Arab Times

New US tariffs slap: Tighter curbs on tech investment

Trump says China stealing American technology

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WASHINGTON, Aug 8, (AP): Already threatened by escalating US taxes on its goods, China is about to find it much harder to invest in US companies or to buy American technology in such cutting-edge areas as robotics, artificial intelligen­ce and virtual reality.

President Donald Trump is expected as early as this week to sign legislatio­n to tighten the US government’s scrutiny of foreign investment­s and exports of sensitive technology.

The law, which Congress passed in a rare show of unity among Republican­s and Democrats, doesn’t single out China. But there’s no doubt the intended target is Beijing. The Trump administra­tion has accused China of using predatory tactics to steal American technology.

“As a policy signal, it speaks with a very loud voice,” said Harry Clark, head of the internatio­nal trade practice at the law firm Orrick. “Leading decision makers and Congress are very concerned about technology transfer to China.”

The Trump administra­tion has already imposed tariffs on $34 billion in Chinese exports, is preparing taxes on a further $16 billion and has threatened to target an additional $200 billion of Beijing’s exports and maybe still more.

As part of the same punitive campaign, Trump had initially ordered the Treasury Department to draft investment restrictio­ns aimed specifical­ly at China. But in late June, Trump decided instead to back Congress’ effort to tighten existing investment restrictio­ns and export controls on all countries, rather than China alone.

The new law strengthen­s reviews of foreign investment by the existing Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS, which is led by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. The committee can now review any investment­s that grant foreigners access to a US company’s high-tech trade secrets. Before the change, such reviews were done only when a foreigner gained control of a company.

The new law also gives the committee oversight of real estate deals that are deemed to pose a national security risk by putting foreigners in “close proximity” to government offices and military bases. The legislatio­n will also crack down on deals that appear structured to evade such oversight.

Congress is also directing the committee to go beyond specific cases to identify patterns in foreign investment — if, for example, Chinese companies are acquiring a specific technology — and to work with US allies that share its concerns about Beijing’s high-tech ambitions.

“Treasury can now share informatio­n,” said Rod Hunter, a partner at the Baker McKenzie law firm and a former White House economic adviser. “They used to have to do all kinds of backflips and workaround­s with allied government­s to deal with this sort of issue.”

The new law also strengthen­s the Commerce Department’s oversight of high-tech exports. Government agencies will identify sensitive “emerging and foundation­al technologi­es” that will be subject to tougher export controls.

Hunter said he thought the stricter oversight of high-tech exports could potentiall­y impose a bigger impact on China than the tariffs the Trump administra­tion has imposed on Beijing’s exports to the United States.

Still, the new measures could burden US companies that will find it harder to attract Chinese investment or to share with Chinese partners or customers technology that the US government might deem sensitive.

“It could be that we’re pushing American tech firms out of China,” said Derek Scissors, China specialist at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute.

The crackdown reflects a sharp reversal in US attitudes toward Chinese investment. From virtually nothing in 2000, Chinese direct investment in the United States (including new plants and offices and acquisitio­ns of American companies) reached a record $46 billion in 2016, according to the Rhodium Group research firm.

Chinese investors sank money into US companies involved in artificial intelligen­ce, robotics and blockchain technology, which is used to do business in cryptocurr­encies. US policymake­rs began to worry about what the Chinese were up to, especially after leaders in Beijing made their ambitions clear: They intend to nurture homegrown Chinese companies that will contend for global dominance in such fields as electric cars, robotics and medical devices.

In March, the Office of the US Trade Representa­tive reported that Chinese investors were using money provided by Beijing to outbid private companies and pay above-market rates for technology and talent. And last year, a Defense Department report sounded the alarm about China obtaining technology that could have military uses.

“The line demarcatin­g products designed and used for commercial versus military purposes is blurring,” said the report from the Pentagon’s Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al.

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