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Chinese firms advised to stay in U.S. as regulation tightens

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2020-09-18 08:11:41China Daily Editor : Li Yan ECNS App Download

Photo taken on Aug 21, 2020 shows a logo of the video-sharing social networking company TikTok's Los Angeles Office in Culver City, Los Angeles County, the United States. (Photo/Xinhua)

Chinese companies operating in the United States are being told to stay put while dealing with increased regulation from the U.S. administration.

"Hang in there" and "keep building those relationships as much as you can" was the advice former U.S. ambassador to China Max Baucus gave Chinese companies in the U.S.. Because "this too shall pass", and the hostility against China is going to "die down".

This period of tensions won't last more than a year or two longer, Baucus told Chinese business leaders at a recent webinar hosted by the China General Chamber of Commerce in the U.S. The two countries need each other, he said.

"We have to work with China. Yes, no alternative. China's not going anywhere. It's a country four times our population. Its GDP will exceed that of the U.S. not too many years from now," Baucus said.

When speaking of the recent pressure on TikTok, WeChat and other Chinese companies, he said those actions are just leading China to "double down and go (in its) own direction".

"And believe me, when they do, they're going to do very well," he added.

"The Chinese are very industrious. They're very smart. They're very hard working. And the more we are trying to put China down, the more that's going hurt the States, because China will go elsewhere," said Baucus. "They'll figure out ways to get stuff done. They just will.

"They've got thousands of years under their belt. We have to figure out a way to work with them, not against them," he said.

Craig Stronberg, director at PwC U.S., cautioned that Chinese companies-especially when they make investments in the U.S.-should understand that protectionist measures can be created through legislation or executive orders.

An example of the former is the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. The government committee is led by the Treasury Department and includes top officials from the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security. Its role is to investigate acquisitions involving foreign companies that may pose national security risks.

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"That is something that's going to be in place, and those regulators are going to act no matter who's in the White House," said Stronberg.

In contrast, executive orders, which have the force of law, can be altered at any time either by the president that issued them or by a different president.

Jeffrey Sachs, an economist and adviser to the United Nations, said privacy concerns were cited when the U.S. administration targeted Chinese companies like TikTok and WeChat, but U.S. companies aren't being regulated over the same concerns.

While acknowledging the role of CFIUS as "guardrails on technologies that are new and still evolving at unprecedented speed", Sachs said it's the U.S. companies that have more data on citizens of other countries than any other companies in the world.

Ask more questions

Part of the issue, he said, especially for Chinese companies in the U.S., is that they have had to deal with a strengthened CFIUS, which focuses on three areas: data, critical technologies and critical infrastructure.

It's often challenging for Chinese companies to understand the role of CFIUS and define "critical technologies", said Stronberg, but it's important to know that the data is affecting the way that U.S. regulators are looking at Chinese and other foreign investment, which might not have been the case four or five years ago.

His advice for Chinese companies as they invest in the U.S. is to not just ask all the usual questions about what the value of a potential partnership or investment might be, but also ask what data they are going to potentially acquire in the deal and think through how a regulator is going to look at it.

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