Trump Softens Threat Of New Curbs On Chinese Investment In US Firms

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The announcement comes amid an intensifying trade war between US and China
(File)Washington: The Trump administration said it would rely on an existing Treasury Department-led committee to restrict new Chinese
investments in American technology companies, backing away from a more aggressive approach that would have declared a national economic
emergency and dramatically limited China's ability to invest in the U.S.President Donald Trump opted instead to rely on legislation to
enhance the powers of the committee known as the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States or CFIUS, which reviews proposed
acquisitions of U.S
assets by foreign investors
At the end of its review, the president can block proposed investments.Both the House and Senate have passed versions of a bill to increase
the panel's authority to review a variety of investments not covered under current law, including minority stakes
The measures passed with strong bipartisan support in both chambers
On Tuesday, the House bill was approved by a margin of 400 to 2.The move caps an intense internal debate between Treasury Secretary Steven
Mnuchin, who favored working within the beefed-up CFIUS process, and trade hard-liners like Peter Navarro, a White House adviser
The administration's get-tough-on-China faction urged the president to employ sweeping powers under the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (IEEPA,) which would have allowed him to impose harsh limits.The administration's action grows out of a report by the Office of
the U.S
Trade Representative, which concluded that China seeks to acquire American technology through such investments
But the CFIUS process applies to all foreign countries not just China.Wednesday's announcement comes amid an intensifying trade dispute
between the U.S
and China
Tariffs on $34 billion in Chinese products are scheduled to take effect on July 6, with additional trade barriers planned in subsequent
weeks
China has pledged to retaliate with equivalent measures.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent
staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)