U.S. House China competition bill heads to passage this week

Reuters

Published Feb 02, 2022 01:36PM ET

Updated Feb 02, 2022 02:50PM ET

By David Shepardson and Patricia Zengerle

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday advanced a multibillion-dollar bill aimed at increasing American competitiveness with China and boosting U.S. semiconductor manufacturing, teeing up the legislation for full approval by the chamber this week.

Democratic President Joe Biden's administration has been working to persuade Congress to approve the bill, which includes $52 billion to subsidize semiconductor manufacturing and research, as shortages of the key components used in autos and computers have been exacerbated by supply chain bottlenecks.

The Democratic-controlled House approved the rule for the "America Competes Act" by 219 to 203, largely along party lines. House aides said they expected a vote to pass the full measure on Friday, after considering a number of amendments.

The bill has several trade provisions and would also authorize $8 billion in U.S. contributions to the Green Climate Fund, established by the Paris Agreement to combat climate change, to help developing countries cope.

Republicans have proposed an amendment to strip that funding. Three Democrats want to boost it by $3 billion.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last week said the 2,900-page bill would "supercharge" investment in chips, boost U.S. manufacturing and research and advance American leadership as it confronts a rising China.

House Republicans complained that Democrats did not include them in drafting the legislation. They harshly criticized the climate provisions and said they could be used to help Beijing.

"Republicans are a strong 'no,'" said Representative Michael McCaul, the top House Foreign Affairs Committee Republican.

Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Cori Bush filed an amendment last week that would bar semiconductor companies receiving government subsidies from paying dividends or repurchasing company stock.

The Senate passed its own bill - the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act - by 68-32 in June. That legislation includes $52 billion to increase domestic semiconductor production and authorizes $190 billion for U.S. technology and research to compete with China.