China-U.S. Trade Issues
Wayne M. Morrison
Specialist in Asian Trade and Finance
February 10, 2014
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL33536


China-U.S. Trade Issues

Summary
U.S.-China economic ties have expanded substantially over the past three decades. Total U.S.-
China trade rose from $2 billion in 1979 to $562 billion in 2013. China is currently the United
States’ second-largest trading partner, its third-largest export market, and its biggest source of
imports. China is estimated to be a $300 billion market for U.S. firms (based on U.S. exports to
China and sales by U.S.-invested firms in China). Many U.S. firms view participation in China’s
market as critical to staying globally competitive. General Motors (GM), for example, which has
invested heavily in China, sold more cars in China than in the United States each year from 2010
to 2013. In addition, U.S. imports of low-cost goods from China greatly benefit U.S. consumers,
and U.S. firms that use China as the final point of assembly for their products, or use Chinese-
made inputs for production in the United States, are able to lower costs. China is the largest
foreign holder of U.S. Treasury securities ($1.3 trillion as of November 2013). China’s purchases
of U.S. government debt help keep U.S. interest rates low.
Despite growing commercial ties, the bilateral economic relationship has become increasingly
complex and often fraught with tension. From the U.S. perspective, many trade tensions stem
from China’s incomplete transition to a free market economy. While China has significantly
liberalized its economic and trade regimes over the past three decades, it continues to maintain (or
has recently imposed) a number of state-directed policies that appear to distort trade and
investment flows. Major areas of concern expressed by U.S. policy makers and stakeholders
include China’s relatively poor record of intellectual property rights (IPR) enforcement and
alleged widespread cyber espionage against U.S. firms by Chinese government entities; its mixed
record on implementing its World Trade Organization (WTO) obligations; its extensive use of
industrial policies (such as financial support of state-owned firms, trade and investment barriers,
and pressure on foreign-invested firms in China to transfer technology in exchange for market
access) in order to promote the development of industries favored by the government and protect
them from foreign competition; and its policies to maintain an undervalued currency. Many U.S.
policy makers argue that such policies harm U.S. economic interests and have contributed to U.S.
job losses. For example, one study estimated that Chinese IPR infringement cost the U.S.
economy up to $240 billion annually. There are a number of views in the United States over how
to more effectively address commercial disputes with China:
• Take a more aggressive stand against China, such as increasing the number of
dispute settlement cases brought against China in the WTO, or threatening to
impose trade sanctions against China unless it addresses policies (such as IPR
theft) that hurt U.S. economic interests.
• Intensify negotiations through existing high-level bilateral dialogues, such as the
U.S.-China Strategic & Economic Dialogue (S&ED), which was established to
discuss long-term challenges in the relationship. In addition, seek to complete
ongoing U.S. negotiations with China to reach a high-standard bilateral
investment treaty (BIT), as well as to finalize negotiations in the WTO toward
achieving China’s accession to the Government Procurement Agreement (GPA).
• Encourage China to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations and/or
seek to negotiate a bilateral a free trade agreement (FTA) with China.
• Continue to press China to implement comprehensive economic reforms, such as
diminishing the role of the state in the economy and implementing policies to
boost domestic consumption.

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Contents
Most Recent Developments ............................................................................................................. 1
U.S. Trade with China ..................................................................................................................... 2
U.S. Merchandise Exports to China .......................................................................................... 4
Major U.S. Imports from China................................................................................................. 8
China as a Major Center for Global Supply Chains .................................................................. 9
U.S.-China Investment Ties ........................................................................................................... 12
China’s Holdings of U.S. Public and Private Securities .......................................................... 13
Bilateral Foreign Direct Investment Flows ............................................................................. 15
Issues Raised by Chinese FDI in the United States ................................................................. 19
Chinese Restrictions on U.S. FDI in China ....................................................................... 24
Major U.S.-China Trade Issues ...................................................................................................... 26
Chinese “State Capitalism” ..................................................................................................... 27
China’s Plan to Modernize the Economy and Promote Indigenous Innovation ................ 29
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) ........................................................................................... 33
Technology Transfer Issues ............................................................................................... 36
Cyber Security Issues ........................................................................................................ 37
China’s Obligations in the World Trade Organization ............................................................. 39
WTO Implementation Issues ................................................................................................... 40
Pending U.S. WTO Dispute Settlement Cases Against China .......................................... 41
Resolved Cases or a WTO Panel Has Issued a Ruling ...................................................... 41
China’s Accession to the WTO Government Procurement Agreement (GPA) ................. 44
China’s Currency Policy .......................................................................................................... 45
The U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue........................................................................ 47
The July 2009 Economic Track Session............................................................................ 47
May 2010 Economic Track Session .................................................................................. 48
The May 2011 Economic Track ........................................................................................ 49
The May 2012 Economic Track ........................................................................................ 49
The May 2013 Economic Track ........................................................................................ 50
Concluding Observations ............................................................................................................... 50

Figures
Figure 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with China: 2002-2013 ............................................................. 4
Figure 2. Top 5 U.S. Merchandise Export Markets: 2013 ............................................................... 5
Figure 3. U.S. Manufactured Imports from Pacific Rim Countries as a Percent of Total
U.S. Manufactured Imports: 1990, 2000, and 2013 .................................................................... 10
Figure 4. U.S. Computer Imports from China as a Percentage of Total U.S. Computer
Imports: 2000-2013 .................................................................................................................... 11
Figure 5. China’s Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2002-November 2013 ........................... 14
Figure 6. BEA’s Estimate of Cumulative Chinese FDI in the United States on a UBO
Basis: 2005-2012 ........................................................................................................................ 16
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Figure 7. Rhodium Group’s Estimates of Cumulative Chinese FDI in the United States on
a UBO Basis: 2005-2013 ............................................................................................................ 17

Tables
Table 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with China: 1980-2013 ............................................................... 3
Table 2. Major U.S. Exports to China: 2009-2013 .......................................................................... 5
Table 3. Major U.S. Merchandise Export Markets: 2004-2013 ....................................................... 6
Table 4. Major U.S. Merchandise Imports From China: 2009-2013 ............................................... 8
Table 5. China’s Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2002-November 2013 ............................ 14
Table 6. U.S. Data on Annual U.S.–China Bilateral FDI Flows:
2005-2012 and Cumulative Value of FDI at Year-End 2012 ...................................................... 16

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 51

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conomic and trade reforms begun in 1979 have helped transform China into one of the
world’s fastest-growing economies. China’s economic growth and trade liberalization,
Eincluding comprehensive trade commitments made upon entering the World Trade
Organization (WTO) in 2001, have led to a sharp expansion in U.S.-China commercial ties. Yet,
bilateral trade relations have become increasingly strained in recent years over a number of
issues, including a large and growing U.S. trade deficit with China, resistance by China to
appreciate its currency to market levels, China’s mixed record on implementing its WTO
obligations, infringement of U.S. intellectual property (including through cyber espionage), and
numerous Chinese industrial policies that appear to impose new restrictions on foreign firms or
provide unfair advantages to domestic Chinese firms (such as subsidies). Several Members of
Congress have called on the Obama Administration to take a tougher stance against China to
induce it to eliminate trade and economic policies deemed harmful to U.S. economic interests
and/or inconsistent with WTO rules. This report provides an overview of U.S.-China commercial
relations, including major trade disputes.
Most Recent Developments
On January 23, 2014, Lenovo, a Chinese technology company, announced that it would purchase
IBM’s x86 server business for $2.3 billion. On January 29, 2014, Lenovo announced that it would
acquire Motorola Mobility from Google for $2.9 billion.
From November 9 to 12, 2013, the Communist Party of China held the 3rd Plenum of its 18th
Party Congress, a meeting that many analysts anticipated would result in the initiation of
extensive new economic reforms. Following the meeting, the Communist Party issued a
communique with a number of broad policy statements. One highlighted by the Chinese media
was that the market would now play a “decisive” role in allocating resources in the economy.
On September 26, 2013, the Chinese government announced that it would join negotiations in the
WTO for a trade in services agreement.
On August 5, 2013, the USTR announced that the United States had largely prevailed in a WTO
dispute settlement case against China over its use of high antidumping and countervailing duties
on U.S. chicken broiler products.
On July 17, 2013, the USTR expressed disappointment over the suspension of WTO negotiations
on reaching a new information technology agreement, stating that China’s hardline position in the
negotiations was largely to blame for lack of an agreement.
On July 10-11, 2013, the fifth round of talks under the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic
Dialogue (S&ED) was held in Washington, DC. China announced its intention to negotiate a
high-standard bilateral investment treaty with the United States that would include all stages of
investment and all sectors.
On June 7-8, 2013, President Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping held discussions on major
bilateral issues. President Obama warned that if cyber security issues are not addressed and if
there continues to be direct theft of United States property, then “this was going to be very
difficult problem in the economic relationship and was going to be an inhibitor to the relationship
really reaching its full potential.”
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On May 29, 2013, Shuanghui International Holdings, the majority owner of China’s largest meat
processing enterprise, announced it was seeking to purchase Smithfield Foods, the largest U.S.
pork producer, for $7.1 billion. Although several Members of Congress expressed concern over
how the acquisition would affect U.S. food safety, the deal was completed on September 26,
2013.
On March 11, 2013, Tom Donilon, National Security Advisor to President Obama, stated in a
speech that the United States and China should engage in a constructive dialogue to establish
acceptable norms of behavior in cyberspace; that China should recognize the urgency and scope
of the problem and the risks it poses to U.S. trade relations and the reputation to Chinese industry;
and that China should take serious steps to investigate and stop cyber espionage.
On February 19, 2013, Mandiant, a U.S. information security company, issued a report
documenting extensive economic cyber espionage by a Chinese unit with alleged links to the
Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) against 141 firms, covering 20 industries, since 2006.
U.S. Trade with China1
U.S.-China trade rose rapidly after the two nations reestablished diplomatic relations (in January
1979), signed a bilateral trade agreement (July 1979), and provided mutual most-favored-nation
(MFN) treatment beginning in 1980.2 In 1979 (when China’s economic reforms began), total
U.S.-China trade (exports plus imports) was $2 billion; China ranked as the United States’ 23rd-
largest export market and its 45th-largest source of imports. In 2013, total bilateral trade (exports
plus imports) reached $562 billion. China is currently the second-largest U.S. trading partner
(after Canada), the third-largest U.S. export market (after Canada and Mexico), and the largest
source of U.S. imports. In recent years, China has been one of the fastest-growing U.S. export
markets, and the importance of this market is expected to grow even further, given the pace of
China’s economic growth, and as Chinese living standards continue to improve and a sizable
Chinese middle class emerges. According to one estimate, China is currently a $300 billion
market for U.S. firms if U.S. exports to China and sales by U.S.-invested firms in China are
counted.3
A major concern among some U.S. policy makers has been the size of the U.S. trade deficit with
China. That deficit rose from $10 billion in 1990 to $266 billion in 2008; it fell to $227 billion in
2009 (due largely to the effects of the global economic downturn), then rose over each of the next
three years, reaching $318 billion in 2013 (see Table 1 and Figure 1). For the past several years,
the U.S. trade deficit with China has been significantly larger than that with any other U.S.
trading partner and several trading groups. Some analysts contend that the large U.S. trade deficit

1 This report focuses primarily on U.S.-China trade relations. For information on China’s economy, see CRS Report
RL33534, China’s Economic Rise: History, Trends, Challenges, and Implications for the United States, by Wayne M.
Morrison. For general information on U.S.-China political ties, see CRS Report R41108, U.S.-China Relations: An
Overview of Policy Issues
, by Susan V. Lawrence.
2 The United States suspended China’s MFN status in 1951, which cut off most bilateral trade. China’s MFN status was
conditionally restored in 1980 under the provisions set forth under Title IV of the 1974 Trade Act, as amended
(including the Jackson-Vanik freedom-of-emigration provisions). China’s MFN status (which was re-designated under
U.S. trade law as “normal trade relations” status, or NTR) was renewed on an annual basis until January 2002, when
permanent NTR was extended to China (after it joined the WTO in December 2001).
3 U.S.-China Business Council, China’s WTO Compliance, September 20, 2013.
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is an indicator that the trade relationship is unbalanced, unfair, and damaging to the U.S.
economy, while others argue that the large U.S. trade deficit with China is a reflection of global
supply chains because a significant level of U.S. imports from China come from foreign-invested
multi-national companies there, which use China as the final point of assembly for many of their
products (discussed more fully later in the report). A joint study by the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the WTO estimated that the U.S trade
deficit in China would be reduced by 25% (in 2009) if bilateral trade flows were measured
according to the value-added that occurred in each country before it was exported.4
Table 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with China:
1980-2013
($ billions)
Year
U.S. Exports
U.S. Imports
U.S. Trade Balance
1980 3.8
1.1
2.7
1985 3.9
3.9
0.0
1990 4.8
15.2
-10.4
1995
11.7
45.6
-33.8
2000
16.3
100.1
-83.8
2005
41.8
243.5
-201.6
2006 55.2
287.8
-232.5
2007 65.2
321.5
-256.3
2008 71.5
337.8
-266.3
2009
69.6
296.4
-226.8
2010
91.9
364.9
-273.1
2011 103.9
393.3
-295.5
2012
110.6
425.6
-315.0
2013
122.0
440.4
-318.4
Source: U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) DataWeb.

4 OECD/WTO Trade in value-Added (TIVA) Database: China, at http://www.oecd.org/sti/ind/TiVA%20China.pdf.
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Figure 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with China: 2002-2013
($ billions)
400
300
200
100
0
-100
-200
-300
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Exports
Imports
Trade Balance

Source: U.S. International Trade Commission DataWeb.
U.S. Merchandise Exports to China
U.S. merchandise exports to China in 2013 were $122 billion, up 10.3% over 2012 levels. In
2013, China was the third largest U.S. merchandise export after Canada and Mexico (see Figure
2
). From 2000 to 2013, the share of total U.S. exports going to China rose from 2.1% to 7.7%. As
indicated in Table 2, the top five merchandise U.S. exports to China in 2013 were oilseeds and
grains; aircraft and parts; waste and scrap; motor vehicles; and navigational, measuring, electro-
medical, and control instruments. As indicated in Table 3, from 2004 to 2013, U.S. exports to
China increased by 349%, which was the fastest growth rate for U.S. exports among its top 10
export markets.
In addition, China was the second-largest U.S. agricultural export market in 2013 at $27.9 billion.
China is also a significant market for U.S. exports of private services. These totaled $30 billion in
2012, making China the fourth-largest export market for U.S. private services.5


5 U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. International Services.
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Figure 2. Top 5 U.S. Merchandise Export Markets: 2013
($ billions)
350
300.2
300
250
226.2
200
150
122
100
65.1
47.4
50
0
Canada
Mexico
China
Japan
Germany

Source: U.S. International Trade Commission DataWeb.
Table 2. Major U.S. Exports to China: 2009-2013
($ millions and percent change)
2012-2013
NAIC Commodity
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
% change
Total Exports to China
69,576
91,878
103,879
110,590
122,016
10.3%
Oilseeds and grains
9,376
11,208
11,500
16,546
16,092
-2.7%
Aerospace products and parts
5,344
5,766
6,392
8,367
12,620
50.8%
Waste and scrap
7,142
8,561
11,540
9,526
8,765
-8.0%
Motor vehicles
1,134
3,515
5,369
5,788
8,614
48.8%
Navigational, measuring, electro-
2,917
3,782
4,275
5,153
5,732
11.2%
medical, and controlling
instruments
Semiconductors and other
6,041
7,555
5,668 4,859 5,724
17.8%
electronic components
Basic chemicals
3,433
4,202
4,658
4,716
4,934
4.6%
Resin, synthetic rubber, & artificial
4,036
4,336
4,476
4,278
4,237
-1.0%
& synthetic fibers & filament
Other general purpose machinery
1,890
2,445
3,113
3,021
3,166
4.8%
Meat products and meat packaging
1,438
1,319
2,020
2,409
2,759
14.5%
products
Source: USITC DataWeb.
Note: Top 10 U.S. exports to China in 2013 using the North American Industry Classification (NAIC) System
on a 4-digit level.

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Table 3. Major U.S. Merchandise Export Markets: 2004-2013
($ billions and percent change)
Country
2004
2012
2013
Percent Change
Percent Change
2012-2013
2004-2013
Total U.S. Exports
817
1,546
1,579
2.1%
193.3
Canada
188
292
300
2.9%
159.6%
Mexico
111
216
226
4.5%
203.6%
China
35
111
122
10.3%
348.6%
Japan
54
70
65
-7.0%
120.4%
Germany
31
49
47
-2.8%
151.6%
UK
36
55
47
-13.6%
130.6%
Brazil
14
44
44
0.9%
314.3%
Netherlands
24
41
43
4.9%
179.2%
Hong Kong
16
37
42
13.3%
262.5%
Korea
26
42
42
-1.8%
161.5%
France
21
31
32
3.7%
152.4%
Belgium
17
29
32
7.9%
188.2%
Singapore
20
31
31
0.5%
155.0%
Switzerland
9
26
27
3.1%
300.0%
Australia
14
31
26
-16.5%
185.7%
Source: U.S. International Trade Commission DataWeb.
Note: Ranked according to the top 10 U.S. export markets in 2013.
Many trade analysts argue that China could prove to be a much more significant market for U.S.
exports in the future. China is one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, and rapid economic
growth is likely to continue in the near future, provided that economic reforms are continued.6
China’s goals of modernizing its infrastructure, upgrading its industries, and improving rural
living standards could generate substantial demand for foreign goods and services. Finally,
economic growth has substantially improved the purchasing power of Chinese citizens, especially
those living in urban areas along the east coast of China. China’s growing economy, large foreign
exchange reserves (at over $3.7 trillion as of September 2013), and large population of over 1.3
billion people make it a potentially enormous market. To illustrate:
• According to a report by the Boston Consulting Group, in 2009, China had 148
million “middle class and affluent” consumers, defined as those whose annual
household income was 60,000 RMB ($9,160) or higher, and that level is
projected to rise to 415 million by 2020.7 A May 2013 Boston Consulting Group
study estimated that China had 1.3 million millionaires in 2012.8

6 China’s real GDP growth from 2008 to 2012 averaged 9.2%.
7 Boston Consulting Group, Big Prizes in Small Places: China’s Rapidly Multiplying Pockets of Growth, November
2010, p. 10.
8 Boston Consulting Group, Global Wealth 2013: Maintaining Momentum in a Complex World, May 30, 2013.
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• Although Chinese private consumption as a percent of GDP is much lower than
that of most other major economies, the rate of growth of Chinese private
consumption has been rising rapidly. For example, private consumption as a
percent of GDP in China in 2012 was 36.3%, compared to 71.0% in the United
States. However, the annual rate of growth in Chinese private consumption from
2001 to 2012 averaged 8.4%, while the U.S. annual average was 2.0%.9
• China’s government has indicated that it plans to step up efforts to boost
domestic spending to help lessen its dependence on exports as the major
contributor to China’s economic growth. In 2008, China began the
implementation of a $586 billion economic stimulus package, largely focused on
infrastructure projects. China’s goals of developing its western regions,
expanding and modernizing its infrastructure, boosting its social safety net (such
as health care and pensions), modernizing and developing key industries,
reducing pollution, and raising incomes of the rural poor will likely result in
large-scale government spending levels. China’s 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015)
reportedly will allocate $1 trillion to infrastructure spending.10
• China currently has the world’s largest mobile phone network and one of the
fastest-growing markets, with over 1.22 billion mobile phone subscribers as of
October 2013.11
• Boeing Corporation predicts that over the next 20 years (2013-2032), China will
buy 5,580 new commercial airplanes valued at $780 billion and will be Boeing’s
largest commercial airplane customer outside the United States.12
• China replaced the United States as the world’s largest Internet user in 2008. At
the end of June 2012, China had an estimated 538 million users versus 245
million in the United States. Yet, the percentage of the Chinese population using
the Internet is small relative to the United States: 40.1% versus 78.1%,
respectively.13
• In 2009, China became the world’s largest producer of motor vehicles as well as
the largest market for new vehicles.
• General Motors (GM) sold more cars and trucks in China than in the United
States each year from 2010 to 2013.14

9 Source: Economist Intelligence Unit.
10 China Daily, “China to invest 7t Yuan for Urban Infrastructure in 2011-15,” May 13, 2013.
11 China Daily, “China's Mobile Phone Users Hit 1.22 Billion,” November 21, 2013.
12 Boeing Corporation, Current Market Outlook: 2013-2032, September 5, 2013, available at
http://www.boeing.com/assets/pdf/commercial/cmo/pdf/Boeing_Current_Market_Outlook_2013.pdf.
13 Internet World Stats, at http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm.
14 A large share of these vehicles was produced by GM and its joint-venture partners in China. According to GM’s
website, it currently has 12 joint ventures and two wholly owned foreign enterprises in China and employees more than
58,000 workers. See, https://media.gm.com/media/cn/en/gm/company.html.
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Major U.S. Imports from China
China was the largest source of U.S. merchandise imports in 2013, at $440 billion, up 3.5% over
the previous year. China’s share of total U.S. imports rose from 8.2% in 2000 to 19.1% in 2010,
dropped to 18.1% in 2011, but rose to 18.7% in 2012 and to 19.4% in 2013. The importance
(ranking) of China as a source of U.S. imports has risen sharply, from eighth largest in 1990, to
fourth in 2000, to second in 2004-2006, to first in 2007-2013. The top five U.S. imports from
China in 2011 were computer equipment, communications equipment, miscellaneous
manufactured products (such as toys and games), apparel, and semiconductors and other
electronic parts (see Table 4). China was also the third-largest source of U.S. agricultural imports
at $4.6 billion. China was the 10th-largest source of U.S. imports of private services at $13.0
billion in 2012.15
Table 4. Major U.S. Merchandise Imports From China: 2009-2013
($ millions and percent change)
Percent
Change
NAIC Commodity
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2012 - 2013
Total imports from China
296,402
364,944
399,335
425,644
440,434
3.5%
Computer equipment
44,818
59,800
68,276
68,815
68,123
-0.1%
Communications equipment
26,362
33,464
39,806
51,857
58,839
13.5%
Miscellaneous manufactured
30,668
34,168
32,672
32,644
32,440
-0.6%
commodities
Apparel 22,669
26,603
27,554
26,926
27,410
1.8%
Semiconductors and other
12,363
18,263
19,835
19,012
19,363
1.8%
electronic components
Footwear 13,119
15,673
16,482
16,870
16,761
-0.6%
Audio and video equipment
18,253
19,493
15,853
15,894
13,830
-13.0%
Household and institutional
9,128
11,123
11,398
12,235
13,225
8.1%
furniture and kitchen cabinets
Household appliances and
7,724
9,090
9,569
10,298
11,670
13.3%
miscellaneous machines
Motor vehicle parts
4,710
6,966
8,277
9,447
10,441
10.5%
Source: U.S. International Trade Commission DataWeb.
Notes: Top 10 U.S. imports from China in 2013 using the North American Industry Classification (NAIC)
System on a 4-digit level.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, nearly all U.S. imports from China were low-value, labor-
intensive products, such as toys and games, consumer electronic products, footwear, and textiles
and apparel. However, over the past few years, an increasing proportion of U.S. imports from
China have been comprised of more technologically advanced products (see text box below).

15 BEA, U.S. International Services.
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U.S.-China Trade in Advanced Technology Products
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. imports of “advanced technology products” (ATP) from China in 2013
totaled $145.9 billion. ATP products accounted for 33.1% of total U.S. imports from China, compared with 19.2%
($29.3 billion) in 2003. In addition, ATP imports from China accounted for 36.4% of total U.S ATP imports (compared
with 14.1% in 2003). U.S. ATP exports to China in 2013 were $29.1 billion; these accounted for 23.9% of total U.S.
exports to China and 9.1% of U.S. global ATP exports. In comparison, U.S. ATP exports to China in 2003 were $8.3
billion, which accounted for 29.2% of U.S. exports to China and 4.6% of total U.S. ATP exports.
The United States ran a $116.8 billion deficit in its ATP trade with China in 2013, up from a $21.0 billion deficit in
2003. Some see the large and growing U.S. trade deficit in ATP with China as a source of concern, contending that it
signifies the growing international competitiveness of China in high technology. Others dispute this, noting that a large
share of the ATP imports from China are in fact relatively low-end technology products and parts, such as notebook
computers, or are products that are assembled in China using imported high technology parts that are largely
developed and/or made elsewhere.
China as a Major Center for Global Supply Chains
Many analysts contend that the sharp increase in U.S. imports from China (and hence the growing
bilateral trade imbalance) is largely the result of movement in production facilities from other
(primarily Asian) countries to China. That is, various products that used to be made in such places
as Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, etc., and then exported to the United States, are now being made in
China (in many cases, by foreign firms in China). To illustrate, in 1990, 47.1% of the value of
U.S. manufactured imports came from Pacific Rim countries (including China); this figure
declined to 46.2% in 2013.16 Over this period, the share of total U.S. manufactured imports that
came from China increased rose from 3.6% to 25.9%. In other words, while China was becoming
an increasingly important source for U.S. manufactured imports, the relative importance of the
rest of the Pacific Rim (excluding China) as a source of U.S. imports was declining, in part
because many multinational firms were shifting their export-oriented manufacturing facilities to
China (see Figure 3). In 1990, China accounted for 7.7% of U.S. manufactured imports from all
Pacific Rim countries, but by 2013, this figure grew to 55.9%.

16 Pacific Rim countries include Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Laos,
Macao, Malaysia, New Zealand, North Korea, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand,
Vietnam, and several small island nations.
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Figure 3. U.S. Manufactured Imports from Pacific Rim Countries as a Percent of
Total U.S. Manufactured Imports: 1990, 2000, and 2013

Source: U.S. International Trade Commission DataWeb.
Notes: Standard International Trade Classification (SITC) definition of manufactured imports.
Another illustration of the shift in production can be seen in the case of U.S. computer equipment
imports, which constitute the largest category of U.S. imports from China (on an NAIC basis, 4-
digit level). In 2000, Japan was the largest foreign supplier of U.S. computer equipment (with a
19.6% share of total U.S. imports), while China ranked fourth (with a 12.1% share). By 2013,
Japan’s ranking had fallen to fourth; the value of its shipments dropped by 70.2% over 2000
levels, and its share of U.S. computer imports declined to 3.8% (2013). China was by far the
largest foreign supplier of computer equipment in 2013 with a 64.0% share of total U.S. computer
equipment imports, compared to 12.0% in 2000 (see Figure 4). While U.S. imports of computer
equipment from China from 2000 to 2013 rose by 725.1%, the total value of U.S. computer
imports worldwide rose by only 55.1%.17 A study by the U.S. International Trade Commission
(USITC) estimated that in 2002 over 99% of computer exports in China were from foreign-
invested firms in China.18 Taiwan, one of the world’s leaders in sales of information technology,
produces over 90% of its information hardware equipment (such as computers) in China.
Computer equipment, like many other globally traded products, often involves many stages of
production, using parts and other inputs made by numerous multinational firms throughout the
world, a significant share of which is assembled in China. The globalization of supply chains
makes it increasingly difficult to interpret conventional U.S. trade statistics (see text box below).

17 China’s accession to the WTO (with the reduction of trade and investment barriers) appears to have been a major
factor behind the migration of computer production from other countries to China.
18USITC, How Much of Chinese Exports Is Really Made In China? Assessing Foreign and Domestic Value-Added in
Gross Exports
, report number 2008-03-B, March 2008, p. 21.
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Figure 4. U.S. Computer Imports from China as a Percentage of
Total U.S. Computer Imports: 2000-2013
(percent)
70
61.5 64.4 63.3 64
57.5
60
51.3 53.7
47.8
50
45.2
39.8
40
29.1
30
19.1
20
12 13.8
10
0
20002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013

Source: U.S. International Trade Commission DataWeb.
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Global Supply Chains, China, and the Apple iPod: Who Benefits?
Many U.S. companies sign contracts with Taiwanese firms to have their products manufactured (mainly in China), and
then shipped to the United States where they are sold by U.S. firms under their own brand name. In many instances,
the level of value-added that occurs in China (often it simply involves assemblage) can be quite small relative to the
overall cost/price of the final product. One study by researchers at the University of California looked at the
production of a 2005 Apple 30 gigabyte video iPod, which is made in China by Foxconn, a Taiwanese company, using
parts produced globally (mainly in Asia). The study estimated that it cost about $144 to make each iPod unit. Of this
amount, only about $4, or 2.8% of the total cost, was attributable to the Chinese workers who assembled it; the rest
of the costs were attributable to the numerous firms involved in making the parts (for example, Japanese firms
provided the highest-value components—the hard drive and the display).19 From a trade aspect, U.S. trade data would
have recorded the ful value of each iPod unit imported from China at $144 (excluding shipping costs) as originating
from China, even though the value added in China was quite small. The retail price of the iPod sold in the United
States was $299, meaning that there was a mark-up of about $155 per unit, which was attributable to transportation
costs, retail and distributor margins, and Apple’s profits. The study estimated that Apple earned at least $80 on each
unit it sold in its stores, making it the single largest beneficiary (in terms of gross profit) of the sale of the iPod. The
study concluded that Apple’s innovation in developing and engineering the iPod and its ability to source most of its
production to low-cost countries, such as China, has helped enable it to become a highly competitive and profitable
firm (as well as a source for high-paying jobs in the United States). The iPod example illustrates that the rapidly
changing nature of global supply chains has made it increasing difficult to interpret the implications of U.S. trade data.
Such data may show where products are being imported from, but they often fail to reflect who benefits from that
trade. Thus, in many instances, U.S. imports from China are really imports from many countries.
U.S.-China Investment Ties20
Investment plays a large and growing role in U.S.-China commercial ties.21 China’s investment in
U.S. assets can be broken down into several categories, including holdings of U.S. securities,
foreign direct investment (FDI), and other non-bond investments. A significant share of China’s
investment in the United States is comprised of U.S. securities, while FDI constitutes the bulk of
U.S. investment in China. The Treasury Department defines foreign holdings of U.S. securities as
“U.S. securities owned by foreign residents (including banks and other institutions) except where
the owner has a direct investment relationship with the U.S. issuer of the securities.” U.S. statutes
define FDI as “the ownership or control, directly or indirectly, by one foreign resident of 10% or
more of the voting securities of an incorporated U.S. business enterprise or the equivalent interest
in an unincorporated U.S. business enterprise, including a branch.”22 BEA reports data on FDI
flows to and from the United States.23 China has also invested in a number of U.S. companies,

19 Communications of the ACM, Who Captures Value in a Global Innovation Network? The Case of Apple’s iPod,
March 2009.
20 U.S. data on FDI flows to and from China differ from Chinese data on FDI flows to and from the United States. This
section examines only U.S. data.
21 Investment is often a major factor behind trade flows. Firms that invest overseas often import machinery, parts, and
other inputs from the parent company to manufacture products for export or sale locally. Other such invested overseas
firms may produce inputs and ship them to their parent company for final production.
22 15 CFRS 806.15(a)(1). The 10% ownership share is the threshold considered to represent an effective voice or
lasting influence in the management of an enterprise. See BEA, International Economic Accounts, BEA Series
Definitions
, available at http://www.bea.gov/international.
23 BEA also reports FDI data according to broad industrial sections, including mining; utilities; wholesale trade;
information; depository institutions; finance (excluding depository institutions); professional, scientific, and technical
services; nonbank holding companies; manufacturing (including food, chemicals, primary and fabricated metals,
machinery, computers and electronic products, electrical equipment, appliances and components, transportation
equipment, and other manufacturing); and other industries.
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projects, and various ventures which do meet the U.S. definition of FDI, and thus, are not
reflected in BEA’s data.
China’s Holdings of U.S. Public and Private Securities24
China’s holdings of U.S. public and private securities are significant.25 These include U.S.
Treasury securities, U.S. government agency (such as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae) securities,
corporate securities, and equities (such as stocks). China’s large holdings of U.S. securities can be
largely attributed to its policy of intervening in exchange rate markets to limit the appreciation of
its currency to the U.S. dollar (discussed in more detail below). For example, the Chinese
government requires Chinese exporters (who are often paid in dollars) to turn over their dollars in
exchange for Chinese currency. As a result, the Chinese government has accumulated a
significant amount of dollars.26 Rather than holding onto U.S. dollars, which earn no interest, the
Chinese government has chosen to invest many of them into U.S. Treasury securities because
they are seen as a relatively safe investment.27 China’s investment in public and private U.S.
securities totaled $1.6 trillion as of June 2012.28
U.S. Treasury securities, which help the federal government finance its budget deficit, are the
largest category of U.S. securities held by China.29 As indicated in Table 5 and Figure 5, China’s
holdings of U.S. Treasury securities increased from $118 billion in 2002 to $1.3 trillion as of
November 2013, making China the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury securities (it overtook
Japan as the largest holder in 2008). China’s holdings of U.S. Treasury securities as a share of
total foreign holdings rose from 9.6% in 2002 to 26.1% in 2010 (year-end), declined to 23.0% in
2011 and to 21.7% in 2012, and then rose to 23.0% as of November 2013.



24 For additional information on this issue, see CRS Report RL34314, China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities: Implications
for the U.S. Economy
, by Wayne M. Morrison and Marc Labonte.
25 The Treasury Department estimates that 72% of China’s total holdings of U.S. government and private securities as
of June 2012 were in U.S. Treasury securities.
26 China’s large annual trade surpluses and inflows of FDI are major contributors to China’s accumulation of foreign
exchange reserves, which totaled $3.4 trillion as of March 2013.
27 However, over the past years, Chinese officials have expressed concern over the “safety” of their large holdings of
U.S. debt. They worry that growing U.S. government debt and expansive monetary policies will eventually spark
inflation in the United States, resulting in a sharp depreciation of the dollar. This would diminish the value of China’s
dollar asset holdings.27 Some Chinese officials have called for replacing the dollar as the world’s major reserve
currency with some other currency arrangement, such as through the International Monetary Fund’s special drawing
rights system, although many economists question whether this would be a feasible alternative in the short run.
28 China’s holdings as of June 2012 were down $135 billion over June 2011 levels. In June 2012, Japan overtook China
as the largest holder of U.S. public and private securities.
29 Some observers characterize foreign holdings of U.S. Treasury securities as “foreign ownership of U.S. government
debt.”
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Table 5. China’s Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2002-November 2013
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2011
2012
Nov.
2013
China’s Holdings
118.0
222.9
396.9
727.4
1,160.1
1,151.9
1,202.8
1,317
($ billions)
China’s Holdings as a
Percent of Total Foreign
9.6% 12.1%
18.9%
23.6%
26.1%
23.0%
21.7%
23.0%
Holdings
Source: U.S. Treasury Department.
Note: Data for 2002-2012 are year-end.
Figure 5. China’s Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2002-November 2013
($ billions)
1,400
1,317
1,203
1,160 1,152
1,200
1,000
895
800
727
600
478
397
400
310
223
159
200
118
0
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012 Nov 2013

Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury.
Note: Data for 2002-2012 are year-end.
Some analysts have raised concerns that China’s large holdings of U.S. debt securities could give
China leverage over U.S. foreign policy, including trade policy. They argue, for example, China
might attempt to sell (or threaten to sell) a large share of its U.S. debt securities as punishment
over a policy dispute, which could damage the U.S. economy. Others counter that China’s
holdings of U.S. debt give it very little practical leverage over the United States. They argue that,
given China’s economic dependency on a stable and growing U.S. economy, and its substantial
holdings of U.S. securities, any attempt to try to sell a large share of those holdings would likely
damage both the U.S. and Chinese economies. Such a move could also cause the U.S. dollar to
sharply depreciate against global currencies, which could reduce the value of China’s remaining
holdings of U.S. dollar assets. Analysts also note that, while China is the largest foreign owner of
U.S. Treasury Securities, those holdings are equal to only 10.4% of total U.S. public debt (as of
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December 2012). Finally, it is argued that, as long as China continues to largely peg the RMB to
the U.S. dollar, it has little choice but to purchase U.S. dollar assets in order to maintain that peg.
In the 112th Congress, the conference report accompanying the National Defense Authorization
Act of FY2012 (H.R. 1540, P.L. 112-81) included a provision requiring the Secretary of Defense
to conduct a national security risk assessment of U.S. federal debt held by China. The Secretary
of Defense issued a report in July 2012, stating that “attempting to use U.S. Treasury securities as
a coercive tool would have limited effect and likely would do more harm to China than to the
United States.” As the threat is not credible and the effect would be limited even if carried out, it
does not offer China deterrence options, whether in the diplomatic, military, or economic realms,
and this would remain true both in peacetime and in scenarios of crisis or war.30
Bilateral Foreign Direct Investment Flows
The level of foreign direct investment (FDI) flows between China and the United States is
relatively small given the large volume of trade between the two countries.31 Many analysts
contend that an expansion of bilateral FDI could greatly expand commercial ties.
The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) is the main federal agency that collects data on
FDI flows to and from the United States.32 Its data indicate that U.S. FDI in China is significantly
higher than China’s FDI in the United States.33 BEA reports that the stock of U.S. FDI in China
through 2012 was $51.4 billion, down from $59.0 billion in 2010, reflecting an outflow of funds
(divestment) from China back to the United States.34 BEA estimates that U.S. majority-owned
affiliates in China employed 1.4 million workers in China in 2011, of which 690,000 were in
manufacturing.35
BEA’s main FDI data measurement puts the stock of Chinese FDI in the United States through the
end of 2012 at $5.2 billion on a historical-cost (or book value) basis. In 2012, Chinese FDI flows
to the United States were $1.4 billion. However, these data do not reflect FDI that Chinese
investors may have made through offshore locations (such as Hong Kong) to invest in the United
States. To reflect this, the BEA attempts to measure the level of FDI inflows according to the
country of “ultimate beneficial owner” (UBO). These measurements nearly double the estimated
level of Chinese FDI in the United States. On a UBO basis, cumulative Chinese FDI in the United
States through 2012 was $10.5 billion (see Table 6). As indicated in Figure 6, the stock of
Chinese FDI in the United States on a UBO basis has risen sharply since 2009.

30 Office of the Secretary of Defense, Report to Congress, Assessment of the National Security Risks Posed to the
United States as a Result of the U.S. Federal Debt Owed to China as a Creditor of the U.S. Government
, July 2012.
31 Note, U.S. and Chinese data on FDI flows between each other differ.
32 According the BEA, direct investment implies that a person in one country has a lasting interest in, and a degree of
influence over the management of, a business enterprise in another. As such, it defines FDI as ownership or control of
10% or more of an enterprise’s voting securities, or the equivalent, is considered evidence of such a lasting interest or
degree of influence over management.
33 Chinese data lists the United States as the fourth-largest overall source of cumulative FDI through 2012. Chinese
data on FDI flows with the United States differ from U.S. data.
34 BEA data indicate that a significant cause of the decline in the stock of U.S. FDI in China over the past two years
was from a decrease in the stock of U.S. FDI in depository institutions in China.
35 BEA, U.S. Direct Investment Abroad: Financial and Operating Data for U.S. Multinational Companies, available at
http://www.bea.gov/international/di1usdop.htm.
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Table 6. U.S. Data on Annual U.S.–China Bilateral FDI Flows:
2005-2012 and Cumulative Value of FDI at Year-End 2012
($ millions)
Cumulative: Value
of FDI at 2012

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Year-End
China’s
FDI in the
146 315
8
500
500
1,037
520
1,370
5,154
($10,465)*
United
States
U.S. FDI
1,955 4,226
5,243
15,971
-7,512
5,240
-1,087
-3,482
51,363
in China
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Notes: Cumulative data are on a historical-cost basis.
* Data in parenthesis are BEA estimates of Chinese FDI in the United States that is made by Chinese investors
both directly or through other countries, described as the “country of ultimate beneficial owner” (UBO).
Figure 6. BEA’s Estimate of Cumulative Chinese FDI in the United States on a UBO
Basis: 2005-2012
($ billions)
12
10.5
10
9.3
8
6
5.1
4
2.0
2
1.2
0.7
0.6
0.5
0
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012

Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Notes: Data is on a historic-cost basis. UBO data represents estimates of the country of origin of the entity that
ultimately owns or controls the U.S. affiliate.
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Some analysts contend that the BEA’s data on China’s FDI in the United States do not fully
capture all investments. For example, the Rhodium Group (a private research consultancy and
advisory company) estimates that annual Chinese FDI in the United States rose from $1.9 billion
in 2009 to $7.1 billion in 2012, to $14 billion in 2013. They estimate the stock of Chinese FDI in
the United States from 2000 to 2012 at $23.6 billion (and through 2013at $35.9 billion).36 As
indicated in Figure 7, Rhodium Group’s estimates of the stock of Chinese FDI in the United
States are significantly higher than BEA’s data.
Figure 7. Rhodium Group’s Estimates of Cumulative Chinese FDI in the United
States on a UBO Basis: 2005-2013
($ billions)
40
35.9
35
30
23.6
25
20
16.5
15
11.8
10
6.2
4.3
5
2.8
2.9
2.4
0
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Source: Rhodium Group, China Investment Monitor.
Notes: Data are on a UBO basis and are derived from a number of sources, including commercial databases,
media reports, and industry contacts in China.


36 Rhodium Group, China Investment Monitor, Tracking Chinese Direct Investment in the U.S. at http://rhgroup.net/
interactive/china-investment-monitor.
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Chinese Companies in the United States
Although the level of Chinese FDI in the United States is relatively small, many Chinese firms view the United States
as a key part of their efforts to become more globally competitive companies, move closer to their U.S. customers,
circumvent perceived trade and investment barriers (such as the Buy American Act), and avoid U.S. trade remedy
measures (such as antidumping duties). Some examples of Chinese FDI in the United States include the fol owing:
The Dalian Wanda Group Corporation Ltd. on May 21, 2011, announced that it had signed a merger and
acquisition agreement to acquire AMC Entertainment (the world’s second-largest theater chain) for $2.6 billion.
Suntech Power Holdings Co., Ltd., the world’s largest producer of solar panels, opened a solar plant in
Goodyear, Arizona, in October 2010, employing 100 workers. However, in March 2013, the company announced it
planned to close the plant, citing higher production costs exacerbated by U.S. anti-dumping import duties imposed on
solar cel s and aluminum, as wel as global solar module oversupply.37
Sany Group, a global producer of construction equipment, founded Sany America Inc. in 2006, headquartered in
Peachtree City, Georgia. In 2007, it announced it would invest $100 million to create and establish a manufacturing
facility for constructing and engineering Sany products, with expected employment of 300 workers by the time the
project is completed.38
Wanxiang Group, an automotive parts manufacturer, established Wanxiang America Corporation in 1994, based in
Illinois. Over the past decade, Wanxiang America reportedly has purchased or invested in more than 20 U.S. firms
and employs 5,000 U.S. workers—more than any other Chinese company.39 In January 2013, Wanxiang America
acquired nearly all of A123 Systems, a manufacturer of advanced lithium-ion batteries, for $256.6 million.
Pacific Centuries Motor (now a subsidiary of AVIC Automobile Industry Co., Ltd, a state-owned firm) purchased
Nexteer Automotive, a Michigan-based firm that producers steering and driveline systems, for an estimated $450
million.40
Tianjin Pipe Corporation, China’s largest steel pipe-maker, announced in 2009 that it planned to spend $1 billion
to construct a mini-mill facility in Gregory, Texas, that will manufacture steel products from recycled scrap steel.
Over the first 10 years of operation, the project is projected to boost the local economy by $2.7 billion and generate
$327 million in direct employee salaries.41
Haier Group, a major global appliance and electronics firm, maintains its corporate headquarters for Haier America
in New York City, has sales offices in 13 U.S. states, and operates a $40 million refrigerator plant in Camden, South
Carolina (employing 120 people), reportedly the first U.S. manufacturing facility built by a Chinese firm (2000).
ZTE Corporation, one of China's largest telecommunications manufacturers, established a U.S. presence in 1995.
ZTE USA is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and maintains R&D facilities in five U.S. states.
Huawei Technologies is a leading global information and communications technology solutions provider. Since
gaining a U.S. presence in 2011, Huawei has reportedly partnered with 280 U.S. technology providers, with total
procurement contracts exceeding $30 billion, covering such items as software, components, chipsets, and services. In
February 2012, Huawei announced procurement contracts with U.S. firms worth $6 billion.42
Golden Dragon Precise Copper Tube Group Inc., one of the world’s largest precise copper tube
manufacturers, announced in February 2012 that it planned to build a $100 million manufacturing facility in Alabama.

37 Suntech press release, March 12, 2013, available at http://ir.suntech-power.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=192654&p=irol-
newsArticle&id=1794801.
38 Sany America website at http://www.sanyamerica.com/about-sany-america.php#ribbon.
39 Washington Post, “Job creation seen as key to China’s investment in U.S,” January 19, 2011,available at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/01/18/AR2011011806676.html.
40The purchase reportedly represents China’s biggest single investment in the global auto parts-making industry and
will make the Chinese company the largest private employer in Saginaw, Michigan at nearly 3,000 (source: New York
Times, G.M. Sells Parts Maker to a Chinese Company, November 29, 2010). The firm owns 20 manufacturing plants
worldwide, 5 regional engineering and test centers, and 14 local customer support centers.
41 Xinhua News Agency, “U.S official hails Chinese Project in Texas, October 11, 2011.”
42 http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/huawei-poised-to-sustain-tens-of-thousands-of-job-opportunities-for-us-
businesses-139525078.html.
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In addition to China’s FDI in the United States and its holdings in U.S. Treasury securities, China
(as of June 2012) held $221 billion in U.S. equities (such as stocks), up from $3 billion in June
2005. It also held $202 billion in U.S. agency securities, many of which are asset-backed (such as
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac securities),43 and $22 billion in corporate bonds. The China
Investment Corporation (CIC), a sovereign wealth fund established by the Chinese government in
2007 with $200 billion in registered capital to help better manage China’s foreign exchange
reserves, had financial assets totaling $482 billion at the end of 2011. CIC has been one of the
largest Chinese purchasers of U.S. equities and other U.S. assets; it has stakes in such firms as
Morgan Stanley, the Blackstone Group, and J.C. Flowers & Co.44 It appears that many of the
investments by the CIC and other Chinese entities have attempted to avoid political controversy
in the United States by limiting their ownership shares to less than 10%.
Issues Raised by Chinese FDI in the United States
Many U.S. analysts contend that greater Chinese FDI in the United States, especially in
“greenfield” projects (new ventures) that manufacture products or provide services in the United
States and create new jobs for U.S. workers,45 could help improve bilateral economic relations
and might lessen perceptions among some critics in the United States that growing U.S.-China
trade undermines U.S. employment and harms U.S. economic interests.46 A number of analysts
note that China’s outward FDI has been growing rapidly since 2004 and is likely to continue in
the years ahead.47
Such analysts contend that greater efforts should be made by U.S. policy makers to encourage
Chinese firms to invest in the United States rather than block them for political reasons. In June
2011, President Obama issued an executive order establishing the “SelectUSA Initiative” to
coordinate federal efforts to promote and retain investment in the United States. According to a
White House factsheet issued during the U.S. visit of Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping in
February 2012, China was already one of SelectUSA top 10 focus markets, and the
Administration was planning a significant expansion of the initiative, including with resources
dedicated to attracting Chinese investors and facilitating their investment. The two sides further
pledged to deepen cooperation on infrastructure financing.48 At the July 2013 session of the U.S.-
China S&ED, the United States pledged to welcome investment from China, including those
made by Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs).
Some critics of China’s current FDI policies and practices contend that they are largely focused
on mergers and acquisitions that are geared toward boosting the competitive position of Chinese
firms and enterprises favored by the Chinese government for development (some of which also

43 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Preliminary Report on Foreign Portfolio Holdings of U.S. Securities at End-June
2011
, February, 29, 2012.
44 For more information on the CIC, see CRS Report R41441, China’s Sovereign Wealth Fund: Developments and
Policy Implications
, by Michael F. Martin.
45 According to the BEA, Chinese majority-owned nonbank affiliates in the United States employed 1,700 U.S. workers
in 2006 (most recent data available).
46 During the 1980s, Japanese firms significantly boosted their FDI in the United States, such as in automobile
manufacturing, in part to help to alleviate bilateral trade tensions.
47 According to the United Nation’s Conference on Trade and Development, China became the third-largest source of
FDI outflows in 2012 at $84 billion (up from being the sixth largest in 2011).
48 The White House, Joint Fact Sheet on Strengthening U.S.-China Economic Relations, February 14, 2012.
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may be receiving government subsidies). Some argue that such investments are often made
largely to obtain technology and know-how for Chinese firms, but do little to boost the U.S.
economy by, for example, building new factories and hiring workers. Another major issue relating
to Chinese FDI in the United States is the relative lack of transparency of Chinese firms,
especially in terms of their connections to the central government. When Chinese SOEs attempt
to purchase U.S. company assets, some U.S. analysts ask what role government officials in
Beijing played in that decision. Chinese officials contend that investment decisions by Chinese
companies, including SOEs and publicly held firms (where the government is the largest
shareholder), are solely based on commercial considerations, and have criticized U.S. investment
policies as “protectionist.”
According to the Foreign Investment and National Security Act (FINSA) of 2007 (P.L. 110-149),
the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) may conduct an investigation
on the effect of an investment transaction on national security if the covered transaction is a
foreign government-controlled transaction (in addition to if the transaction threatens to impair
national security, or results in the control of a critical piece of U.S. infrastructure by a foreign
person).49 The House report on the bill (H.Rept. 110-24, H.R. 556) noted: “The Committee
believes that acquisitions by certain government-owned companies do create heightened national
security concerns, particularly where government-owned companies make decisions for
inherently governmental—as opposed to commercial—reasons.”
There have been several instances in which efforts by Chinese firms (oftentimes these have been
SOEs or state-favored firms) have raised concerns of some U.S. policy makers and/or U.S.
stakeholders:
• On January 23, 2014, Lenovo, a Chinese technology company, announced that it
would purchase IBM’s x86 server business for $2.3 billion. On January 29, 2014,
Lenovo announced that it would acquire Motorola Mobility from Google for $2.9
billion.
• On May 29, 2013, Shuanghui International Holdings, the majority owner of
China’s largest meat processing enterprise (Henan Shuanghui Investment &
Development Company), announced it was seeking to purchase Smithfield
Foods, the largest U.S. pork producer, for $7.1 billion (including the assumption
of Smithfield’s debt). If the merger goes through, it would represent the largest
acquisition of a U.S. firm by a Chinese company to date. The proposed
acquisition has raised a number of concerns among some U.S. policy makers.50
On June 20, 2013, 15 members of the Senate Committee on Agricultural,
Nutrition, and Forestry sent a letter to the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
contending that the U.S. food supply is “critical infrastructure” and should be
regarded as a national security issue during the CFIUS review process, urging
that the Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration be
represented in any CFIUS review of the transaction, and stating that review look

49 CFIUS is an interagency committee that serves the President in overseeing the national security implications of
foreign investment in the U.S. economy. See CRS Report RL33388, The Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States (CFIUS)
, by James K. Jackson.
50 Some argued, for example, that, given the relatively poor food safety record of many Chinese firms in China, the
acquisition of Smithfield by Chinese investors could undermine food safety in the United States, and some suggested
that the acquisition would eventually result in Chinese pork exports to the United States.
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to broader issues, including food security, food safety, and biosecurity.51 The
Senate Agriculture Committee also announced plans to hold a hearing on the
transaction and to “more broadly examine how the government review process of
foreign acquisitions of U.S. companies addresses American food safety,
protection of American technologies, and intellectual property, and the effects of
increased foreign ownership of the U.S. food supply.”52 In a June 21, 2013, letter
to Administration officials, Senators Max Baucus and Orrin Hatch stated that the
planned acquisition “has thrown a spotlight on China’s unjustified trade barriers
to U.S. meat exports.”53 A letter sent to Administration officials by
Representative Rosa DeLauro and Senator Elizabeth Warren about the planned
acquisition on June 26, 2013, raised a number of issues relating to food security,
food safety, intellectual property rights protection, unfair Chinese trade practices,
and U.S. global economic competitiveness and requested the Obama
Administration to publicly respond to eight major concerns.54 On July 10, 2013,
the Senate Committee on Agricultural, Nutrition, and Forestry held a hearing on
the proposed transaction. On September 26, 2013, Shuanghui International
Holdings completed its purchase of Smithfield.
• In January 2013, Wanxiang America Corporation completed its acquisition of
substantially all nongovernment business assets of A123 Systems, a manufacturer
of lithium battery products. The acquisition included A123’s automotive, grid,
and commercial business assets, including technology, products, customer
contracts, and U.S. facilities in Michigan, Massachusetts, and Missouri; its
manufacturing operations in China; and its equity interest in Shanghai Advanced
Traction Battery Systems Company (A123’s joint venture with Shanghai
Automotive).55 Several Members of Congress expressed concerns over the
national security implications of Wanxiang’s acquisition of A123 Systems, as
well as concerns that U.S. government grants that had been given to A123
Systems in the past might end up benefiting a Chinese company.
• On October 8, 2012, the chairman and ranking Member of the House Intelligence
Committee (Representatives Mike Rogers and C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger)
released a report recommending that U.S. companies considering doing business
with Chinese telecommunications companies Huawei and ZTE to find another
vendor, and that the CFIUS should block acquisitions, takeovers, or mergers
involving Huawei and ZTE given “the threat to U.S. national security interests.”
The report went on to state that “we have serious concerns about Huawei and
ZTE, and their connection to the communist government of China. China is

51 The text of the letter can be found at http://www.stabenow.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=1061.
52 Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, available at http://www.ag.senate.gov/hearings/smithfield-
and-beyond.
53 The text of the letter can be found at http://www.finance.senate.gov/newsroom/chairman/release/?id=22b5b74e-
5477-4ff8-9346-b46e0e158738.
54 The letter is available at http://delauro.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1328:delauro-
warren-demand-answers-on-shuanghui-smithfield-foods-deal&catid=2:2012-press-releases&Itemid=21.
55 A123 Systems, Press Release, January 29, 2013, available at http://www.a123systems.com/62ce67cf-68aa-4b23-
8b12-b8b210af1a3c/media-room-2013-press-releases-detail.htm.
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known to be the major perpetrator of cyber espionage, and Huawei and ZTE
failed to alleviate serious concerns throughout this important investigation.”56
• On September 28, 2012, President Obama issued an executive order requiring
Ralls Corporation, a Chinese-owned firm, to divest its interest in four wind farm
project companies in Oregon that it acquired earlier in the year, due to national
security concerns, reportedly because of their proximity to a naval test facility.57
China’s government-controlled media called the action “protectionist.”
• On May 9, 2012, the Federal Reserve announced that it had approved (1) the
application by Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Limited, China
Investment Corporation, and Central Huijin Investment Ltd., to become bank
holding companies by acquiring up to 80% of the voting shares of the Bank of
East Asia (USA) National Association; (2) the Bank of China’s application to
establish a branch in Chicago, IL; and (3) the application by the Agricultural
Bank of China Limited to establish a state-licensed branch in New York City.58 In
a letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, Senator Robert Casey noted
that each of the entities approved by the Federal Reserve was state-owned, and he
expressed concern that “these banks and their U.S. subsidiaries will use their
state-support as a way to underprice U.S. banks that abide by U.S. law and do not
have the support of a sovereign country behind them.”59
• In May 2010, Huawei bought certain intellectual property assets of 3Leaf
Systems (an insolvent U.S. technology firm) for $2 million. A February 2011
letter issued by Senators Jim Webb and Jon Kyl to then-Commerce Secretary
Gary Locke and then-Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner stated: “We are convinced
that any attempt Huawei makes to expand its presence in the U.S. or acquire U.S.
companies warrants thorough scrutiny. Moreover, the 3Leaf acquisition appears
certain to generate transfer to China by Huawei of advanced U.S. computing
technology. Allowing Huawei and, by extension, communist China to have
access to this core technology could pose a serious risk as U.S. computer
networks come to further rely on and integrate this technology.”60 In February
2011, Huawei stated that it been formally notified by CFIUS that it should
withdraw its application to acquire 3Leaf’s assets, which it later did.61 In an

56 Investigative Report on the U.S. National Security Issues Posed by Chinese Telecommunications Companies Huawei
and ZTE, A Report by Chairman Mike Rogers and Ranking Member C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger of the Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence, October 22, 2012, available at http://intelligence.house.gov/sites/
intelligence.house.gov/files/documents/Huawei-ZTE%20Investigative%20Report%20(FINAL).pdf.
57 New York Times, Obama Orders Chinese Company to End Investment at Sites Near Drone Base, September 28,
2012. Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/29/us/politics/chinese-company-ordered-to-give-up-stake-in-
wind-farms-near-navy-base.html.
58 Senator Robert Casey, Press Release, May 10, 2012, available at http://www.federalreserve.gov.
59 The letter is available at http://www.casey.senate.gov/newsroom/press/release/?id=b940fb00-0a69-42d6-bcff-
6ac72c8ce0c1.
60 The letter also raised concerns over allegations that Huawei had ties to the Iranian government, had received
substantial subsidies from the Chinese government, and had a poor record of protecting intellectual property rights.
61 Huawei initially stated that it would decline CFIUS’s recommendation with the intent of going through all of the
procedures of the CFIUS process (including a potential decision by the President) in order to “reveal the truth about
Huawei.”
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“Open Letter,” Huawei invited the U.S. government to carry out a formal
investigation on any concerns it may have about Huawei.62
• In May 2010, Anshan Iron and Steel Group Corporation (Ansteel), a major
Chinese state-owned steel producer, announced plans to form a joint venture with
Steel Development Company, a U.S. firm in Mississippi, to build and operate
four mills to produce reinforcing bar and other bar products used in infrastructure
applications, and one mill that would be capable of producing electrical and
silicon grades of steel used in energy applications.63 In July 2010, the
Congressional Steel Caucus sent a letter signed by 50 Members to Secretary of
the Treasury Tim Geithner, expressing concerns over the effect the investment
would have “on American jobs and our national security.”64 At a February 2012
hearing on China’s SOEs, Representative Visclosky, chairman of the
Congressional Steel Caucus stated: “As a Caucus, we were concerned that the
investment would allow a Chinese state-owned enterprise to pursue the
government of China’s aims, and not the aims of the employer, the American
worker, or the market. We were concerned that this investment would allow the
full force and financing of the Chinese government to exploit the American steel
market from American soil. We also were concerned that China would have
access to new steel production technologies and information regarding American
national security infrastructure projects.”65
• In February 2010, Emcore Corporation, a provider of compound semiconductor-
based components, subsystems, and systems for the fiber optics and solar power
markets, announced it had agreed to sell 60% interest in its fiber optics business
(excluding its satellite communications and specialty photonics fiber optics
businesses) to China’s Tangshan Caofeidian Investment Corporation (TCIC) for
$27.8 million. However, Emcore announced in June 2010 that the deal had been
ended because of concerns by CFIUS.66
• In July 2009, China’s Northwest Nonferrous International Investment Company,
a Chinese SOE, made a $26 million offer to purchase a 51% stake in the
Firstgold Corporation, a U.S. exploration-stage company. However, the deal
reportedly raised national concerns within CFUIS because some of the mines
controlled by Firstgold were near U.S. military installations. As a result, the
Chinese firm withdrew its bid in December 2009.67
• In September 2007, Huawei announced plans, along with its partner, Bain Capital
Partners, to buy the U.S. firm 3Com Corporation, a provider of data networking
equipment, for $2.2 billion. However, the proposed merger was withdrawn in
February 2008 following a review of the deal by CFIUS when Huawei and its

62 Huawei, Open Letter, February 25, 2011, available at http://www.huawei.com/huawei_open_letter.do.
63 A press release by Ansteel stated that its intensions are “to capitalize on the opportunity to enter into an overseas
joint venture with a company that is focused on utilizing advanced technology in an environmentally friendly and
highly profitable manner.” See, http://www.steeldevelopment.com/documents/ansteel2010.pdf.
64 See letter at http://visclosky.house.gov/SC_Geithner_CFIUS_7.2.10.pdf.
65 Testimony of Rep. Peter J. Visclosky before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission on China’s
State-Owned and State-Controlled Enterprises, February 15, 2012.
66 Emcore Press Release, June 28, 2010, available at http://www.emcore.com/news_events/release?y=2010&news=249.
67 New York Times, “Chinese Withdraw Offer for Nevada Gold Concern,” December 21, 2009.
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partner failed to adequately address U.S. national security concerns raised by
CFIUS members.68
In 2005, the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC), a Chinese
SOE, made a bid to buy UNOCAL, a U.S. energy company, for $18.5 billion, but
widespread opposition in Congress led CNOOC to withdraw its bid. Some
Members argued at the time that the proposed takeover represented a clear threat
to the energy and national security of the United States, would put vital oil assets
in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska into the hands of a Chinese state-controlled
company, could transfer a host of highly advanced technologies to China, and
that CNOOC’s bid to take over UNOCAL would be heavily subsidized by the
Chinese government. Some Members argued that “vital” U.S. energy assets
should never sold to the Chinese government. CNOOC officials referred to U.S.
political opposition to the sale as “regrettable and unjustified.”69
• In 2004, Lenovo Group Limited, a computer company primarily owned by the
Chinese government, signed an agreement with IBM Corporation to purchase
IBM’s personal computer division for $1.75 billion. Some U.S. officials raised
national security concerns over potential espionage activities that could occur in
the United States at IBM research facilities by Lenovo employees if the deal went
through. A review of the agreement by CFIUS took place in which IBM and
Lenovo were able to address certain national security concerns and, as a result,
the acquisition was completed in April 2005.70
Chinese Restrictions on U.S. FDI in China
U.S. trade officials have urged China to liberalize its FDI regime in order to boost U.S. business
opportunities in, and expand U.S. exports to, China. Although China is one of the world’s top
recipients of FDI, the Chinese central government imposes numerous restrictions on the level and
of types of FDI allowed in China. According to the U.S.-China Business Council, China imposes
ownership barriers on nearly 100 industries.71 The OECD’s 2012 FDI Regulatory Restrictiveness
Index, which measures statutory restrictions on foreign direct investment in 57 countries
(including all OECD and G20 countries, and covering 22 sectors), ranked China’s FDI regime as
the most restrictive, based on foreign equity limitations, screening or approval mechanisms,
restrictions on the employment of foreigners as key personnel, and operational restrictions (such
as restrictions on branching, capital repatriation, and land ownership).72

68 Although Huawei states that it is a private company wholly owned by its employees, many analysts contend that the
company has close connections to the Chinese military. In addition, Huawei has also reportedly received extensive
financial support from the Chinese government, including a $30 billion line of credit from China Development Bank.
69 The Senate report of its version of FINSA (S.Rept. 110-80, S. 1610) noted that CNOOC’s attempt to acquire
UNOCAL “led many members of Congress to raise questions about the transfer of ownership or control of certain
sectors of the U.S. economy to foreign companies, especially to foreign companies located within or controlled by
countries the governments of which might not be sympathetic to U.S. regional security interests.”
70 IBM and Lenovo reportedly agreed to address national security concerns by CFIUS. For example, it was agreed that
1,900 employees from a North Carolina research facility, which IBM had shared with other technology companies,
would move to another building. See the Financial Times, “US State Department limits use of Chinese PCs,” May 18,
2006.
71 U.S.-China Business Council, China’s WTO Compliance, September 20, 2013.
72 OECD, FDI Regulatory Restrictiveness Index, at http://www.oecd.org/investment/fdiindex.htm.
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To a great extent, China’s investment policies appear to be linked to industrial policies that seek
to promote the development of sectors identified by the government as critical to future economic
development. For example, since the early 1980s, the Chinese government has encouraged
foreign auto companies to invest in China, but has limited FDI in that sector to 50-50 joint
ventures with domestic Chinese partners.73 In addition, the central government maintains a
“Guideline Catalogue for Foreign Investment” (the latest revision was issued in January 2012),
which lists FDI categories that are encouraged, restricted, or prohibited.74 Many of the sectors
under the “encouraged” category include high technology, green technology, and energy
conservation, and pollution control.75 Several of the sectors under the “restricted” category limit
FDI to joint ventures (such as for rare earth smelting) or where the Chinese parties are the
controlling shareholders (such as railway passenger transport companies). “Prohibited” sectors
are those that fall under “national security” concerns (such as manufacturing of ammunition and
weapons) or are categories where the government seeks to preserve state monopolies (such as
postal companies) or protect Chinese firms from foreign competition (such as mining of rare earth
elements).
The Chinese government also sets restrictions on FDI inflows during the investment screening
process, or through its mergers and acquisition regulations, especially when seeking to protect
pillar or strategic industries that the central government (as well as many provincial and local
governments) seeks to promote. Many critics of China’s investment policies contend that the
Chinese government often requires foreign firms to transfer technology to their China partners,
and sometimes to set up research and development facilities in China, in exchange for access to
China’s markets.76 Foreign-invested firms in China face a number of challenges, including local
protectionism, lack of regulatory transparency, IPR theft, and discriminatory license practices. A
2013 business survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in China (AmCham China) found
that 35% of respondents stated that they were at a competitive disadvantage as a result of Chinese
industrial policies that favored state-owned enterprises.77 Some U.S. policy makers have
suggested that Chinese investment in certain U.S. sectors should be restricted in response to
Chinese policies that limit U.S. FDI in China in similar sectors.78
The United States and China have held negotiations on reaching a bilateral investment treaty
(BIT) with the goal of expanding bilateral investment opportunities. U.S. negotiators hope such a
treaty would improve the investment climate for U.S. firms in China by enhancing legal
protections and dispute resolution procedures, and by obtaining a commitment from the Chinese
government that it would treat U.S. investors no less favorably than Chinese investors. However,

73 The automotive industry was designated a “pillar industry” by the Chinese government in 1991.
74 China also maintains a permitted category which represents a neutral position by the government that FDI in that
area is neither encouraged nor discouraged. Prior to 2012, FDI in the manufacture of complete automobiles was listed
as an encouraged category, but now is listed under the neutral category.
75 One major function of the Guideline Catalogue for Foreign Investment is to promote FDI in sectors that the
government has targeted for growth in its five-year macro-economic plans.
76 USTR, 2011 Report to Congress on China’s WTO Compliance, December 2011, p. 7.
77 AmCham China, China Business Climate Survey, 2013, p. 9.
78 For example, in March 2011, Senators Casey, Schumer, Stabenow, and Whitehouse sent a letter to the Obama
Administration urging that they oppose Chinese mining projects in the United States because of China’s restrictive and
anticompetitive policies on rare earth. The letter noted China’s prohibition on foreign investment in rare earth mining
and requirements that FDI in rare earth smelting and separation can only be in the form of a joint venture. See
http://www.casey.senate.gov/newsroom/press/release/print.cfm?id=81a1fa95-49d2-47a7-98b4-65973ae14ddc.
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some groups have argued that a BIT with China could hurt U.S. workers by encouraging more
U.S. firms to relocate to China.79
In April 2012, the Obama Administration released a “Model Bilateral Investment Treaty” that was
developed to enhance U.S. objectives in the negotiation of new BITs.80 The new BIT model
establishes mechanisms to promote greater transparency, labor and environment requirements,
disciplines to prevent parties from imposing domestic technology requirements, and measures to
boost the ability of investors to participate in the development of standards and technical
regulations on a nondiscriminatory basis.
During the July 10-11, 2013, session of the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue
(S&ED), China indicated its intention to negotiate a high-standard BIT with the United States that
would include all stages of investment and all sectors, a move that U.S. officials described as “a
significant breakthrough, and the first time China has agreed to do so with another country.”81 A
press release by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce stated that China was willing to negotiate a
BIT on the basis of non-discrimination and a negative list, meaning the agreement would identify
only those sectors not open to foreign investment on a non-discriminatory basis (as opposed to a
BIT with a positive list which would only list sectors open to foreign investment).
At the Communist Party of China’s 3rd Plenum meeting in November 2013, the government
stated that it would reduce regulations on FDI in China and create a number of free trade zones
that may open up certain sectors to foreign investment.
Major U.S.-China Trade Issues
China’s economic reforms and rapid economic growth, along with the effects of globalization,
have caused the economies of the United States and China to become increasingly integrated.82
Although growing U.S.-China economic ties are considered by most analysts to be mutually
beneficial overall, tensions have risen over a number of Chinese economic and trade policies that
many U.S. critics charge are protectionist, economically distortive, and damaging to U.S.
economic interests. According to the USTR, most U.S. trade disputes with China stem from the
consequences of its incomplete transition to a free market economy. Major areas of concern for
U.S. stakeholders include China’s:

79 Inside U.S.-China Trade, April 28, 2010.
80 The Administration began efforts to review and revise the U.S. BIT model in 2009. The previous BIT model dated to
2004. The Administration’s review process likely meant that negotiations with China for a BIT were someone limited.
81 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Remarks of Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew at the Close of the Fifth U.S.-China
Strategic and Economic Dialogue
, July 13, 2013.

82 The impact of globalization has been a controversial topic in the United States. Some argue that it has made it easier
for U.S. firms to shift production overseas, resulting in lost jobs in the United States (especially in manufacturing) and
lower wages for U.S. workers. Others contend that globalization has induced U.S. firms to become more efficient and
to focus a greater share of their domestic manufacturing on higher-end or more technologically advanced production
(while sourcing lower-end production abroad), making such firms more globally competitive. The result has been that
the United States continues to be a major global manufacturer in terms of value-added, but there are fewer U.S. workers
in manufacturing.
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• Extensive network of industrial policies that seek to promote and protect
domestic sectors and firms, especially SOEs, deemed by the government to be
critical to the country’s future economic growth;
• Failure to provide adequate protection of U.S. intellectual property rights (IPR)
and (alleged) government-directed cyber security attacks against U.S. firms;
• Mixed record on implementing its obligations in the World Trade Organization
(WTO) and its failure to date to join the WTO’s Government Procurement
Agreement (GPA); and
• Intervention in currency markets to limit the appreciation of the renminbi (RMB)
against the dollar (and other major currencies) in order to make China’s exports
more globally competitive.
Chinese “State Capitalism”
Currently, a significant share of China’s economy is thought to be driven by market forces.
According to a 2010 WTO report, the private sector now accounts for more than 60% of China’s
gross domestic product (GDP).83 However, the Chinese government continues to play a major
role in economic decision-making. For example, at the macroeconomic level, the Chinese
government maintains policies that induce households to save a high level of their income, much
of which is deposited in state-controlled Chinese banks. This enables the government to provide
low-cost financing to Chinese firms, especially SOEs. At the microeconomic level, the Chinese
government (at the central and local government level) seeks to promote the development of
industries that are deemed critical to the country’s future economic development by using various
policies, such as subsidies, tax breaks, preferential loans, trade barriers, FDI restrictions,
discriminatory regulations and standards, export restrictions on raw materials (such as rare
earths), technology transfer requirements imposed on foreign firms, public procurement rules that
give preferences to domestic firms, and weak enforcement of IPR laws.
Many analysts contend that the Chinese government’s intervention in various sectors through
industrial policies has intensified in recent years. The December 2013 U.S. Trade
Representative’s (USTR’s) report on China’s WTO trade compliance states:
During most of the past decade, the Chinese government emphasized the state’s role in the
economy, diverging from the path of economic reform that had driven China’s accession to
the WTO. With the state leading China’s economic development, the Chinese government
pursued new and more expansive industrial policies, often designed to limit market access
for imported goods, foreign manufacturers and foreign service suppliers, while offering
substantial government guidance, resources and regulatory support to Chinese industries,
particularly ones dominated by state-owned enterprises. This heavy state role in the
economy, reinforced by unchecked discretionary actions of Chinese government regulators,
generated serious trade frictions with China’s many trade partners, including the United
States.84

83 World Trade Organization, Trade Policy Review Body, Trade Policy Review, Report by the Secretariat, China,
Revision, 2010, Part 2, p. 1.
84 U.S. Trade Representative, 2013 USTR Report to Congress on China’s WTO Compliance, December 2013, p. 2.
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The extent of SOE involvement in the Chinese economy is difficult to measure due to the opaque
nature of the corporate sector in China and the relative lack of transparency regarding the
relationship between state actors (including those at the central and non-central government
levels) and Chinese firms. According to one study by the U.S.-China Economic and Security
Review Commission:
The state sector in China consists of three main components. First, there are enterprises fully
owned by the state through the State‐owned Assets and Supervision and Administration
Commission (SASAC) of the State Council and by SASACs of provincial, municipal, and
county governments. Second, there are SOEs that are majority owners of enterprises that are
not officially considered SOEs but are effectively controlled by their SOE owners. Finally,
there is a group of entities, owned and controlled indirectly through SOE subsidiaries based
inside and outside of China. The actual size of this third group is unknown. Urban collective
enterprises and government‐owned township and village enterprises (TVEs) also belong to
the state sector but are not considered SOEs. The state‐owned and controlled portion of the
Chinese economy is large. Based on reasonable assumptions, it appears that the visible state
sector—SOEs and entities directly controlled by SOEs, accounted for more than 40 percent
of China’s nonagricultural GDP. If the contributions of indirectly controlled entities, urban
collectives, and public TVEs are considered, the share of GDP owned and controlled by the
state is approximately 50 percent.85
According to the Chinese government, at the end of 2011, there were 144,700 state-owned or
state-controlled enterprises, excluding financial institutions, with total assets worth $13.6
trillion.86 Chinese SOEs have undergone significant restructuring over the years. More than 90%
of SOEs have reportedly become corporations or shareholding companies.87 The Chinese
government has identified a number of industries where the state should have full control or
where the state should dominate. These include autos, aviation, banking, coal, construction,
environmental technology, information technology, insurance, media, metals (such as steel), oil
and gas, power, railways, shipping, telecommunications, and tobacco.88
Many SOEs are owned or controlled by local governments. According to one analyst:
The typical large industrial Chinese company is...wholly or majority-owned by a local
government which appoints senior management and provides free or low-cost land and
utilities, tax breaks, and where possible, guarantees that locally made products will be
favored by local governments, consumers, and other businesses. In return, the enterprise
provides the local state with a source of jobs for local workers, tax revenues, and dividends.89
China’s banking system is largely controlled by state-owned or state-controlled banks. In 2011,
the top five largest banks in China, all of which were shareholding companies with significant
state ownership, accounted for 57.5% of Chinese banking assets. The Chinese government also
has four banks that are 100% state-owned and holds shares in a number of joint stock commercial

85 U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, An Analysis of Stateowned Enterprises and State
Capitalism in China,
by Andrew Szamosszegi and Cole Kyle, October 26, 2011, p.1.
86 Xinhua Agency, October 24, 2012.
87 Xinhua News Agency, October 24, 2010.
88 Testimony for the U.S.–China Economic and Security Review Commission by Derek Scissors, Ph.D, Chinese State
Owned Enterprises and the US Policy on China
, February 12, 2012.
89 Anderson, G.E., PhD, Designated Drivers, How China Plans to Dominate the Global Auto Industry, 2012, p. 2.
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banks.90 SOEs are believed to receive preferential credit treatment by government banks, while
private firms must often pay higher interest rates or obtain credit elsewhere. According to one
estimate, SOEs accounted for 85% ($1.4 trillion) of all bank loans in 2009.91
Not only are SOEs dominant players in China’s economy, many are becoming quite large by
global standards. In 2013, 84 Chinese companies (excluding Hong Kong firms) made Fortune
Magazine’s Global 500
list of the world’s largest firms based on revenues. Of the 84 Chinese
companies listed, 77 firms or 88.1% were state-owned or state-controlled enterprises (defined as
where the state owned 50% of the company). Of the 10 non-SOEs companies listed, at least 3 are
partially owned by the government. For example, the government owes 26.5% of the Bank of
Communications, 15.7% of China Minsheng Banking Corp., and 20% of Shanghai Pudong
Development Bank.92 Another company, Huawei (a major telecommunications company)
describes itself as an employee-owned firm. However, many U.S. analysts contend that Huawei
has strong links with the Chinese government, including the Chinese People’s Liberation Army
(PLA), and has not published a full breakdown of its ownership structure. In addition, in the past,
the Chinese government reportedly ordered state banks to extend loans to the company early in its
development so that it could compete against foreign firms in the domestic telecommunications
market.93
China’s Plan to Modernize the Economy and Promote Indigenous Innovation
Many of the industrial policies that China has implemented or formulated since 2006 appear to
stem largely from a comprehensive document issued by China’s State Council (the highest
executive organ of state power) in 2006 titled the National Medium-and Long-Term Program for
Science and Technology Development (2006-2020)
, often referred to as the MLP. The MLP
appears to represent an ambitious plan to modernize the structure of China’s economy by
transforming it from a global center of low-tech manufacturing to a major center of innovation
(by the year 2020) and a global innovation leader by 2050.94 It also seeks to sharply reduce the
country’s dependence on foreign technology. The MLP includes the stated goals of “indigenous
innovation, leapfrogging in priority fields, enabling development, and leading the future.”95 Some
of the broad goals of the MLP state that by 2020:
• The progress of science and technology will contribute 60% or above to China’s
development.
• The country's reliance on foreign technology will decline to 30% or below (from
an estimated current level of 50%).

90 Lund University, Lending for Growth? An Analysis of State-Owned Banks in China, by Fredrik N.G. Anderson,
Katarzyna Burzynska, and Sonja Opper, June 2013, p. 41.
91 The Economist, State Capitalism’s Global Reach, New Masters of the Universe, How State Enterprise is Spreading,
January 21, 2012.
92Lund University, Lending for Growth? An Analysis of State-Owned Banks in China, by Fredrik N.G. Anderson,
Katarzyna Burzynska, and Sonja Opper, June 2013, p. 41.
93 McGregor, Richard, The Party, the Secret World of China’s Communist Rulers, 2010, p. 204.
94 As some observers describe it, China wants to go from a model of “made in China” to “innovated in China.”
95 The MLP identifies main areas and priority topics, including energy, water and mineral resources, the environment,
agriculture, manufacturing, communications and transport, information industry and modern service industries,
population and health, urbanization and urban development, public security, and national defense. The report also
identifies 16 major special projects and 8 “pioneer technologies.”
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• Gross expenditures for research and development (R&D) would rise to 2.5% of
gross domestic product (from 1.3% in 2005). Priority areas for increased R&D
include space programs, aerospace development and manufacturing, renewable
energy, computer science, and life sciences.96
The document states that “China must place the strengthening of indigenous innovative capability
at the core of economic restructuring, growth model change, and national competitiveness
enhancement. Building an innovation-oriented country is therefore a major strategic choice for
China’s future development.” This goal, according to the document, is to be achieved by
formulating and implementing regulations in the country’s government procurement law to
“encourage and protect indigenous innovation,” establishing a coordination mechanism for
government procurement of indigenous innovative products, requiring a first-buy policy for major
domestically made high-tech equipment and products that possess proprietary intellectual
property rights, providing policy support to enterprises in procuring domestic high-tech
equipment, and developing “relevant technology standards” through government procurement.
Reaction by U.S. Stakeholders
Beginning in 2009, several U.S. companies began to raise concerns over a number of Chinese
government circulars that would establish an “Indigenous Innovation Product Accreditation”
system. For example, in November 2009, the Chinese government released a “Circular on
Launching the 2009 National Indigenous Innovation Product Accreditation Work,” requiring
companies to file applications by December 2009 for their products to be considered for
accreditation as “indigenous innovation products.” Similar proposed circulars were issued at the
provincial and local government levels as well. U.S. business representatives expressed deep
concern over the circulars, arguing that they were protectionist in nature because they extended
preferential treatment for Chinese government procurement to domestic Chinese firms that
developed and owned intellectual property (IP) and thus largely excluded foreign firms.97
AmCham China described China’s attempt to link IP ownership with market access as
“unprecedented worldwide.”98 A letter written by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and 33
business associations to the Chinese government on December 10, 2009, stated that the
indigenous innovations circulars would “make it virtually impossible for any non-Chinese
companies to participate in China’s government procurement market—even those that have made
substantial and long-term investments in China, employ Chinese citizens, and pay taxes to the
Chinese government.”99 Such groups contend that a large share of their technology is developed
globally and thus it would be difficult to attribute the share of technology developed in China
needed to obtain accreditation.100

96 R&D Magazine, December 22, 2009.
97 U.S. business representatives also claim that the Chinese government is using tax incentives, standards setting and
requirements, security regulations, subsidies, technology transfer requirements, and other measures to promote the
goals of indigenous innovation.
98 AmCham China,2011 White Paper, April 26, 2011, p. 66.
99 A copy of the letter can be found at http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/
chinaprocurementletter1210.pdf.
100 Some U.S. business representatives argue that one of the main goals of China’s indigenous innovation regulations is
to induce foreign firms to boost their R&D activities in China in order to qualify for government contracts.
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A 2011 AmCham China survey found that 40% of respondents believed that China’s indigenous
innovation policies would hurt their businesses and 26% said their businesses were already being
hurt by such policies. At a November 2011 WTO review of China’s IPR policies, the U.S. WTO
representative stated that China’s policies of adopting indigenous innovation had “created a
troubling trend toward increased discriminatory policies which were aimed at coercing
technology transfer.” He stated that “Chinese regulations, rules and other regulatory measures
frequently called for technology transfer, and in certain cases, conditioned, or proposed to
condition, the eligibility for government benefits or preferences on intellectual property being
owned or developed in China, or being licensed, in some cases exclusively, to a Chinese party.”101
China’s Response to U.S. Concerns
The Chinese government responded to U.S. concerns over its indigenous innovation policies by
arguing that they did not discriminate against foreign firms or violate global trade rules.102
However, during the visit of (then) Chinese President Hu Jintao to the United States in January
2011, the Chinese government stated that it would not link its innovation policies to the provision
of government procurement preferences.103 During the May 2011 session of the U.S.-China
Strategic and Economic Dialogue (S&ED), China pledged that it would eliminate all of its
indigenous innovation products catalogs.104 During the November 2011 talks held under the U.S.-
China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade (JCCT), the Chinese government announced
that the State Council had issued a measure requiring governments of provinces, municipalities,
and autonomous regions to eliminate by December 1, 2011, any catalogues or other measures
linking innovation policies to government procurement preferences.105 This occurred after foreign
business groups raised concerns that discriminatory indigenous innovation policies might
continue to be implemented at the local level even after Hu Jintao’s commitment. For example,
The U.S.-China Business Council (USCBC) reported in February 2011 that it had identified 22
municipal and provincial governments that had issued at least 61 indigenous innovation
catalogues. U.S. business representatives sought to ensure that Beijing’s pledge on indigenous
innovation would apply at all levels of government in China.
In May 2013, the USCBC reported that, although the central government had largely been
successful in ensuring that sub-national governments complied with implement Hu Jintao’s
January 2011 commitments, 13 provinces had not yet issued any measures to comply.106 In
addition, an October 2012 USCBC survey found that 85% of respondents said they had seen little

101 Transitional Review Under Section 18 of the Protocol on the Accession of the People's Republic of China, Report to
the General Council by the Chair, November 17, 2011, p. 4.
102 Wall Street Journal, China Defends Rule On 'Indigenous' Tech, December 15, 2009.
103 The White House, U.S. - China Joint Statement, January 19, 2011.
104 According to a U.S. fact sheet on the meeting “China pledged to eliminate all of its government procurement
indigenous innovation products catalogues and revise Article 9 of the draft Government Procurement Law
Implementing Regulations (which have preferences in government procurement to national indigenous innovation
products), in fulfillment of President Hu's January 2011 commitment not to link Chinese innovation policies to
government procurement preferences. See U.S. Department of the Treasury, The 2011 U.S.-China Strategic and
Economic Dialogue U.S. Fact Sheet – Economic Track, May 10, 2011.
105 U.S. Department of Commerce, 22nd U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade Fact Sheet, November
21, 2011.
106 U.S.-China Business Council, Status Report: China’s Innovation and Government Procurement Policies, May 1,
2013, at https://www.uschina.org/files/public/documents/2013/05/innovation-status-report.pdf.
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impact on their businesses resulting from China’s commitments delinking indigenous innovation
with government procurement.107
Remaining U.S. Concerns
While many U.S. business leaders have applauded China’s pledge to delink indigenous
innovation from government procurement, some remain wary that China will implement new
policies that attempt to provide preferences to local Chinese firms over foreign firms. According
to Adam Segal with the Council on Foreign Relations: “Even if China reverses certain policies
under U.S. pressure, it will remain dedicated to those goals. U.S. policy is likely to become a
game of Whac-a-Mole, beating down one Chinese initiative on indigenous innovation only to see
another pop up.”108 U.S. business groups are also concerned with how the MLP blueprint will
affect China’s commitment to enforcing foreign IPR. They note, for example, that the MLP states:
“Indigenous innovation refers to enhancing original innovation, integrated innovation, and re-
innovation based on assimilation and absorption of imported technology, in order to improve our
national innovation capability.” To some, this seems to indicate that China intends to take existing
technology, make some changes and improvements on it, and then claim it as its own without
acknowledging or compensating the original IPR holders. A 2011 report by the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce stated that China’s indigenous innovation policies led many international technology
companies to conclude that the MLP is a “blueprint for technology theft on a scale the world has
never seen before.”109
U.S. officials have attempted to convince Beijing that, while its desire to increase innovation in
China is a commendable goal, its efforts to limit the participation of foreign firms in such efforts,
or attempting to condition market access in China to the development of IPR by foreign firms in
China will hinder, not promote, the advancement of innovation in China. The direction China
takes on this issue could have a significant impact on U.S. economic interests as noted by a study
by the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC):
To the extent that China’s policies succeed in accelerating technological progress,
productivity, and innovation in the Chinese economy, they could provide spillover benefits
for other countries. But if indigenous innovation policies act as a form of technological
import substitution, systematically favoring Chinese domestic firms over foreign firms in
relevant industries, they would be expected to have a negative effect on foreign firms and
economies roughly analogous to what would occur if China simply imposed a protective
tariff on imports of goods in the relevant sectors or levied a discriminatory excise tax on the
sales of FIEs in the Chinese market.110

107 U.S.-China Business Council, USCBC 2012 China Business Environment Survey Results:
Continued Growth and Profitability; Tempered Optimism Due to Rising Costs, Competition, and Market Barriers,
October 2012, p. 6, available at https://www.uschina.org/info/members-survey/2012/pdfs/uscbc-2012-member-survey-
results.pdf.
108 Foreign Affairs, China's Innovation Wall: Beijing's Push for Homegrown Technology, September 28, 2010.
109 U.S. Chamber of Commerce, China’s Drive for 'Indigenous Innovation' - A Web of Industrial Policies, February
2011, p. 4.
110 USITC, China: Intellectual Property Infringement, Indigenous Innovation Policies, and Frameworks for Measuring
the Effects on the U.S. Economy (Investigation No. 332-514, USITC Publication 4199, November 2010, pp. 6-7.
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Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
U.S. business and government representatives have voiced growing concern over economic losses
suffered by U.S. firms as a result of IPR infringement in China (and elsewhere), including those
that have resulted from cyber-attacks. U.S. innovation and the intellectual property that is
generated by such activities have been cited by various economists as a critical source of U.S.
economic growth and global competitiveness.111 For example, according to the Department of
Commerce, in 2010, U.S. IP-intensive industries supported at least 40 million jobs and
contributed $5.1 trillion (or 34.8%) to U.S. gross domestic product (GDP).112 A study by NDP
Consulting estimated that in 2008, workers in IP-intensive production earned 60% more than
workers at similar levels in non-IP industries.113 A study on the Apple iPod concluded that Apple's
innovation in developing and engineering the iPod and its ability to source most of its production
to low-cost countries, such as China, have helped enable it to become a highly competitive and
profitable firm as well as a creator of high-paying jobs (such as engineers engaged in the design
of Apple products) in the United States.114
Lack of effective and consistent protection of IPR has been cited by U.S. firms as one of the most
significant problems they face in doing business in China. Other U.S. firms have expressed
concern over pressures they often face from Chinese government entities to share technology and
IPR with a Chinese partner. Although China has significantly improved its IPR protection regime
over the past few years, U.S. IP industries complain that piracy rates in China continue to remain
unacceptably high and economic losses are significant, as illustrated by studies and estimates
made by several stakeholders:
• A May 2013 study by the Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual
Property estimated the annual cost to the U.S. economy of global IPR theft at
$300 billion, of which China accounted for 50% ($150 billion) to 80% ($240
billion) of those losses.115
• A 2013 AmCham China survey found that 72% of respondents said that China’s
IPR enforcement was either ineffective or totally ineffective.116
• The USITC estimated that U.S. intellectual property-intensive firms that
conducted business in China lost $48.2 billion in sales, royalties, and license fees
in 2009 because of IPR violations there. It also estimated that an effective IPR
enforcement regime in China that was comparable to U.S. levels could increase
employment by IP-intensive firms in the United States by 923,000 jobs.117

111 See CRS Report RL34292, Intellectual Property Rights and International Trade, by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Ian
F. Fergusson.
112 U.S. Department of Commerce, Intellectual Property and the U.S. Economy: Industries in Focus, March 2012,
available at http://www.esa.doc.gov/sites/default/files/reports/documents/ipandtheuseconomyindustriesinfocus.pdf.
113 Nam Pham, The Impact of Innovation and the Role of Intellectual Property Rights on U.S. Productivity,
Competitiveness, Jobs, Wages and Exports
, 2010, NDP Consulting.
114 Communications of the ACM, Who Captures Value in a Global Innovation Network? The Case of Apple's iPod,
March 2009.
115 The Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property, the Report of the Commission on the Theft of
Intellectual Property
, May 2013.
116 AmCham China, China Business Climate Survey Report, 2013, p. 11.
117 The United States International Trade Commission, China: Effects of Intellectual Property Infringement and
Indigenous Innovation Policies on the U.S. Economy
, USITC Publication 4226, May 2011, p. xiv.
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• The Business Software Alliance (BSA) estimated the commercial value of
illegally used software in China at $8.9 billion in 2011 (up from $6.7 billion in
2007) and that the software piracy rate in China was 77% (down from 82% in
2007).118 BSA further estimated that legitimate software sales in China were only
$2.7 billion, compared to legal sales of $41.7 billion in the United States.
• The U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported that China accounted for 72%
of pirated goods seized by the agency in FY2012 (based on domestic value). The
value of seized goods originating from China and Hong Kong was $1.1 billion.119
Handbags and wallets accounted for nearly half the estimated value of seized
goods originating in China.
Chinese officials contend that they have significantly improved their IPR protection regime, but
argue that the country lacks the resources and a sophisticated legal system to effectively deal with
IPR violations. They also contend that IPR infringement is a serious problem for domestic
Chinese firms as well. However, some analysts contend that China’s relatively poor record on
IPR enforcement can be partially explained by the fact that Chinese leaders want to make China a
major producer of capital-intensive and high-technology products, and thus, they are tolerant of
IPR piracy if it helps Chinese firms become more technologically advanced. According to an
official at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce:
The newer and emerging challenge to U.S. IPR is not a function of China’s lack of political
will to crackdown on infringers. Rather, it is a manifestation of a coherent, and government-
directed, or at least government-motivated, strategy to lessen China’s perceived reliance on
foreign innovations and IP. China is actively working to create a legal environment that
enables it to intervene in the market for IP, help its own companies to “re-innovate”
competing IPR as a substitute to American and other foreign technologies, and potentially
misappropriate U.S. and other foreign IP as components of its industrial policies and internal
market regulation.... The common themes throughout these policies are: 1) undermine and
displace foreign IP; 2) leverage China’s large domestic market to develop national
champions and promote its own IP, displacing foreign competitors in China; and 3) building
on China’s domestic successes by displacing competitors in foreign markets.120
An illustration of alleged IPR theft in China involves American Superconductor Corporation
(AMSC). On September 14, 2011, AMSC announced that it was filing criminal and civil
complaints in China against Sinovel Wind Group Co. Ltd. (Sinovel), China’s largest wind turbine
producer, and other parties, alleging the illegal use of AMSC's intellectual property. According to
an AMSC press release, Sinovel illegally obtained and used AMSC's wind turbine control
software code to upgrade its 1.5 megawatt wind turbines in the field to meet proposed Chinese
grid codes and to potentially allow for the use of core electrical components from other
manufacturers.121 In addition, AMSC claimed that Sinovel had refused to pay for past shipments

118 BSA, Shadow Market, 2011 BSA Global Software Piracy Study, Ninth Edition, May 2012, at http://portal.bsa.org/
globalpiracy2011/downloads/study_pdf/2011_BSA_Piracy_Study-Standard.pdf.
119 U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Intellectual Property Rights, Fiscal Year 2012 Seizure Statistics, February
2013, available at http://www.cbp.gov/linkhandler/cgov/trade/priority_trade/ipr/ipr_communications/seizure/
fy2012_final_stats.ctt/fy2012_final_stats.pdf.
120 Testimony of Jeremie Waterman, Senior Director, Greater China, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, before the U.S.
International Trade Commission, Hearing on China: Intellectual Property Infringement, Indigenous Innovation
Policies, and Frameworks for Measuring the Effects on the U.S. Economy
, June 15, 2010.
121 AMSC claims Sinovel had obtained the intellectual property from a former AMSC employee who was now under
arrest in Austria for economic espionage and fraudulent manipulation of data.
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from AMSC and was now refusing to honor contracts for future shipments of components and
spare parts as well.122 AMSC has brought several civil cases against Sinovel, seeking to recover
more than $1.2 billion for contracted shipments and damages caused by Sinovel’s contract
breaches.123
According to a specialist in intellectual property at Tufts University, “Chinese companies, once
they acquire the needed technology, will often abandon their Western partners on the pretext the
technology or product failed to meet Chinese governmental regulations. This is yet another
example of a Chinese industrial policy aimed at procuring, by virtually any means, technology in
order to provide Chinese domestic industries with a competitive advantage.”124
During the December 2010 U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade (JCCT),125 the
Chinese government announced several new initiatives to improve its IPR protection regime,
including boosting purchases of legitimate software by government agencies and 30 large SOEs.
The USTR’s 2011 Special 301 report (an annual review of IPR and market access practices in
foreign countries) noted that China had launched the “Program for Special Campaign on
Combating IPR Infringement and Manufacture and Sales of Counterfeiting and Shoddy
Commodities” (Special Campaign) in October 2010, aimed at a broad range of IPR violations.
The Special Campaign involved 26 member agencies (led by a Chinese vice premier), and
reportedly led to improved government coordination of IPR enforcement by the Chinese
government.
The USTR’s 2012 Special 301 report stated that, while China had made some notable
improvements to its IPR enforcement regime (in particular by making the Special Campaign on
IPR enforcement permanent), serious problems remain. These include very high levels of
trademark counterfeiting and copyright piracy, the persistence of “notorious” physical and online
markets selling IPR-infringing goods, the manufacturing and sale of counterfeit pharmaceuticals,
export of counterfeit goods, and discriminatory policies seeking to promote indigenous
innovation in China by coercing foreign firms to transfer IPR to Chinese domestic firms. The
USTR further noted a “recent alarming increase” in thefts of trade secrets (both in China and
outside China) for the benefit of Chinese entities. Many of these problems, according to the
USTR, stemmed from the lack of an effective government deterrent to such activities. In addition,
while China’s campaign to require central and provincial governments to use legitimate software
produced a “modest increase” in U.S. software sales to the Chinese government, piracy rates by
Chinese SOEs remained high.126
The USTR’s 2013 Special 301 report stated that China had made comprehensive improvements to
its trade laws and regulations, but indicated growing U.S. concern over the apparent growth of
trade secret theft in China, including those involving departing employees, failed joint ventures,
cyber intrusion and hacking (discussed in more detail below), and misuse of information
submitted by U.S. firms to Chinese government entities for purposes of complying with

122 AMSC Press Release, “AMSC Filing Criminal and Civil Complaints Against Sinovel,” September 14, 2011.
123 AMSC, Press Release, April 10, 2012, at http://files.shareholder.com/downloads/AMSC/2346100399x0x558743/
f01e0c5a-a526-4102-a818-f61f2d71ef79/AMSC_News_2012_4_10_Commercial.pdf.
124 “Data Theft Case May Test U.S. China Ties,” Boston Globe, September 19, 2011.
125 The JCCT was established in 1983 to serve as a forum for high-level dialogue on major bilateral trade issues.
126 USTR, 2012 Special 301 Report, April 2012, available at http://www.ustr.gov/sites/default/files/
2012%20Special%20301%20Report_0.pdf.
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regulatory obligations.127 The USTR also noted that IPR enforcement remains a serious problem
and has gotten worse because of cyber theft (discussed in more detail below). The USTR stated
that the Chinese government viewed trade secret cases as routine commercial disputes, rather than
as serious violations of the law. It further said that even though the Chinese government had
reported that it had completed its plan to require the use of legitimate software by government
entities at the central and provincial level, U.S. software firms had reported only a modest
increase in sales to the government.
Market access in China remains a significant problem for many U.S. IP industries (such as music
and films) and is considered to be a significant cause of high IPR piracy rates. For example, until
recently, China limited imports of foreign films to 20 per year. During the visit to the United
States by then-Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping (February 13-17, 2012), China agreed that it
would allow more American exports to China of 3D, IMAX, and similar enhanced format movies
on favorable commercial terms; strengthen the opportunities to distribute films through private
enterprises rather than the state film monopoly; and ensure fairer compensation levels for U.S.
blockbuster films distributed by Chinese SOEs.128
Technology Transfer Issues
When China entered the WTO in 2001, it agreed that foreign firms would not be pressured by
government entities to transfer technology to a Chinese partner as part of the cost of doing
business in China. However, many U.S. firms argue that this is a common Chinese practice,
although this is difficult to quantify because, oftentimes, U.S. business representatives appear to
try to avoid negative publicity regarding the difficulties they encounter doing business in China
out of concern over retaliation by the Chinese government.129
In 2011, then-U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner charged that “we're seeing China
continue to be very, very aggressive in a strategy they started several decades ago, which goes
like this: you want to sell to our country, we want you to come produce here. If you want to come
produce here, you need to transfer your technology to us.” A 2012 AmCham China survey
reported that 33% of its respondents stated that technology transfer requirements were negatively
affecting their businesses.130 A 2010 study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce stated that growing
pressure on foreign firms to share technology in exchange for market access in China was forcing
such firms to “anguish over balancing today’s profits with tomorrow’s survival.”131
However, a 2011 survey by the USCBC found that technology transfer requirements by Chinese
entities (both government and private) did not rank among the top 10 challenges faced by the
Council’s members in 2010. Among U.S. firms where technology was an issue, when asked if

127 USTR, 2013 Special 301 Report, April 2013, available at http://www.ustr.gov/sites/default/files/
05012013%202013%20Special%20301%20Report.pdf.
128 The White House, Press Release, February 17, 2012, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/02/17/
united-states-achieves-breakthrough-movies-dispute-china.
129 China denies that public officials exert such pressure and that any technology transfers that do occur in China are the
result of commercial agreements between companies.
130 AmCham China, 2012 China Business Climate Survey Report, March 2012, available at
http://www.amchamchina.org/businessclimate2012.
131 U.S. Chamber of Commerce, China’s Drive for 'Indigenous Innovation' - A Web of Industrial Policies, July 29,
2010.
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their company had been asked to transfer technology to China over the past three years, 18%
answered yes. Among the respondents that had been asked to transfer technology, 20% said the
pressure came from a government entity, while 80% said that it came from a Chinese company.132
Of the respondents who said they were asked to transfer technology, 40% stated that they found
the requests acceptable, 30% refused the requests, 15% negotiated to mitigate the amount of
technology transfer, and 10% said they had to transfer the technology requested in order to gain
access to the Chinese market. As noted by the USCBC:
The PRC [People’s Republic of China] certainty has a long-term strategy to bring in foreign
technology. But technology is not simply “given to China.” Instead, technology is typically
licensed to a China-based entity in which the foreign company has an ownership stake. In
many cases the foreign company owns 100 percent of the entity in China; in some cases, the
foreign company must form a joint venture with a Chinese partner. In exchange, the
company determines a value of the technology to be transferred and negotiates a payment—
the technology is rarely “given” for free.133
Press reports indicate that the USTR’s office is currently seeking information from U.S.
manufacturers on examples of efforts by the Chinese government to force the transfer of
technology from U.S. companies operating in China. This issue was discussed during President
Obama’s meeting with then-Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping on February 14, 2012.134 A White
House Factsheet of the meeting stated: “China reiterates that technology transfer and
technological cooperation shall be decided by businesses independently and will not be used by
the Chinese government as a pre-condition for market access.”
In the 112th Congress, S. 2063 (Webb) would have prohibited the transfer by a U.S. commercial
entity of any proprietary technology or intellectual property that was researched, developed, or
commercialized using a contract, grant, loan, loan guarantee, or other financial assistance
provided or awarded by the U.S. government to certain foreign entities (such as those that are
owned or controlled by a foreign government) unless the Secretary of Commerce determined (and
issued a waiver) that the transfer would not compromise the U.S. economic interests or
competitiveness.
Cyber Security Issues
Cyber-attacks against U.S. firms have raised concerns over the potential large-scale theft of U.S.
IPR and its economic implications for the United States. A 2011 report by McAfee (a U.S. global
security technology company) stated that its investigation had identified targeted intrusions into
more than 70 global companies and warned that “every conceivable industry with significant size
and valuable intellectual property has been compromised (or will be shortly), with the great
majority of the victims rarely discovering the intrusion or its impact.”135 Many U.S. analysts and

132 However, the Council notes that since the Chinese government maintains approval authority for investment
decisions, which may be used by Chinese firms as leverage when attempting to negotiate technology transfer
agreements with U.S. firms.
133 U.S.-China Business Council, USCBC 2011 China Business Environment Survey Results: Market Growth
Continues, Companies Expand, But Full Access Elusive for Many,
November 2011, p. 20.
134 Inside Trade, USTR Seeks Info From Manufacturers On Forced Technology Transfer To China, January 31, 2012.
135 The report did not identify China (or any country) as the source of the intrusions. McAfee, Revealed: Operation
Shady Rat, An Investigation of Targeted Intrusions Into More Than 70 Global Companies, Governments, and Nonprofit
Organizations During the Last Five Years
, 2011.
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policy makers contend that the Chinese government is a major source of cyber-economic
espionage against U.S. firms. For example, Representative Mike Rogers, chairman of the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, stated at an October 4, 2011, hearing that
Attributing this espionage isn’t easy, but talk to any private sector cyber analyst, and they
will tell you there is little doubt that this is a massive campaign being conducted by the
Chinese government. I don’t believe that there is a precedent in history for such a massive
and sustained intelligence effort by a government to blatantly steal commercial data and
intellectual property. China’s economic espionage has reached an intolerable level and I
believe that the United States and our allies in Europe and Asia have an obligation to
confront Beijing and demand that they put a stop to this piracy.136
According to a report by the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI): “Chinese
actors are the world’s most active and persistent perpetrators of economic espionage. U.S. private
sector firms and cyber security specialists have reported an onslaught of computer network
intrusions that have originated in China, but the IC (Intelligence Community) cannot confirm who
was responsible.” The report goes on to warn that
China will continue to be driven by its longstanding policy of “catching up fast and
surpassing” Western powers. The growing interrelationships between Chinese and U.S.
companies—such as the employment of Chinese-national technical experts at U.S. facilities
and the off-shoring of U.S. production and R&D to facilities in China—will offer Chinese
government agencies and businesses increasing opportunities to collect sensitive US
economic information.137
On February 19, 2013, Mandiant, a U.S. information security company, issued a report
documenting extensive economic cyber espionage by a Chinese unit (which it designated as
APT1) with alleged links to the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) against 141 firms,
covering 20 industries, since 2006. The report stated:
Our analysis has led us to conclude that APT1 is likely government-sponsored and one of the
most persistent of China’s cyber threat actors. We believe that APT1 is able to wage such a
long-running and extensive cyber espionage campaign in large part because it receives direct
government support. In seeking to identify the organization behind this activity, our research
found that People’s Liberation Army (PLA’s) Unit 61398 is similar to APT1 in its mission,
capabilities, and resources. PLA Unit 61398 is also located in precisely the same area from
which APT1 activity appears to originate.138
On March 11, 2013, Tom Donilon, National Security Advisor to President Obama, stated in a
speech that the United States and China should engage in a constructive dialogue to establish
acceptable norms of behavior in cyberspace; that China should recognize the urgency and scope
of the problem and the risks it poses to U.S. trade relations and the reputation to Chinese industry;
and that China should take serious steps to investigate and stop cyber espionage.139 Following a
meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in June 2013, President Obama warned that if cyber

136 House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Chairman Mike Rogers Opening Statement at the Hearing on
Cyber Threats and Ongoing Efforts to Protect the Nation
, October 4, 2011.
137 DNI, Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive, Foreign Spies Stealing U.S. Economic Secrets in
Cyberspace, Report to Congress on Foreign Economic Collection and Industrial Espionage
: 2009-2011, October 2011.
138 Mandiant, APT1: Exposing One of China’s Cyber, Espionage Units, February 19, 2013, p. 2.
139 U.S. Asia Society, Complete Transcript: Thomas Donilon at Asia Society, New York March 11, 2013.
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security issues are not addressed and if there continues to be direct theft of United States property,
then “this was going to be a very difficult problem in the economic relationship and was going to
be an inhibitor to the relationship really reaching its full potential. 

On May 7, 2013, Senator Levin introduced S. 884, the Deter Cyber Theft Act. The bill would
require the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) to develop a watch list and a priority watch
list (determined to engage in the most egregious economic or industrial espionage in cyberspace)
of foreign countries that engage in economic or industrial espionage in cyberspace with respect to
U.S. trade secrets or proprietary information. The bill would require the president to block import
of products containing stolen U.S. technology; products made by state-owned enterprises of
nations on the DNI’s priority watch list that are similar to items identified in the DNI’s report as
stolen or targeted U.S. technology; or made by a company the DNI identifies as having benefited
from theft of U.S. technology or proprietary information.140
China’s Obligations in the World Trade Organization
Negotiations for China’s accession to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and its
successor organization, the WTO, began in 1986 and took over 15 years to complete. During the
WTO negotiations, Chinese officials insisted that China was a developing country and should be
allowed to enter under fairly lenient terms. The United States insisted that China could enter the
WTO only if it substantially liberalized its trade regime. In the end, a compromise was reached
that required China to make immediate and extensive reductions in various trade and investment
barriers, while allowing it to maintain some level of protection (or a transitional period of
protection) for certain sensitive sectors. China’s WTO membership was formally approved at the
WTO Ministerial Conference in Doha, Qatar, on November 10, 2001. On November 11, 2001,
China notified the WTO that it had formally ratified the WTO agreements, and on December 11,
2001, it formally joined the WTO.141
Under the WTO accession agreement, China agreed to the following.
• Reduce the average tariff for industrial goods from 17% to 8.9%, and average
tariffs on U.S. priority agricultural products from 31% to 14%.
• Limit subsidies for agricultural production to 8.5% of the value of farm output,
eliminate export subsidies on agricultural exports, and notify the WTO of all
government subsidies on a regular basis.
• Within three years of accession, grant full trade and distribution rights to foreign
enterprises (with some exceptions, such as for certain agricultural products,
minerals, and fuels).
• Provide nondiscriminatory treatment to all WTO members, such as treating
foreign firms in China no less favorably than Chinese firms for trade purposes.

140 Office of Senator Carl Levin, Newsroom, Bipartisan Group of Senators Introduces Legislation to Combat Cyber
Theft, May 7, 2013, at http://www.levin.senate.gov/newsroom/press/release/bipartisan-group-of-senators-introduces-
legislation-to-combat-cyber-theft.
141 Following China’s WTO accession, the United States, in January 2002, granted China permanent normal trade
relations (PNTR) status (prior to that time, that status was on a conditional basis) to ensure that the United States and
China had a formal trade relationship under the rules of the WTO.
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• End discriminatory trade policies against foreign invested firms in China, such as
domestic content rules and technology transfer requirements.
• Implement the WTO’s Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
(TRIPS) Agreement upon accession (which sets basic standards on IPR
protection and rules for enforcement).
• Fully open the banking system to foreign financial institutions within five years
(by the end of 2006).
• Allow joint ventures in insurance and telecommunication (with various degrees
of foreign ownership allowed).
WTO Implementation Issues
Getting China into the WTO under a comprehensive trade liberalization agreement was a major
U.S. trade objective during the late 1990s. Many U.S. policy makers at the time maintained that
China’s WTO membership would encourage the Chinese government to deepen market reforms,
promote the rule of law, reduce the government’s role in the economy, further integrate China into
the world economy, and enable the United States to use the WTO’s dispute resolution mechanism
to address major trade issues. As a result, it was hoped, China would become a more reliable and
stable U.S. trading partner. U.S. trade officials contend that in the first years after it joined the
WTO, China made noteworthy progress in adopting economic reforms that facilitated its
transition toward a market economy and increased its openness to trade and FDI. However,
beginning in 2006, progress toward further market liberalization appeared to slow. By 2008, U.S.
government and business officials noted evidence of trends toward a more restrictive trade
regime.142 The USTR’s 12th annual report to China on WTO compliance (issued in December
2013) identified several areas of concern, including143
• Failure by the Chinese government to maintain an effective IPR enforcement
regime;
• Industrial policies and national standards that attempt to promote Chinese firms
(while discriminating against foreign firms);
• Restrictions on trading and distribution rights;
• Discriminatory and unpredictable health and safety rules on imports (especially
agricultural products);
• Burdensome regulations and restrictions on services; and
• Failure to provide adequate transparency of trade laws and regulations.
As of January 2014, the United States has brought 14 dispute settlement cases against China, 9 of
which have been resolved or ruled upon.144 China has nine WTO cases against the United States
as well.145 The U.S. cases are summarized below.

142 China generally implemented its tariff reductions on schedule.
143 USTR, 2013 Report to Congress on China’s WTO Compliance, December 2013.
144 For an overview of the WTO’s dispute settlement process, see CRS Report RS20088, Dispute Settlement in the
World Trade Organization (WTO): An Overview
, by Daniel T. Shedd, Brandon J. Murrill, and Jane M. Smith.
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Pending U.S. WTO Dispute Settlement Cases Against China
• On September 17, 2012, the USTR announced that it had initiated a WTO dispute
settlement case against China over it export subsidies to auto and auto parts
manufacturers in China.146
• On March 13, 2012, the United States, Japan, and the European Union jointly
initiated a dispute settlement case against China’s restrictive export policies (such
as quotas, tariffs, and minimum export prices) on rare earths and two other
minerals.147
• On September 15, 2010, the USTR’s office announced it was bringing a WTO
case against China over its improper application of antidumping duties and
countervailing duties on imports of grain oriented flat-rolled electrical steel from
the United States. A WTO panel in June 2012 ruled largely in favor of the U.S.
position and this was generally upheld by a WTO Appellate Body in October
2012. However, on December 24, 2013, the USTR stated that China had failed to
bring its duties into compliance with WTO rules.
Resolved Cases or a WTO Panel Has Issued a Ruling148
• In May 2012, the United States initiated a WTO dispute settlement case China’s
improper use of anti-dumping and countervailing duties on broiler products. On
August 5, 2013, the USTR announced that the United States had largely
prevailed in the case.
• On September 15, 2010, the USTR’s office announced it was bringing a WTO
dispute settlement case against China over its discrimination against U.S.
suppliers of electronic payment services (EPS). The United States charged that
China permits only a Chinese entity (China UnionPay) to supply electronic
payment services for payment card transactions denominated and paid in RMB in
China, that service suppliers of other Members can only supply these services for
payment card transactions paid in foreign currency, that China requires all
payment card processing devices to be compatible with that entity's system and
that payment cards must bear that company's logo, and that the Chinese entity
has guaranteed access to all merchants in China that accept payment cards, while
services suppliers of other WTO members must negotiate for access to
merchants.149 On July 16, 2012, the USTR announced that the United States had
largely prevailed in the dispute.

(...continued)
145 The United States has been the largest target of China’s dispute settlement cases in the WTO. Most of these cases
have challenged certain U.S. applications of antidumping and countervailing measures.
146 For additional information about this issue, see CRS Report R43071, U.S.-Chinese Motor Vehicle Trade: Overview
and Issues
, by Bill Canis and Wayne M. Morrison
147 For additional information on China’s restrictions on rare earths, see CRS Report R42510, China’s Rare Earth
Industry and Export Regime: Economic and Trade Implications for the United States
, by Wayne M. Morrison and
Rachel Y. Tang.
148 Often, cases are resolved through consultations before a case goes to a panel.
149 WTO, Dispute Settlement—Certain Measures Affecting Electronic Payments, Current Status, August 31, 2012.
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• On June 23, 2009, the United States brought a case against China’s export
restrictions (such as export quotas and taxes) on raw materials (bauxite, coke,
fluorspar, magnesium, manganese, silicon metal, silicon carbide, yellow
phosphorus, and zinc). The United States charged that such policies are intended
to lower prices for Chinese firms (steel, aluminum, and chemical sectors) in order
to help them obtain an unfair competitive advantage. China claims that these
restraints are intended to conserve the environment and exhaustible natural
resources. In July 2011, a WTO panel issued a report that China’s export taxes
and quotas on raw materials violated its WTO commitments. It further found that
China failed to show that restrictions were linked to conservation of exhaustible
natural resources for some of the raw materials or to protect the health of its
citizens (by reducing pollution).150 China appealed the WTO panel’s ruling.
However, on January 30, 2012, a WTO Appellate Body affirmed that China’s
export quotas and export taxes on certain raw materials violated its WTO
commitments.151 U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk called the decision a
“tremendous victory for the United States,” and said that it would ensure that
“core manufacturing industries in this country can get the materials they need to
produce and compete on a level playing field.”152
• On December 22, 2010, the USTR’s office announced that it would bring a WTO
case against China over a government program that extended subsidies to
Chinese wind power equipment manufacturers that use parts and components
made in China rather than foreign-made parts and components. On June 7, 2011,
the USTR’s office announced that China had agreed to end these subsidies.
However, the USTR noted that it had taken significant investigatory efforts by
the U.S. government, working with industry and workers, to uncover China’s
wind subsidies because of the lack of transparency in China. The USTR further
noted that, under the terms of China’s WTO accession, it was required to fully
report its subsidy programs to the WTO, which, to date, it has failed to do.153
• On December 19, 2008, the USTR filed a WTO case against China over its
support for “Famous Chinese” brand programs, charging that such programs
utilize various export subsidies (including cash grant rewards, preferential loans,
research and development funding to develop new products, and payments to
lower the cost of export credit insurance) at the central and local government
level to promote the recognition and sale of Chinese brand products overseas. On
December 18, 2009, the USTR announced that China had agreed to eliminate
these programs.
• On March 3, 2008, the USTR requested WTO dispute resolution consultations
with China regarding its discriminatory treatment of U.S. suppliers of financial

150 A summary of the WTO panel report can be found at http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/cases_e/
ds394_e.htm#bkmk394r.
151 The Appellate Body declared moot and of no legal effect the Panel's findings regarding China’s export licensing
requirements, minimum export price requirements, administration and allocation of export quotas, and fees and
formalities in connection with exportation because of inadequacies in the complainants’ panel requests involving these
measures.
152 USTR, Press Release, January 31, 2012.
153 USTR Press Release, June 7, 2011, available at http://www.ustr.gov/about-us/press-office/press-releases/2011/june/
china-ends-wind-power-equipment-subsidies-challenged.
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information services in China. On November 13, 2008, the USTR announced that
China had agreed to eliminate discriminatory restrictions on how U.S. and other
foreign suppliers of financial information services do business in China.
• On April 10, 2007, the USTR filed a WTO case against China, charging that it
failed to comply with the TRIPS agreement (namely in terms of its enforcement
of IPR laws). On January 26, 2009, the WTO ruled that many of China’s IPR
enforcement policies failed to fulfill its WTO obligations. On June 29, 2009,
China announced that it would implement the WTO ruling by March 2010.
• On April 10, 2007, the USTR filed a WTO case against China charging that it
failed to provide sufficient market access to IPR-related products, namely in
terms of trading rights and distribution services. In August 2009, a WTO panel
ruled that many of China’s regulations on trading rights and distribution of films
for theatrical release, DVDs, music, and books and journals were inconsistent
with China’s WTO obligation. China appealed the decision, but lost, and in
February 2010 stated that it would implement the WTO’s ruling.
• On February 5, 2007, the USTR announced it had requested WTO dispute
consultations with China over government regulations that give illegal (WTO-
inconsistent) import and export subsidies to various industries in China (such as
steel, wood, and paper) that distort trade and discriminate against imports.154
China’s WTO accession agreement required it to immediately eliminate such
subsidies. On November 29, 2007, China formally agreed to eliminate the
subsidies in question by January 1, 2008.
• On March 30, 2006, the USTR initiated a WTO case against China over its use of
discriminatory regulations on imported auto parts, which often applied the high
tariff rate on finished autos (25%) to certain auto parts (which generally average
10%). The USTR charged that that the purpose of China’s policy was to
discourage domestic producers from using imported parts and to encourage
foreign firms to move production to China. On February 13, 2008, a WTO panel
ruled that China’s discriminatory tariff policy was inconsistent with its WTO
obligations (stating that the auto tariffs constituted an internal charge rather than
ordinary customs duties, which violated WTO rules on national treatment). China
appealed the decision, but a WTO Appellate Body largely upheld the WTO
panel’s decision.
• On March 18, 2004, the USTR announced it had filed a WTO dispute resolution
case against China over its discriminatory tax treatment of imported
semiconductors. The United States claimed that China applied a 17% value-
added tax (VAT) on semiconductor chips that were designed and made outside
China, but gave VAT rebates to domestic producers. Following consultations with
the Chinese government, the USTR announced on July 8, 2004, that China
agreed to end its preferential tax policy by April 2005. However, the USTR has
expressed concern over new forms of financial assistance given by the Chinese
government to its domestic semiconductor industry.

154 Some programs gave tax preferences, tariff exemptions, discounted loans, or other benefits to firms that met certain
export performance requirements, while others gave tax breaks for purchasing Chinese-made equipment and
accessories over imports.
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During his State of the Union Address in January 2012, President Obama announced plans to
create a new Trade Enforcement Unit “charged with investigating unfair trade practices in
countries like China.” On February 28, 2012, President Obama issued an executive order
establishing the Interagency Trade Enforcement Center within the USTR’s office. Many analysts
contend that the new enforcement unit could result in a sharp increase in the number of WTO
dispute settlement cases brought by the United States against China.
China’s Accession to the WTO Government Procurement Agreement (GPA)
Government procurement policies are largely exempt from WTO rules, except for those members
which have signed the GPA.155 When China joined the WTO, it indicated its intention to become
a member of WTO’s GPA as soon as possible, but, to date, has failed to submit an offer
acceptable to current GPA members.
China’s accession to the GPA is a major U.S. priority. China reports its annual government
procurement spending at $179 billion (2011).156 U.S. officials estimate this figure could be as
high as $200 billion.157 A study by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China
estimates that this figure could be well over $1 trillion if all levels of government are included,
plus SOEs.158 China currently maintains a number of restrictive government procurement
practices and policies that favor domestic Chinese firms. Because of China’s rapidly growing
economy and significant infrastructure needs, China’s accession to the GPA could result in
significant new opportunities for U.S. firms.
China did not formally enter into negotiations to join the GPA until 2007, and its initial offer was
deemed unacceptable by the other WTO GPA parties. China promised to revise its GPA offer, but
did not do so until July 2010. That offer was deemed an improvement over the previous offer but
was not accepted, in part because it excluded purchases by local and provincial governments as
well as SOEs. A revised offer in December 2011 only covered public entities in three cities and
two provinces.159 Commenting on China’s last offer, the USTR’s office stated:
China began its negotiations to join the GPA four years ago this month. Since that time,
China has submitted three offers, each an improvement over the last. But China still has
some distance to go before the procurement that it is offering is comparable to the extensive
procurement that the United States and other Parties cover under the GPA. For example, we

155 The GPA is a plurilateral agreement among 41 WTO members (including the United States, Japan, and the 27
members of the European Union) that effectively provides market access for various nondefense government
procurement projects to signatories to the agreement. Each member of the Agreement submits lists of government
entities and goods and services (with thresholds and limitations) that are open to bidding by firms of the other GPA
members. WTO members that are not signatories to the GPA, including those that are GPA observers (such as China),
do not enjoy any rights under the GPA. Nor are non-GPA signatories in the WTO generally obligated to provide access
to their government procurement markets.
156 Xinhua News Agency, June 29, 2012, at http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/china/2012-06/29/c_131685154.htm.
157 Testimony of Karen Laney, Acting Director of Operations, U.S. International Trade Commission before the
Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade, Committee on Foreign Affairs, on China’s Indigenous
Innovation, Trade, and Investment Policies
, March 9, 2011.
158 European Chamber of Commerce in China, Public Procurement in China: European Business Experiences
Competing for Public Contracts in China, 2011, p. 15, at http://www.europeanchamber.com.cn/en/publications-public-
procurement-study-european-business-experiences-competing-for-public-contracts-in-china.
159 Inside U.S. Trade, December 8, 2011.
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are urging China to cover state-owned enterprises, add more sub-central entities and services,
reduce its thresholds for the size of covered contracts, and remove other broad exclusions.160
China submitted a new offer in November 2012. According to press reports, the U.S.
representative to the WTO GPA committee stated that China’s latest offer was “only another step
but far from what we had expected.” In particular, the United States and other GPA parties want
China to improve its offer by including coverage of SOEs, lowering thresholds above which the
GPA's nondiscrimination disciplines apply, removing several broad exclusions to coverage, and
expanding coverage of sub-central entities. Some Members also stated opposition to China’s
proposal that it be allowed a five-year implementation period.161 During the July 2013 S&ED
talks, China pledged to submit a new revised GPA offer by the end of 2013 that would include
lowering thresholds and increased coverage of sub-central entities.
Congressional concerns over China’s restrictions on public procurement and failure to date to join
the GPA resulted in the introduction of legislation in 112th Congress. H.R. 375 (Kildee) would
have limited the total value of Chinese goods that could be procured by the U.S. government to
the same value of U.S. goods procured by the Chinese government in the previous year, while
H.R. 2271 (Royce) would have prohibited the federal government from awarding contracts to
Chinese entities until China signs the GPA.
China’s Currency Policy162
Unlike most advanced economies (such as the United States), China does not maintain a market-
based floating exchange rate. Between 1994 and July 2005, China pegged its currency, the
renminbi (RMB) or yuan, to the U.S. dollar at about 8.28 yuan to the dollar.163 In July 2005,
China appreciated the RMB to the dollar by 2.1% and moved to a “managed float,” based on a
basket of major foreign currencies, including the U.S. dollar. In order to maintain a target rate of
exchange with the dollar (and other currencies), the Chinese government has maintained
restrictions and controls over capital transactions and has made large-scale purchases of U.S.
dollars (and dollar assets).164 According to the Bank of China, from July 2005 to July 2009, the
official exchange rate went from 8.27 to 6.83 yuan per dollar, an appreciation of 21.1%.165
However, once the effects of the global financial crisis became apparent, the Chinese government
halted its appreciation of the RMB and subsequently kept the yuan/dollar exchange rate relatively
constant at 6.83 from July 2009 to June 2010 in order to help limit the impact of the sharp decline
in global demand for Chinese products. From June 19, 2010, (when appreciation was resumed) to
December 17, 2013, the yuan/dollar exchange rate went from 6.83 to 6.11, an appreciation of
11.8%. Most of the appreciation occurred in 2010 and 2011. From January 1, 2012, to December
17, 2013, the RMB appreciated by only 3.6% against the dollar. Some analysts maintain that this
is an indicator that the Chinese government is continuing to heavily intervene in currency markets
to hold the down value of RMB relatively constant in the face of weak global demand for Chinese

160 USTR Press Release, December 2011.
161 Inside U.S. Trade, December 12, 2012.
162 For additional information on this issue, see CRS Report RS21625, China's Currency Policy: An Analysis of the
Economic Issues
, by Wayne M. Morrison and Marc Labonte.
163 The official name of China’s currency is the renminbi, which is denominated in units of yuan.
164 Much of China’s trade is believed to be in U.S. dollars (e.g., exporters are often paid in dollars). The central
government requires firms to exchange most of their dollars for RMB.
165 Calculated from Bank of China data using the official government “middle rate.”
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exports. Others argue that market forces are the main cause of the slow appreciation of the RMB,
noting that China’s current account surplus and accumulation of foreign exchange reserves have
slowed considerably over the past few years which, it is argued, have lessened the need for the
Chinese government to intervene in currency markets.
Many U.S. policy makers, labor groups, and business representatives of import-sensitive
industries have charged that China’s currency remains significantly undervalued against the
dollar. They claim that this policy provides an indirect subsidy to Chinese exporters (which
makes Chinese goods less expensive in the United States), while acting as a de facto tariff on U.S.
goods imported into China (which makes them more expensive). They argue that this policy has
particularly hurt several U.S. manufacturing sectors that are forced to compete against low-cost
Chinese products and has led to significant job losses in the United States, especially in
manufacturing. Critics further charge that China’s currency policy has been a major factor in the
size and growth of the U.S. trade deficit with China. Some Members of Congress contend that,
given the current high rate of unemployment in the United States, Chinese “currency
manipulation” can no longer be tolerated.
U.S. officials have urged China to continue efforts to rebalance its economy by boosting
consumer demand (which would increase import demand) and decreasing the reliance on exports
and fixed investment for economic growth. They argue that doing so would enable the Chinese
government to move more quickly toward adopting a market-based exchange rate since the
creation of new jobs in the nontrade sector would offset job losses in the trade sector resulting
from an appreciation of the RMB.
Numerous bills have been introduced in Congress over the past few years that would seek to
induce China to reform its currency policy or would attempt to address the perceived effects that
policy has on the U.S. economy. For example, one bill in the 108th Congress would have imposed
an additional duty of 27.5% on imported Chinese products unless China appreciated its currency
to near market levels. In the 111th Congress, the House passed an amended version of H.R. 2378
(Tim Ryan), which would have made certain misaligned currencies (such as the RMB) actionable
under U.S. countervailing duty cases on foreign government export subsidies (although the
Senate did not take up the bill). In the 112th Congress, the Senate passed S. 1619, which would
have provided for the identification of fundamentally misaligned currencies and required action to
correct the misalignment for certain “priority” countries.
Two currency bills have been introduced in the 113th Congress: H.R. 1276 and S. 1114. H.R.
1276, the Currency Reform for Fair Trade Act was introduced by Representative Sander Levin on
March 20, 2013. The bill is identical to the one he introduced in the 112th Congress (H.R. 639)
and nearly identical to H.R. 2378, which passed the House during the 111th Congress by a vote of
284 to 123. The bill would seek to clarify certain provisions of U.S. countervailing duty laws
(pertaining to foreign government export subsidies) that would allow the Commerce Department
to consider a “fundamentally misaligned currency” as an actionable subsidy. S. 1114, the
Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act of 2013, was introduced by Senator Sherrod
Brown on June 7, 2013, and is essentially the same bill he introduced in 2011 and was passed by
the Senate on October 11, 2011. The bill would provide for the identification of fundamentally
misaligned currencies and require action to correct the misalignment for certain “priority”
countries.
Some Members have expressed opposition to various currency bills aimed at China, arguing that
they could violate U.S. obligations in the WTO. Other Members have argued that, while inducing
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China to adopt a market-based exchange rate is an important goal, the United States should give
higher priority to addressing China’s industrial policies and IPR infringement, which some view
as more damaging to U.S. economic interests.
The U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue
On September 29, 2006, President George W. Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao agreed to
establish a Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) to have discussions on major economic issues at
the “highest official level.” According to a U.S. Treasury Department press release, the intent of
the SED was to “discuss long-term strategic challenges, rather than seeking immediate solutions
to the issues of the day,” in order to provide a stronger foundation for pursuing concrete results
through existing bilateral economic dialogues.166 The first meeting was held in December 2006.
Four subsequent rounds of talks were held (the last was in December 2008).
While attending the G-20 summit in London on the global financial crisis on April 1, 2009,
President Obama and Chinese President Hu agreed to continue the high-level forum, renaming it
the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue (S&ED). The new dialogue is based on two
tracks. The first (the “Strategic Track”) is headed by the Secretary of State on the U.S. side and
focuses on political and strategic issues, while the second track (the “Economic Track”) is headed
by the U.S. Treasury Secretary on the U.S. side and focuses on financial and economic issues.
Areas of discussion include economic and trade issues, counterterrorism, law enforcement,
science and technology, education, culture, health, energy, the environment (including climate
change), nonproliferation, and human rights.
One of the reported benefits of the U.S-China S&ED process is that it brings together top
economic officials from both sides (as well as U.S. Cabinet officials and Chinese heads of
ministries) on a regular basis, which enables both sides to identify their major positions and
priorities on various issues and to develop long-term working relationships. Some in Congress
have criticized the S&ED forum, arguing that it produces few concrete results, and that many of
the results described in subsequent fact sheets that are jointly issued simply restate agreements or
pledges China has already made. Others counter that U.S. engagement with China occurs on
multiple levels throughout the year and that the S&ED meetings are in part a cumulative result of
this process.
The July 2009 Economic Track Session
The first round of the S&ED was held in Washington, DC, on July 27-28, 2009, and involved 12
U.S. Cabinet officials and agency heads and 15 Chinese ministers, vice ministers, and agency
heads. The session was focused heavily on issues relating to the global economic crisis. Then-
Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner stated: “Recognizing that cooperation between China
and the United States will remain vital not only to the well-being of our two nations but also the
health of the global economy, we agreed to undertake policies to bring about sustainable,
balanced global growth once economic recovery is firmly in place.”
The two sides agreed to establish a framework of cooperation based on four pillars:

166 U.S. Treasury Department, Press Release, December 15, 2006.
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• Advancing macroeconomic and structural policies to achieve sustainable and
balanced growth;
• Promoting more resilient, open, and market-oriented financial systems;
• Strengthening trade and investment ties; and
• Strengthening the international financial architecture.
These pillars appear to have been aimed at deepening bilateral cooperation in response to the
global economic crisis, continuing commitments on both sides to promote policies that seek to
achieve more balanced economic growth, encouraging China to continue economic and financial
reforms, expanding China’s role and/or participation in international economic forums,167 and
attempting to avoid new forms of trade protection.
May 2010 Economic Track Session
The May 24-25, 2010, S&ED economic session focused heavily on the continuing efforts relating
to the four pillars identified in the July 2009 session. Although few concrete accomplishments
were announced at the end of the meetings, the two agreed to intensify talks on a number of
bilateral economic and trade issues. The two sides pledged to
• Sign a cooperation protocol on small and medium-sized firms (SMEs);
• Boost economic cooperation at the central and local government level, such as
promoting the establishment of state-to-province and city-to-city partnerships;
• Conduct “intensive expert and high-level discussions” as early as the summer of
2010 on innovation issues (such as China’s indigenous innovation proposals) and
take into account the results of these talks in formulating and implementing their
innovation measures;168
• Improve cooperation to address health and safety issues relating to U.S. sales of
soybeans to China;
• Establish a cooperative mechanism between the U.S. Export-Import Bank and the
Export-Import Bank of China on trade finance, and develop initiatives to promote
exports by SMEs;
• Explore the possibility of cooperating to enable the United States to treat China
as a market economy, and treat certain Chinese firms as market-oriented
industries, for the purpose of U.S. trade remedy laws; and
• Boost investment opportunities and transparency.169

167 The United States is seeking to broaden China’s participation in international economic institutions in order to
promote the goal of helping to make China a “responsible stakeholder” in the global economy. This implies that, since
China greatly benefits from the global trading system and is a major global economy, it should shoulder a greater
responsibility in maintaining and promoting that system (rather than just enjoying the benefits of that system.
168 The United States also pledged that it would review Chinese concerns relating to U.S. restrictions on high
technology exports to China resulting from the current U.S. export control regime.
169 The United States pledged that it welcomed investment from China and confirmed that review of foreign investment
by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States ensures the consistent and fair treatment of all foreign
investment without prejudice to the place of origin. China promised to revise its Catalogue Guiding Foreign Investment
(continued...)
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The May 2011 Economic Track
The third round of the S&ED was held in Washington, DC, on May 9-10, 2011. Prior to the
meeting, U.S. officials identified several goals for the economic track of the S&ED, including
ensuring that China followed through on previous economic and trade commitments (such as on
IPR protection and indigenous innovation policies) and encouraging China to make a number of
reforms to its financial sector (such as adopting market-based interest rates on bank deposits and
expanding market access in China for U.S. financial firms). China pledged to continue to promote
domestic consumption, improve IPR enforcement, eliminate all of its indigenous innovation
products catalogues, improve transparency of its economic and trade policies, and provide
significant new opportunities for U.S. financial services firms in China.
The May 2012 Economic Track
The fourth S&ED round was held in Beijing on May 3 and 4, 2012, and focused largely on
economic rebalancing and boosting foreign access to China’s financial services sector.170 China
pledged that it would:
• Increase the number of SOEs that pay dividends;
• Participate in negotiations (beginning in the summer of 2012) for new rules on
official export financing with the United States and other major exporters;
• Provide nondiscriminatory treatment to all enterprises, regardless of type of
ownership, in terms of credit, taxation, and regulatory policies so that U.S. firms
can more easily compete against Chinese SOEs;
• Submit a new robust offer in 2012 to join the WTO’s GPA and to intensify efforts
to negotiate a BIT with the United States;
• Open up more sectors to FDI and improve the transparency of its investment
approval process;
• Prioritize the protection of trade secrets, extend efforts to promote the use of
legal software by Chinese enterprises, treat IPR owned or developed in other
countries the same as IPR owned or developed in China, and hold discussions
with U.S. officials on the implementation of China’s commitment not to make
technology transfer a pre-condition for doing business in China;
• Take steps to raise household income and lower prices of consumer goods, such
as cutting import tariffs, reducing taxes on services, and raising deposit rates; and
• Expand market access to domestic financial markets by boosting the permitted
level of foreign investment in its stock and bond markets, raising the permitted
foreign equity stake in domestic securities joint ventures from 33% to 49%, and

(...continued)
in Industries and encourage and expand areas open to foreign investment, including those relating to high-technology,
energy, and the environment. China also pledged to streamline the process for investment approval.
170 The session was somewhat overshadowed by events relating to Chinese human rights advocate Chen Guangcheng
who had been temporarily sheltered at the U.S. embassy in Beijing prior to the session.
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allowing foreign investors to establish joint venture brokerages to trade
commodity and financial futures (with up to a 49% equity stake).
The May 2013 Economic Track
The 5th round of the S&ED talks were held in Washington, DC, on July 10-11, 2013. China
pledged that it would:
• Negotiate a high-standard bilateral investment treaty with the United States that
would include all stages of investment and all sectors based on a negative list
approach;
• Submit a new and improved offer to join the WTO GPA by the end of 2013 that
would include lowered thresholds and increased coverage of sub-central entities;
• Establish a pilot Free Trade Zone program in Shanghai which would enable
foreign enterprises to compete on the same terms as Chinese firms across a wide
range of services sectors;
• Affirmed its support for concluding negotiations by 2014 for new comprehensive
international agreement setting guidelines on export financing by the major
providers of export credits that would be consistent with international best
practices;
• Eliminate preferential input pricing for energy, land, and water given to SOEs
and develop a market-based mechanism for determining;
• Strengthening financial regulatory cooperation; and
• Continue to implement polices to boost private consumption such as raising
social security and employment spending by two percentage points of total fiscal
spending by the end of 2015.
Some analysts have argued that the S&ED structure should be reformed. For example, a report by
the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) argues that ceremony has come to
overwhelm substance in the S&ED, that pressure for short-term deliverables at each event has
detracted from the dialogue’s objective of fostering long-term strategic cooperation, and that the
structure of the S&ED has undermined the efforts of individual agencies to work on critical
elements of the relationship.171 Others have complained about the lack of benchmarks in the
S&ED process to evaluate outcomes of China’s commitments. Others complain that the S&ED
process often fails to achieve results on major issues. For example, at the July 2013 S&ED, China
made no specific commitment on halting cyber theft.
Concluding Observations
China’s rapid economic growth and emergence as a major economic power have given China’s
leadership increased confidence in its economic model. The key challenges for the United States
are to convince China that (1) it has a stake in maintaining the international trading system, which

171 CSIS, Crafting Asia Economic Strategy in 2013, January 28, 2013, at http://csis.org/publication/crafting-asia-
economic-strategy-2013.
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is largely responsible for its economic rise, and to take a more active leadership role in
maintaining that system; and (2) further economic and trade reforms are the surest way for China
to expand and modernize its economy. For example, by boosting domestic spending and allowing
its currency to appreciate, China would likely import more, which would help speed economic
recovery in other countries, promote more stable and balanced economic growth in China, and
lessen trade protectionist pressures around the world. Improving IPR protection in China and
providing nondiscriminatory treatment to foreign IP firms would likely foster greater innovation
in China and attract more FDI in high technology than has occurred under current policies.
Lowering trade barriers on imports would increase competition in China, lower costs for
consumers, and boost economic efficiency. Some observers contend that reformist-minded
officials in China will continue to push for greater free-market reforms, while others argue that
vested interests in China (such as SOEs and export-oriented firms) who benefit from the status-
quo will make further economic reforms more difficult to realize.
There are a number of views in the United States over how to more effectively address
commercial disputes with China:
• Take a more aggressive stand against China, such as increasing the number of
dispute settlement cases brought against China in the WTO, threatening to
impose trade sanctions against China unless it addresses policies (such as IPR
theft) that hurt U.S. economic interests, and making greater use of U.S. trade
remedy laws (such as anti-dumping and countervailing measures) to address
China’s “unfair” trade practices.
• Intensify negotiations through existing high-level bilateral dialogues, such as the
U.S.-China S&ED, which was established to discuss long-term challenges in the
relationship. In addition, seek to complete ongoing U.S. negotiations with China
to reach a high-standard BIT, as well as to finalize negotiations in the WTO
toward achieving China’s accession to the GPA. Continue to encourage China to
implement comprehensive economic reforms, such as diminishing the role of the
state in the economy and implementing policies to boost domestic consumption.
• Encourage China to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations and/or
seek to negotiate a bilateral a free trade agreement (FTA) with China that would
require it to significantly improve IPR protection, lower trade and FDI barriers,
and adopt new disciplines on the treatment of SOEs.172

Author Contact Information

Wayne M. Morrison

Specialist in Asian Trade and Finance
wmorrison@crs.loc.gov, 7-7767


172 The TPP is a proposed regional free trade agreement among 12 countries, including Australia, Brunei, Canada,
Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States, and Vietnam.
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