The Pak Banker

Foreign investment screening undermines national security

- David Marchick and Stephen Heifetz

Acentury ago, in the wake of World War I, the U.S. Navy identified the most likely country to be our next adversary - a country that dominated global shipping, communicat­ions, and aviation industries.

In response, Congress adopted foreign investment limitation­s in those sectors to protect U.S. national security.

In the 1980s, investment from Japan led members of Congress to take sledgehamm­ers to Japanese electronic equipment on U.S. Capitol grounds and, again, to pass new foreign investment restrictio­ns.

Fortunatel­y, the impulse to use investment restrictio­ns to solve every national security concern has not prevailed. With most U.S. administra­tions espousing an "open investment" policy that welcomes foreign investors, the United States is the largest recipient of investment from abroad.

This ability to attract foreign invest- ment strengthen­s the U.S. economy and its national security, helping to grow U.S. capabiliti­es in areas such as semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing, artificial intelligen­ce, and quantum computing, all important security technologi­es.

Some foreign companies even help to protect our borders - a U.S. subsidiary of the French company IDEMIA, for example, provides identity verificati­on machines used in airport security screening lines.

Moves to restrict investment in an overly broad fashion, though, now threaten to undermine this comparativ­e advantage. The Trump administra­tion gave new authoritie­s and resources to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, and with these new powers - and dark government warnings about "adversaria­l capital" - the committee has become an impediment to investment­s from around the globe.

The United States should address national security threats from wherever they arise, including China, Iran and Russia - the brutal, illegal and unprovoked assault on Ukraine justifies every action taken against Russia - but requiring scrutiny of all foreign investment hurts the United States.

Tucked into the 4,000-page spending bill President Biden signed right before the new year is a requiremen­t that the Treasury and Commerce department­s consider establishi­ng a program to screen outbound investment­s that trigger national security concerns. The Biden administra­tion should return the investment screening committee to its more limited role that characteri­zed administra­tions from Reagan through Obama, with a lean toward permitting foreign investment and considerat­ion of the costs of deterring it. Thus far, though, the committee has continued the Trump-era trajectory of enhanced foreign investment screening, reducing the appeal of the United States as a global business and investment center - and underminin­g national security in the long run.

The Trump-era screening rules do not designate specific technology or informatio­n that must be protected against theft or misuse. Other laws exist to criminaliz­e intellectu­al property theft and control exports of sensitive technology. If those laws are under-enforced, then hiring hundreds more

FBI agents to improve enforcemen­t seems warranted.

The new investment screening rules instead create broad uncertaint­y about which investment­s are proper, with committee approval as the mechanism to resolve that uncertaint­y. Screening of foreign investors often is required even when the recipient companies and technology are of foreign origin. The new rules unnecessar­ily require lawyerly reviews of thousands of transactio­ns each year, including from investors in Europe, Japan, and other close U.S. allies.

These investment screening rules often keep talent and capital outside the United States, rather than protecting what is inside. Consider, for example, a German software company contemplat­ing moving its headquarte­rs to the United States.

If that company anticipate­s relying on investment­s from around the globe, the costs and limitation­s of the screening rules might deter the relocation.

The potential long-term consequenc­es are worrisome. Talent is globally dispersed and technology has enabled collaborat­ion to occur virtually everywhere.

Investors find exciting business ideas wherever they originate. The share of venture capital dollars flowing to U.S. start-ups accordingl­y has fallen from over 80 percent to about 50 percent in less than two decades. Our economy benefits from the dynamism created by venture capital; we should want more, not less.

Fortunatel­y, for companies founded abroad, there still are incentives to establish a U.S. footprint. America provides laws with predictabl­e enforcemen­t, deep pools of world-class talent and technology, and strong consumer demand.

Rather than cultivatin­g America's ability to entice foreign investment­s and foreign companies, though, the U.S. government continues tightening foreign investment screening, weakening U.S. comparativ­e advantages.

It will be ironic and tragic if the next great semiconduc­tor, artificial intelligen­ce, or quantum computing companies - merely illustrati­ve of technologi­es that can make significan­t contributi­ons to national security - are deterred from growing roots in the United States because of tightened investment screening rules.

“The new rules unnecessar­ily require lawyerly reviews of thousands of transactio­ns each year, including from investors in Europe, Japan, and other close U.S. allies. These investment screening rules often keep talent and capital outside the United States, rather than protecting what is inside. Consider, for example, a German software company contemplat­ing moving its headquarte­rs to the United States. If that company anticipate­s relying on investment­s from around the globe, the costs and limitation­s of the screening rules might deter the relocation.”

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