Business Standard

America plans law to invest more in allies like India, outcompete China

Senate leader Chuck Schumer says the legislativ­e package also aims to create new American jobs

- LALIT K JHA

US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has asked his Democratic colleagues to draft a legislativ­e package to “outcompete” China, create new American jobs and invest in strategic partners and alliances like NATO and India.

On a caucus call on Tuesday, Schumer discussed his push to direct Senate committees to draft a legislatio­n to protect American jobs and outcompete China.

He said his intention is to put the legislatio­n on the Senate floor for a vote this spring.

“Today I directed the chairs and members of our relevant committees to start drafting a legislativ­e package to outcompete China and create new American jobs,” Schumer said.

The new legislatio­n, he said, must achieve three goals. They should enhance American competitiv­eness with China by investing in US innovation, American workers and American manufactur­ing; invest in strategic partners and alliances: NATO, Southeast Asia and India; and expose, curb, and end once and for all China's predatory practices which have hurt so many American jobs, Schumer said.

The legislatio­n will have as its centrepiec­e a bicameral, bipartisan bill, the Endless Frontiers Act, which Schumer introduced last year with Senator Todd Young, Indianamer­ican Congressma­n Ro Khanna and Senator Mike Gallagh in the House.

“It will take the key cutting industries and make American investment­s so we will outcompete China in all of them. In addition, we will make serious investment­s in strengthen­ing the US semiconduc­tor industry to outcompete China and stop depending on foreign sources,” Schumer said.

He said at present semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing is a dangerous weak spot in US economy and national security and that has to change.

“You've all seen that auto plants throughout America are closed because they can't get the chips. We cannot rely on foreign processors for the chips. We cannot let China get ahead of us in chip production. This will be part of the proposal that we will introduce,” Schumer said.

“We will also talk about the build out of 5G and how America can remain number one there. And all of these have bipartisan support. The bill we will intend to introduce... will be bipartisan. Our intention is to put this legislatio­n on the Senate floor for a vote this spring,” he said.

This month alone, nearly 20 anti-china legislatio­ns have been tabled or reintroduc­ed in either chambers of the US Congress.

During a US Senate Finance Committee hearing, Senator Todd Young pushed the Department of the Treasury to assure Americans that they are not unknowingl­y investing in Us-sanctioned and other questionab­le Chinese corporatio­ns that are linked to human rights abuses.

Also in a letter to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Young wrote that if the Biden administra­tion were to undo policies of the last four years, Americans could be unwittingl­y supporting Chinese companies affiliated with the Chinese military and others who are committing genocide against the Uyghur population in China, manufactur­ing advanced weapons systems, and constructi­ng an oppressive surveillan­ce state.

"One of China's most glaring weaknesses is access to the kind of largescale financing that only US capital markets can adequately provide,” Young wrote.

“As this is one of our country's greatest strengths, we must take every measure necessary to protect it. We must place American investor protection and our national security interests ahead of any fleeting investment gains when it comes to the financing of the Chinese Communist Party and its affiliated enterprise­s and activities,” he said.

Four Republican senators Mitt Romney, Marco Rubio, Chuck Grassley and Rob Portman in a letter to President Joe Biden have urged him to implement the proposed rule requiring US academic institutio­ns disclose their relationsh­ips with Confucius Institutes, which ˘ are funded by the Chinese Communist Party.

“We have significan­t concerns regarding the CCP'S nefarious actions and urge you to follow through on your commitment­s to advancing the interests of the American people as we collective­ly respond to the challenge that the CCP poses,” they wrote.

“We believe it is critically important to better understand and reduce the CCP'S influence on the American people, including through the Hanban, its propaganda arm that runs Confucius Institutes through the PRC Ministry of Education. The proposed rule is a necessary step in that effort and would bring needed transparen­cy to Confucius Institutes,” the senators said.

This month alone, nearly 20 anti-china legislatio­ns have been tabled or reintroduc­ed in either chambers of the US Congress

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