U.S. Commerce chief to push investment in domestic
economy
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[September 28, 2021] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Commerce
Secretary Gina Raimondo plans to outline her vision for U.S. investment
in its domestic economy and doing more to compete with China, in a
speech on Tuesday.
"For America to compete globally, we must invest domestically − in
American workers, American businesses, and American innovation,"
Raimondo will say at the Washington Economic Club, according to excerpts
from the speech.
Congress is considering awarding the Department of Commerce tens of
billions of dollars to extend broadband services to areas lacking
high-speed internet and $52 billion to boost U.S. semiconductor chip
production.
Raimondo's prepared excerpts say she will argue China's R&D spending
requires a response: "We must expand R&D investments and move
innovations from the lab to the marketplace at 21st century speed."
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In a roundtable media interview Friday, Raimondo singled out China,
saying it was dumping cheap steal and aluminum and not living up to a
2020 trade agreement to buy U.S. products.
"We are going to look to work with our allies to counteract China's
anticompetitive behavior," Raimondo said. "That's a big difference
between the last administration's approach and our administration's
approach."
She said tariffs on steel and aluminum imposed by the Trump
administration "worked" to increase U.S. production but said the
national security tariffs imposed on allies was not "necessarily the
right way to go...It was really irritating to Europeans and now we've
got to, like, clean that up... The enemy of course isn't Europeans. The
enemy is excess supply of cheap steel being dumped by China into
Europe."
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U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo listens to a question during
an interview with Reuters at the Department of Commerce in
Washington U.S., September 23, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
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EU trade chief Valdis Dombrovskis said on Monday he was "moderately optimistic
that the U.S. and European Union could resolve their dispute over steel and
aluminum tariffs.
Raimondo called efforts by the Trump administration to address data security
issues surrounding TikTok "hamhanded and ineffective."
In June, President Joe Biden withdrew executive orders issued by former
President Donald Trump that unsuccessfully sought to ban new downloads of WeChat,
TikTok and other Chinese-owned apps and directed the Commerce Department to make
recommendations by early October on how to protect U.S. data accessible by
companies controlled by foreign adversaries.
Raimondo said "we're in the middle of the TikTok review" and added she was
limited about what she could say.
She said the Biden administration is "very serious about protecting Americans'
data" and is working with allies. "That's really hard work," Raimondo said.
"Doing some executive order that's meaningless on TikTok is not the way to do
it."
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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