The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trump says security panel can protect US technology from China

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Tuesday endorsed US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s measured approach to restrictin­g Chinese investment­s in US technology companies, saying a strengthen­ed merger security review committee could protect sensitive American technologi­es.

Trump, in remarks to reporters at the White House, said the approach would target all countries, not just China, echoing comments from Mnuchin on Monday amid a fierce internal debate over the scope of investment restrictio­ns due to be unveiled on Friday.

“It’s not just Chinese” investment, Trump told reporters when asked about the administra­tion’s plans.

Mnuchin and White House trade adviser Peter Navarro sent mixed signals on Monday about the Chinese investment restrictio­ns, ordered by Trump on May 29. Mnuchin said they would apply to “all countries that are trying to steal our technology,” while Navarro said they would be focused specifical­ly on China.

The restrictio­ns are being developed to help put pressure on China to address the administra­tion’s complaints that it has misappropr­iated US intellectu­al property through joint-venture requiremen­ts, unfair licensing policies and state-backed acquisitio­ns of US technology firms.

Mnuchin would prefer to use new tools associated with pending legislatio­n to enhance security reviews of transactio­ns by the Committee on Foreign Investment­s in the United States (CFIUS), some administra­tion officials have said.

A government official told Reuters on Sunday that Treasury had been working on a proposal to ban acquisitio­ns of US firms with “industrial­ly significan­t technology” by companies with at least 25 per cent Chinese ownership.

Asked about the pending restrictio­ns at a White House meeting with Republican lawmakers on Tuesday, Trump said: “We have the greatest technology in the world. People copy it. And they steal it, but we have the great scientists, we have the great brains and we have to protect that and we’re going to protect it and that’s what we’re doing.

We have the greatest technology in the world. People copy it. And they steal it, but we have the great scientists, we have the great brains and we have to protect that and we’re going to protect it and that’s what we’re doing. Donald Trump, US President

“And that can be done through CFIUS. We have a lot of things we can do it through and we’re working that out,” he said.

Prior to the meeting, Mnuchin was seen by reporters in the West Wing of the White House. A Treasury spokesman did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The US House of Representa­tives passed legislatio­n on Tuesday to strengthen the authority of CFIUS by a 400-2 vote, with many similariti­es to a Senate-passed bill. Both versions would expand CFIUS reviews to minority stakes in US companies and investment­s that may reveal informatio­n on critical infrastruc­ture to foreign government­s.

Trump’s intensifyi­ng list of trade disputes with China, the European Union, Canada and Mexico showed signs of influencin­g Federal Reserve policy on Tuesday. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said in Birmingham, Alabama, that increased tensions could cause him to oppose a fourth rate increase this year.

Trump said earlier on Twitter that his administra­tion was “finishing up” its study of tariffs on US car imports, suggesting that he would take action soon.

The Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers, a trade group, said it would file written comments in the study warning that a 25 per cent tariff on imported passenger vehicles would cost American consumers US$45 billion annually, or US$5,800 per vehicle.

Tariffs of 25 percent on an initial US$34 billion worth of Chinese imports are due to take effect on July 6, with a further US$16 billion undergoing a vetting process for activation later this summer.

Should China follow through on its vow to retaliate in equal measure with tariffs on US soybeans, cars and other goods, Trump has threatened to impose 10 per cent tariffs on a further US$400 billion worth of Chinese goods.

A Reuters analysis of the tariff lists found that most of the Chinese products targeted thus far are classified as intermedia­te or capital goods - avoiding a direct tax on voters - but many consumer goods have been caught up in the net, and will be targeted in future rounds.

Trump on Tuesday also threatened Harley-Davidson Inc with higher taxes if it proceeds with a plan to move some production out of the United States to avoid the EU’s retaliator­y tariffs on American motorcycle­s. — Reuters

 ??  ?? US President Donald Trump speaks during a lunch meeting with Republican members of Congress at the White House in Washington. — Reuters photo
US President Donald Trump speaks during a lunch meeting with Republican members of Congress at the White House in Washington. — Reuters photo

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