Former Rep. Ron Kind, D-Wis., has joined Arnold & Porter as a senior policy adviser and resident in the Legislative and Public Policy practice, the firm announced. In Congress, Kind served on the House Ways and Means Committee and its Subcommittees on Health and Trade, where he engaged on various issues including multiple free trade agreements, the CHIPS Act, and tax and pension reform legislation.
With hostile acts like China recently sending a spy balloon drifting across the U.S., Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., said it's difficult to manage the U.S.-China relationship "when our economies are deeply integrated."
The U.S. should “acknowledge” the national security risks associated with outbound investments into China, said Nathaniel Fick, the first ambassador at large of the State Department’s recently established Bureau of Cyberspace and Digital Policy. Fick, speaking during a Feb. 2 event hosted by the German Marshall Fund, suggested he’s expecting government action around outbound investments soon.
New U.S. chip export controls are among the most complex export regulatory provisions ever published and have caused significant uncertainty in the semiconductor industry, trade groups and technology firms told the Bureau of Industry and Security in comments that were due this week. More than 40 companies, trade associations, law firms and others asked BIS to revise parts of the regulations or offer more guidance to avoid hurting U.S. competitiveness, with some saying the new controls may force foreign companies to stop using U.S.-origin items altogether rather than deal with the added compliance obligations.
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The chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Michael McCaul, R-Texas, promised a "thorough review of the policies and procedures" at the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security after the state-run China Academy of Engineering Physics reportedly was able to continue purchasing U.S.-made semiconductors since 2020 despite being on a U.S. export ban list since 1997.
The U.S. has been “abusing export controls” and “politicizing tech and trade issues and using them as a tool and weapon” to “hold on to its hegemony and serve its selfish agenda,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said in response to a question about a reported agreement on chip controls between the U.S., the Netherlands and Japan (see 2301270002). “China is firmly against this,” she said at a regularly scheduled press conference Jan. 30. “Such practices serve no one’s interests. They destabilize global industrial and supply chains and have given rise to global concerns.”
The upcoming U.S. outbound investment review tool probably won’t be used to unwind past deals, and will likely only target investments in specific, sensitive technology areas, said Laura Black, a former Treasury Department official. But she said companies still should prepare for a new outbound investment executive order and be ready for other jurisdictions to implement their own outbound investment controls, including in the EU.
A former undersecretary of Commerce now at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Bill Reinsch, said there has been relatively little impact on chip companies and chipmaking equipment companies from export controls on sales to China announced last October (see 2210070049).
Japan and the Netherlands will soon join the U.S. in imposing export restrictions on certain advanced semiconductor machinery destined to China, Bloomberg reported Jan. 26. Although the three countries have been discussing the controls for months, the report said talks were expected to conclude Jan. 27 and would result in new, expanded Dutch restrictions on ASML and new Japanese controls on Nikon. The Netherlands will prevent ASML from selling “at least some” of its deep ultraviolet lithography machines to China (see 2301250022), with Japan setting “similar limits” on Nikon, the report said, adding that the countries haven’t yet decided on a date for a public announcement.