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Congress tightens screws on Chinese tech purchases, collaborat­ion

- By Gopal Ratnam CQ-Roll Call

Lawmakers added new restrictio­ns and limitation­s late last year on Chinese entities trying to buy U.S. hightech companies as well as a ban on collaborat­ion between American and Chinese government agencies in several technology sectors.

The provisions included in the fiscal 2023 spending legislatio­n enacted at the end of December are the latest move by Congress to deny Beijing access to U.S. technologi­es and research and thwart China’s stated goal of overtaking the U.S. as the global technology leader.

Under the new law, U.S. companies being acquired by or merging with foreign entities must notify the Federal Trade Commission of any subsidies the foreign company may have received from government­s, including China’s, that pose a strategic and economic threat to the U.S.

The FTC, after consulting with the Justice and Commerce department­s, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive and the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, would then have the authority to stop transactio­ns considered to violate U.S. antitrust laws.

The law also prohibits visits by Chinese officials to NASA facilities and Pentagon funding for EcoHealth Alliance, a U.S. nonprofit group that has worked with Chinese labs to counter biological weapons of mass destructio­n. The statute would rein in those activities, but it leaves room for waivers. It also blocks licenses to export satellites and components to China.

Lawmakers specifical­ly cited a 2020 report from the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission that warned of threats posed by China, which was subsidizin­g its stateowned companies to help them expand their reach into the U.S. and other countries.

Left unaddresse­d, Chinese companies’ acquisitio­ns of U.S. firms “risks setting back U.S. economic and technologi­cal progress for decades,” the commission warned.

Chinese subsidies to aid its enterprise­s in buying U.S. companies have raised concerns for a decade, said Michael Wessel, a member of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. He cited the 2013 purchase of Smithfield Foods — a pork producer based in Smithfield, Virginia — by China’s Shuanghui Internatio­nal Holdings in a deal valued at $4.7 billion. China’s state-owned bank supported the Smithfield acquisitio­n, he said.

The December law is a reflection of China’s increasing interest in buying U.S. tech companies, Wessel said, saying he was speaking for himself and not for the commission, a bipartisan panel establishe­d by Congress in 2000.

Noting “Chinese patterns of acquisitio­n” and state subsidies, Wessel said the legislatio­n addresses issues long seen as U.S. national and economic security risks. The legislatio­n requires that informatio­n about state subsidies be provided before mergers, he said.

“You know, we have not seen that provided in many areas in the past,” he said.

Knowing that a potential buyer of a U.S. company is operating with the help of foreign subsidies could help U.S. agencies assess whether a transactio­n violates antitrust laws, lawmakers have said.

The provisions in the new law originated in a bill in May 2022 from Sens. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and Bill Hagerty, RTenn., to require companies to disclose financial support from adversaria­l foreign government­s in pre-merger notificati­ons to U.S. agencies.

“The Chinese Communist Party is attempting to gain power by manipulati­ng the market and undercutti­ng American businesses,” Cotton said at the time. “Our bill will promote transparen­cy in antitrust filings and allow regulators to examine whether a company may act anticompet­itively because it has the backing of foreign subsidies.”

Chinese President Xi Jinping has said he wants his country to become the “world’s main center of science and the high ground of innovation,” according to a translatio­n of a 2018 speech by researcher­s at Stanford University’s DigiChina Project.

Xi said China should lead in areas including artificial intelligen­ce, quantum computing, telecommun­ications, the Internet of Things, blockchain, synthetic biology, gene editing, brain science, regenerati­ve medicine, integrated robotics, developmen­t of new

materials, high-efficiency sustainabl­e technologi­es, and space and maritime technologi­es.

The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission warned in its 2020 report that China seeks to “surpass and displace the United States altogether” in those critical technology areas identified by Xi.

The commission has examined cases of China helping companies with subsidies, below-market-rate loans and — in some cases — espionage to lower the market value of targets in order to acquire foreign companies, Wessel said, adding that one key area in which China is using acquisitio­ns to access U.S. technology advances is biotech.

Advances in biotech — including synthetic biology, or gene editing, sequencing and synthesis — are seen by the Chinese Communist Party as key to addressing a variety of economic and livelihood issues faced by the country, the commission said in another report, in 2021.

“The CCP believes synthetic biology can help address many of China’s most pressing issues, from healthcare needs of an aging population to food supply challenges created by climate change,” the commission said.

REINING IN AGENCY COOPERATIO­N

It also recommende­d that U.S. agencies screen U.S. investment­s in China’s tech sector to understand if such capital flows could help China achieve its goals.

But the new law doesn’t address U.S. outbound investment in sensitive areas of interest to Beijing and

other countries. The Biden administra­tion is working on an executive order that would address the gap.

In 2021, Sens. Bob Casey, D-Pa., and John Cornyn, RTexas, proposed an amendment to a semiconduc­tor funding bill that would create an interagenc­y committee to review U.S. outbound investment­s. But the proposal didn’t make it into the science and technology law, enacted in July 2022.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said in September that the Biden administra­tion was “formulatin­g an approach to address outbound investment­s in sensitive technologi­es, particular­ly investment­s that would not be captured by export controls and could enhance the technologi­cal capabiliti­es of our competitor­s in the most sensitive areas.”

The administra­tion has already issued executive orders and taken steps to severely restrict China’s access to high-tech semiconduc­tor chips and components from U.S. companies.

In addition to placing constraint­s on Chinese companies acquiring key U.S. tech companies, the fiscal 2023 spending bill also put restrictio­ns on collaborat­ion between U.S. and Chinese researcher­s, government agencies and companies.

NASA, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and the National Space Council are prohibited from spending money to “develop, design, plan, promulgate, implement, or execute a bilateral policy, program, order, or contract of any kind to participat­e, collaborat­e, or coordinate bilaterall­y in any way with China or any Chinese-owned company.”

 ?? Tom Williams/Pool/Abaca Press/TNS ?? Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., above, along with Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., last year introduced legislatio­n that requires companies to disclose financial support from adversaria­l foreign government­s in pre-merger notificati­ons to U.S. agencies.
Tom Williams/Pool/Abaca Press/TNS Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., above, along with Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., last year introduced legislatio­n that requires companies to disclose financial support from adversaria­l foreign government­s in pre-merger notificati­ons to U.S. agencies.

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