China investment curbs gain momentum in U.S. lawmaker talks
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[June 14, 2022] WASHINGTON
(Reuters) -A bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers said on Monday they had
agreed on a proposal to give the government sweeping new powers to block
billions in U.S. investment into China, though the measure is part of a
broader bill with an uncertain future.
News of the provision, part of legislation that aims to boost U.S.
competitiveness and grant chipmakers $52 billion to expand U.S.
operations, drew opposition from China, which said it would only deprive
the United States of opportunities.
"The refined proposal released today has bipartisan, bicameral support
and addresses industry concerns," U.S. Senators Bob Casey and John
Cornyn, and Representatives Rosa DeLauro, Bill Pascrell, Jr., Michael
McCaul, Brian Fitzpatrick and Victoria Spartz, said in a statement.
The measure also covered the scope of prospective activities, industries
affected, and the prevention of duplicative authorities, they added.
The initial "outbound investment" proposal encountered opposition for
fear it could reduce companies' investments abroad, leading some
chipmakers to oppose its inclusion in the chips bill being hammered out
by Senate and House lawmakers.
Democratic Senator Mark Warner told Reuters on Monday the "the clock is
ticking" on the broader chips bill.
There were "a lot of conversations", he added, about pivoting to a bill
that would only focus on subsidies for plants to make chips, potentially
dropping trade and other measures aimed at helping the U.S. compete with
China in science, business and technology.
The outbound investment measure, originally proposed as a standalone
bill by Cornyn and Casey, was later added to the House version of a
massive bill that includes the grants for chipmakers and is aimed at
countering China's rise.
Asked on Tuesday to comment on the proposal, foreign ministry spokesman
Wang Wenbin said China opposed how the U.S. "over-generalised" the
concept of national security and carried out investment reviews it
considered "unreasonable'.
"The restrictions that U.S. politicians continue to impose on normal
economic and trade co-operation between China and the United States will
not hamper China’s development, but will only lead them to box
themselves in and miss out on development opportunities," he told a news
conference.
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Chinese and U.S. flags flutter outside the building of an American
company in Beijing, China January 21, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu
Wang/File Photo
The draft legislation, which would capture fewer investments than the original
version, stirred opposition from critics who said it would harm American
competitiveness.
The US-China Business Council said, "If such government controls were
implemented on a unilateral basis, it would only hurt the flexibility and
resilience of American companies."
The draft says a new investment committee would engage with allies to coordinate
and share information.
The legislation aims to give the U.S. government greater visibility into U.S.
investments.
It will be mandatory to notify the government of investments that may fall under
the new regulations, and the U.S. can use existing authorities to stop
investments, or mitigate risk. If no action is taken, the investment can move
forward.
The concept behind the measure has support within the administration of U.S.
President Joe Biden.
In July, national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the government was working
on new investment screening and considering outbound investment as it seeks to
better position the United States for competition in technology.
A study by Rhodium said 43% of U.S. foreign direct investment transactions in
China over the past two decades could have been subject to screening under the
broad categories set out by the original proposal.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper and David Shepardson in Washington; Karen Freifeld
in New York; Additional reporting by Yew Lun Tian in Beijing; Editing by Richard
Pullin and Clarence Fernandez)
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