The U.S. Trade Representative’s (USTR) investigation of China's trade practices relating to intellectual property rights (IPR) and forced technology transfer under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 provided the president with a third opportunity to wield his favorite trade policy tool -- tariffs. Earlier, he imposed them as safeguard measures on residential washers and solar cells; then he relied on a threat to national security argument to apply them to steel and aluminum imports and possibly to auto imports. In the Section 301 case, the president began with $50 billion of tariffs on Chinese imports and added $200 billion when China matched them with its own retaliatory tariffs. The tit-for-tac escalation of tariffs shows little signs of abating and no clear U.S. strategy. This post outlines the president’s Section 301 remedies and questions his use of tariffs to address the Chinese practices at the heart of the 301 case.
In March, USTR concluded its Section 301 investigation with an extensive report, in which it determined that Chinese policies and practices relating to technology transfer, intellectual property and innovation were unreasonable or discriminatory and harmed U.S. stakeholders. More specifically, it found that China:
- Uses joint venture requirements, foreign investment restrictions and administrative review and licensing processes to force or pressure U.S. firms to transfer technology;
- Uses discriminatory licensing processes to transfer technologies from U.S. companies to Chinese companies;
- Directs and facilitates investments and acquisitions that generate large-scale technology transfer; and
- Conducts and supports cyber intrusions into U.S. computer networks to gain access to valuable business information.
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