has been employed by the Company for more than 30 days and who
is customarily employed for more than 20 hours per week and at least five months
per calendar year by the Company is eligible to participate  in offerings  under
the Purchase Plan. Eligible employees become participants in
                                       20
<PAGE>
the Purchase Plan by delivering to the Company's stock administration department
a subscription  agreement authorizing payroll deductions at least 24 hours prior
to the beginning of the  applicable  offering  period,  as described  below.  An
employee  who  becomes  eligible  to  participate  in the  Purchase  Plan  after
commencement  of an offering  period may not  participate  in the Purchase  Plan
until the next  semi-annual  entry date. There are a maximum of four semi-annual
entry dates  ("entry  date") within each  offering  period,  which are the first
business day of each March and September within an offering period.

   The Purchase Plan is currently implemented in a series of successive offering
periods,  each with a maximum  duration  of 24 months.  Each  two-year  offering
period is divided into four semi-annual participation periods, commencing on the
first  business  day of each March and  September  during the  offering  period.
Shares are purchased on the last business day of each semi-annual  participation
period (a "purchase  date") during an offering  period.  The purchase  price per
share for an eligible  employee who  participates  in the  Purchase  Plan is the
lower of (i) 85% of the fair  market  value  of a share of  Common  Stock on the
employee's entry date into the  then-current  offering period under the Purchase
Plan or (ii) 85% of the fair  market  value  of a share of  Common  Stock on the
semi-annual purchase date.

   
   The second offering  period under the Purchase Plan began in March,  1995 and
ended on February  28,  1997.  The fair market  value of the Common Stock on the
first entry date into the Purchase Plan for the second offering period (March 1,
1995) was $16.33 per share; and the fair market value of the Common Stock on the
last day of the second two-year  offering period (February 28, 1997) was $37.375
per share.  This resulted in a weighted average purchase price of $14.22 for the
second two-year offering period.

   The third and current offering period under the Purchase Plan began in March,
1997 and will end on February  28,  1999.  The fair  market  value of the Common
Stock on March 1, 1997 was $36.937 per share.
    

   The purchase price of shares is accumulated  by payroll  deductions  over the
semi-annual  participation  period.  The  deductions  may  not  exceed  10% of a
participant's  earnings for the semi-annual  participation period. A participant
may discontinue his or her  participation in the Purchase Plan at any time prior
to five business  days before a purchase date during an offering  period and may
decrease  the  rate of  payroll  deductions  at any time  during  a  semi-annual
participation  period;  provided,  however,  that the participant may not effect
more  than  one  such   reduction   during  the  same   semi-annual   period  of
participation.  A  participant  may not  increase  his or her  rate  of  payroll
deductions  following  his or her entry date into the Purchase  Plan unless such
increase is made prior to the commencement of the next two-year offering period.
No participant may purchase more than $25,000 in Common Stock annually (based on
the fair market value of a share of the Common Stock on the participant's  entry
date into the Purchase  Plan) or 13,500  shares of Common Stock per  semi-annual
participation period.

   A participant's purchase right terminates automatically in the event that the
participant ceases to be an employee of the Company,  and any payroll deductions
collected  from such  individual  during  the  semi-annual  period in which such
termination occurs will be refunded.  However, in the event of the participant's
disability  or death,  such payroll  deduction may be applied to the purchase of
Common Stock on the next semi-annual purchase date.

   If the  Company is  acquired  by merger,  consolidation  or asset  sale,  all
outstanding purchase rights will automatically be exercised immediately prior to
the effective date of such  acquisition at a price per share equal to 85% of the
lower of (i) the fair  market  value of the  Common  Stock on the  participant's
entry date into the offering  period or (ii) the fair market value of the Common
Stock immediately prior to such acquisition.

   The Board of  Directors  may at any time  amend,  suspend  or  terminate  the
Purchase Plan following the close of any semi-annual purchase period.  Following
termination  or  suspension of the Purchase  Plan all  outstanding  options will
automatically  terminate.   Amendments  to  the  Purchase  Plan  or  to  options
thereunder  that would adversely  affect the rights of any participant  under an
option  theretofore  granted  shall only be  effective as to such options if the
participant's consent is obtained. No amendment may be made to the Purchase Plan
without approval of the  stockholders of the Company if stockholder  approval of
such  amendment  is necessary  and  desirable to comply with Code Section 423 or
with Rule 16b-3 of the Exchange Act, or any successor rule.
                                       21
<PAGE>
   
PURCHASE PLAN PARTICIPATION

   Participation  in the  Purchase  Plan is  voluntary  and is dependent on each
eligible   employee's   election  to  participate  and  his  or  her  respective
determination  as to  the  level  of  payroll  deductions.  Accordingly,  future
purchases under the Purchase Plan are not determinable. The following table sets
forth,  as to  each of the  Named  Executive  Officers,  all  current  executive
officers as a group and all other  employees  who  participated  in the Purchase
Plan: (i) the number of shares of Common Stock purchased under the Purchase Plan
during the fiscal year ended March 31,  1997;  and (ii) the dollar  value of the
benefit,  which is  calculated  as the fair market value per share of the Common
Stock on the date of  purchase,  minus  the  purchase  price per share of Common
Stock under the Purchase Plan:
    

                              AMENDED PLAN BENEFITS
                          EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN


   
          NAME OF INDIVIDUAL OR
          IDENTITY OF GROUP AND                 NUMBER OF SHARES   DOLLAR
                 POSITION                          PURCHASED(#)  VALUE($)(1)
                 --------                          ------------  -----------
Steve Sanghi, Director, Chairman,
 President and Chief Executive Officer .........       1,830     $  39,133
Robert A. Lanford, Vice President,
 Worldwide Sales ...............................       1,591        27,377
George P. Rigg, Vice President, Advanced
 Microcontroller And Technology Division .......       1,267        21,914
Timothy B. Billington, Vice President,
 Manufacturing Operations ......................       1,616        29,187
C. Philip Chapman, Vice President,
 Chief Financial Officer and Secretary .........       1,139        19,756
Mitchell R. Little, Vice President,
 Standard Microcontroller and ASSP
 Division ......................................       1,341        23,666
All current executive officers as a
 group (6 people) ..............................       8,784       161,034
All other employees as a group .................     229,049     3,831,709
- ----------------------
(1)   Calculated  as the fair market  value per share of the Common Stock on the
      date of purchase, minus the purchase price per share of Common Stock under
      the Purchase Plan.
    

FEDERAL INCOME TAX  CONSEQUENCES FOR PURCHASE OF COMMON STOCK UNDER THE PURCHASE
PLAN

   The  Purchase  Plan,  and  the  right  of   participants  to  make  purchases
thereunder, is intended to qualify under the provisions of Code Sections 421 and
423. Under these  provisions,  no income will be taxable to a participant at the
time of grant of the option or  purchase  of  shares.  Upon  disposition  of the
shares,  the participant  will generally be subject to tax and the amount of the
tax will depend upon the holding period.

   If the shares have been held by the participant for more than two years after
the date of option  grant and for more than one year after the date of purchase,
the lesser of (a) the excess of the fair market  value of the shares at the time
of such  disposition over the purchase price or (b) 15% of the fair market value
of the  shares  at the date of  commencement  of the  offering  period,  will be
treated as  ordinary  income.  If the shares are sold and the sale price is less
than the purchase  price,  there is no ordinary income and the participant has a
capital  loss for the  difference.  If the  shares  are  disposed  of before the
expiration of these holding periods,  the excess of the fair market value of the
shares on the purchase date over the purchase  price will be treated as ordinary
income,  and any further gain or loss on such  disposition  will be long-term or
short-term capital gain or loss, depending on the holding period.

   Different rules may apply with respect to participants  subject to Section 16
of the Exchange Act.
                                       22
<PAGE>
   The  Company is not  entitled to a  deduction  for amounts  taxed as ordinary
income or capital gain to a participant  except to the extent of ordinary income
recognized by participants  upon  dispositions of shares prior to the expiration
of the holding periods described above.

   The  foregoing  is only a brief  summary  of the  effect  of  federal  income
taxation  upon the  participant  and the  Company  with  respect  to the  shares
purchased under the Purchase Plan, does not purport to be complete, and does not
discuss the tax consequences of a participant's  death or the income tax laws of
any municipality, state or foreign country in which a participant may reside.

               RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

   
   The  Board of  Directors  has  appointed  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP  ("KPMG"),
independent  certified public accountants,  to audit the consolidated  financial
statements  of the Company for the fiscal year ending March 31,  1998.  KPMG has
audited the  Company's  financial  statements  since fiscal  1993.  The Board of
Directors recommends that stockholders vote in favor of the ratification of such
appointment. In the event of a negative vote on such ratification,  the Board of
Directors will reconsider its selection. The Board of Directors anticipates that
representatives  of  KPMG  will  be  present  at  the  Meeting,  will  have  the
opportunity to make a statement if they desire, and will be available to respond
to appropriate questions.

                 DEADLINE FOR RECEIPT OF STOCKHOLDERS PROPOSALS

   Pursuant to Rule 14a-5(e) of Regulation  14A  promulgated  under the Exchange
Act,   stockholder   proposals  that  are  intended  to  be  presented  by  such
stockholders at the annual meeting of stockholders of the Company for the fiscal
year  ending  March 31,  1998 must be  received  by the  Company  no later  than
February 20, 1998 in order to be considered for possible  inclusion in the proxy
statement and form of proxy relating to such meeting.
    

                                  OTHER MATTERS

   The Company knows of no other matters to be submitted to the Meeting.  If any
other  matters  properly  come before the  Meeting,  it is the  intention of the
persons  named in the enclosed  proxy card to vote the shares they  represent as
the Board of Directors may recommend.

   
   For  business  to  be  properly   brought  before  an  annual  meeting  by  a
stockholder,  the Company's  By-Laws  require that the Company's  secretary must
have received  notice in writing from the  stockholder not less than 30 days nor
more than 60 days prior to the meeting; provided,  however, that if less than 35
days'  notice of the  meeting  is given to  stockholders,  such  notice  must be
received  by the  secretary  not later than the close of business on the seventh
day  following  the day on which the notice of meeting was  mailed.  The written
notice to the  secretary  shall set forth,  as to each  matter  the  stockholder
proposes to bring  before the annual  meeting:  (i) a brief  description  of the
business,  (ii) the name and address,  as they appear on the Company's books, of
the  stockholder  proposing such business,  (iii) the number of shares of Common
Stock beneficially owned by such stockholder,  and (iv) any material interest of
such stockholder in such business.


Dated: June 20, 1997
    
                                       23
<PAGE>
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<S>                     <C>
PROXY                                             MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED                                            PROXY

                                     This Proxy is Solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors


                                                 1997 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

         The  undersigned  stockholder  of  MICROCHIP  TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED,  a  Delaware  corporation  (the  "Company"),  hereby
acknowledges  receipt of the Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders  and Proxy Statement of the Company,  each dated June 20, 1997
and hereby appoints Steve Sanghi and C. Philip Chapman, and each of them, proxies and  attorneys-in-fact  with full power to each of
substitution,  on behalf and in the name of the undersigned, to represent the undersigned at the 1997 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
of the Company,  to be held on July 28, 1997, at 9:00 a.m., local time, at the Company's facility at 1200 South 52nd Street,  Tempe,
Arizona,  and at any adjournment or  adjournments  thereof,  and to vote all shares of Common Stock which the  undersigned  would be
entitled to vote if then and there personally present, in the matters set forth below:

         A majority of such  attorneys  or  substitutes  as shall be present  and shall act at said  meeting or any  adjournment  or
adjournments thereof (or if only one shall be present and act,  then that one) shall have and may exercise all of the powers of said
attorneys-in-fact hereunder.

                                            (Continued and to be signed on reverse side.)

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</TABLE>
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>                                          <C>                        <C>                                   <C>
1. Election of Directors:                                   
   Nominees: Steve Sanghi; Jon H. Beedle;    For  Withhold  For All     3. Proposal to Amend the Company's    For   Against Abstain
   Albert J. Hugo-Martinez; L.B. Day;        All     All    Except         1993 Stock Option Plan to 
   Matthew W. Chapman                        [ ]     [ ]    [ ]            increase by 2,000,000 the number      [ ]     [ ]    [ ]
                                                                           of shares of Common Stock 
   --------------------------------------                                  reserved for issuance thereunder;
   (Except nominee(s) written above)
                                                                        4. Proposal to Amend the Company's    [ ]     [ ]    [ ]
2. Proposal to Amend the Company's           For   Against Abstain         Employee Stock Purchase Plan to    
   Restated Certificate of Incorporation                                   increase by 300,000 the number     
   to increase the number of authorized      [ ]     [ ]    [ ]            of shares of Common Stock          
   shares of Common Stock, par value                                       reserved for issuance 
   $0.001 per share, from 65,000,000                                       thereunder;
   to 100,000,000;        
                                                                        5. Proposal to ratify the             [ ]     [ ]    [ ]
                                                                           appointment of KPMG Peat 
                                                                           Marwick LLP as the independent
                                                                           auditors of the Company.

                                                                        This  Proxy  will be voted as  directed  or, if no  contrary
                                                                        direction  is  indicated,  will be voted for the Election of
                                                                        Directors;  for  the  amendment  to the  Company's  Restated
                                                                        Certificate  of  Incorporation;  for  the  amendment  to the
                                                                        Company's  1993 Stock Option Plan;  for the amendment to the
                                                                        Company's Employee Stock Purchase Plan; for the ratification
                                                                        of  the   appointment  of  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP  as  the
                                                                        independent  auditors of the  Company;  and as said  proxies
                                                                        deem  advisable on such other matters as may come before the
                                                                        meeting.

                                                                                                         Dated:_______________, 1997

                                                                        Signature(s)________________________________________________

   
                                                                        ____________________________________________________________
                                                                        (This Proxy  should be dated,  signed by the  stockholder(s)
                                                                        exactly  as his or her name  appears  hereon,  and  returned
                                                                        promptly  in the  enclosed  envelope.  Persons  signing in a
                                                                        fiduciary capacity should so indicate. If shares are held by
                                                                        joint tenants or as community  property,  both  stockholders
                                                                        should sign.)
    
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                                                      ^ FOLD AND DETACH HERE ^

                                                       YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT!

                                     PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY
                                                     USING THE ENLOSED ENVELOPE.
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