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Increase Tech Spending, Standards Body Focus, Experts Advise US Review Commission

The U.S. shouldn't address U.S. and Chinese trade tensions through decoupling, experts told the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. Instead, they recommended investing more heavily in technology research while pursuing more involvement at international standards bodies. “We need to…

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accept that this is going to go on for the long term,” said David Finkelstein, director of the China and Indo-Pacific security affairs division at CNA, a nonprofit research group. “It's just not enough to [only] confront. We have to be positioned to compete.” The panel is preparing a report on U.S.-China competition to present to Congress in November. Kristine Lee, U.S.-China relations expert at the Center for a New American Security, said “there are a number of important elections coming up” for international bodies. The Commerce Department recently issued a rule to allow U.S. companies to more easily participate in standards setting bodies in which Huawei is a member (see 2006170031). Others advocated Wednesday for more technology investment, especially as China continues to pursue advancements in 5G and artificial intelligence. “Let's put some money into experimental, high-quality AI network-driven infrastructure,” said Barry Naughton, chair of Chinese international affairs at the University of California-San Diego. The White House didn't comment Thursday,