Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Biden nears order to restrict investment in China tech

- By Daniel Flatley and Erik Wasson

WASHINGTON » The Biden administra­tion is nearing completion of an executive order that would restrict investment­s by U.S. companies in parts of the Chinese economy, including advanced technologi­es that could enhance China’s military and intelligen­ce capabiliti­es, people familiar with the matter said.

The effort is at an advanced stage, with President Joe Biden prepared to request funding for it in his March 9 fiscal 2024 budget, according to reports to Congress obtained by Bloomberg.

The order would add to the administra­tion’s toolkit to address concern about China’s technologi­cal advances, which includes export controls on advanced semiconduc­tors and new guidance on screening Chinese investment­s in the U.S.

While working on the policies, officials discovered that U.S. investment­s in China often come with intangible benefits such as managerial and technical expertise that can help Chinese firms grow quickly, the people said. The restrictio­ns are meant to capture investment­s in projects that have clear national-security applicatio­ns, including artificial intelligen­ce and code-breaking technologi­es.

U.S. companies currently face no U.S. government restrictio­ns on investing in China’s tech sector. Some have invested in Chinese companies that are developing cutting-edge supercompu­ting capabiliti­es and other technologi­es that can be used in military applicatio­ns.

The administra­tion is working with allies and partners to develop the program and submitted two reports to Congress on Friday

outlining what it would cost to set up a so-called outbound investment program with the Treasury Department.

The broad outlines of the program, which targets certain kinds of sensitive “dual-use” technologi­es that can be used in both commercial and military applicatio­ns, are included in the brief reports to Congress seen by Bloomberg.

While the reports don’t mention specific technologi­es or countries, certain kinds of advanced semiconduc­tors, quantum computing and artificial intelligen­ce are expected to fall within the scope of the program.

It’s “a good first step to ensure U.S. investment does not fuel the Chinese Communist Party’s capabiliti­es and create dangerous dependenci­es,” Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the House Appropriat­ions Committee, said in a statement.

The program would be implemente­d and administer­ed by the Department of the Treasury in coordinati­on with the Department of Commerce, which maintains extensive lists of individual­s and firms that are barred from receiving certain kinds of sensitive U.S. exports.

But the new program is broader in scope. Investment­s that would be subject to it “are of a nature that they are not presently captured by export controls, sanctions or other related authoritie­s,” according to the reports to Congress.

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