Congress urged to bar Chinese state-run firms from buying U.S. businesses, especially high-tech

As Chinese investment in the United States keeps setting records, congressional advisers suggest changing U.S. law so Chinese state-owned companies can be barred from buying or gaining control of American businesses.

The concern is that such enterprises could use technology, intelligence and market power “in the service of the Chinese state,” the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission said Wednesday in its annual report. The commission noted, for example, a growth in Chinese attempts to buy U.S. assets in the semi-conductor industry.

The recommendation stemming from the security implications about foreign investment by the world’s No. 2 economy was one of several proposals in the report, which examines a range of issues in the relationship between the powers.

Chinese investment in the U.S. reached a record $15 billion in 2015 and could climb to $30 billion in 2016. About one-quarter of that investment is from state-owned companies.

“We don’t want the U.S. government owning large chunks of the U.S. economy, so why do we want the Chinese Communist Party owning large chunks of the U.S. economy?” said Dennis Shea, the Republican-appointed chairman of the bipartisan commission.

“These state-owned enterprises are arms of the Chinese state and Communist Party. Often they do not act purely on commercial or market basis, they have strategic considerations,” he said.

The report urges Congress to amend the statute authorizing the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, known as CFIUS, to prohibit Chinese state-owned enterprises “from acquiring or otherwise gaining effective control of U.S. companies.”

That committee reviews foreign acquisitions for threats to U.S. national security.

A February report by the Rhodium Group, a research organization that tracks Chinese investment in the U.S., said that for the past three years, China was the country with the most transactions scrutinized by the committee. Rhodium said that was not due to increased scrutiny of China, but rather reflected an increase in the volume of foreign investment from China and a shift in its interest toward technology acquisitions.

“The vast majority of Chinese overtures continue to pass CFIUS reviews without any problems,” researchers said. According to Rhodium, annual investment flows from China to the U.S. have exceeded American investment flows into China since 2015.

China has long complained that Washington’s security review process for investments in the U.S. unfairly targets Chinese investors.

Carolyn Bartholomew, the Democratic-appointed vice chairman of the review commission, said that while China restricts foreign investment with laws banning foreign participation in large swaths of its economy, Chinese companies face no such obstacles in the U.S.

“People need to take a harder look at what companies are investing in the United States, why they are investing in the United States,” she said. “We just think that people are not paying enough attention to this.”

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