Research & Analysis

Beijing Expands Anti-Long-Arm Jurisdiction Toolkit
Member Exclusive

Beijing Expands Anti-Long-Arm Jurisdiction Toolkit

Just six days after issuing the Regulations on Industrial and Supply Chain Security (Doc. 834), China’s State Council released the Regulations on Countering Foreign States’ Improper Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (Doc. 835), another expansion of Beijing’s retaliatory toolkit. Unlike Doc. 834, which governs sectoral and commercial supply chain security and is triggered by a demonstrable harm or threat, Doc. 835 targets foreign legal pressure itself regardless of commercial impact and can therefore be invoked under a lower evidentiary threshold.

Publications

China Market Intelligence

China Market Intelligence

Member Exclusive
Short takes on policy and regulatory actions that impact the business environment.

See the articles

Washington Update

Washington Update

Member Exclusive
Weekly recaps of every noteworthy development in the US legislative and executive branches.

See the articles

Filters

Close

Filter By

Topic
Format
Publication
Date

through

49 Results Clear Filters

2914 Results

Tariff exclusions, social credit, and expensive flights to China

Tariff exclusions, social credit, and expensive flights to China

This week’s catchup is a bit of a mixed bag, with some news on tariff exclusions, a look at some standardization of China’s social credit system, and a status update on air travel to China. We get the details from

China Business Review (Archive Only)
What came out of the Phase One deal review?

What came out of the Phase One deal review?

After some confusion about whether talks were going to happen at all, Liu He, Robert Lighthizer, and Steve Mnuchin held a call about the Phase One deal. To get an update on this and the response from the Chinese side,

China Business Review (Archive Only)
What’s going on with the Phase One deal?

What’s going on with the Phase One deal?

Hot and cold rhetoric surrounding the Phase One deal has sent mixed signals about the future of the US-China trade relationship. With Phase One now officially in effect for six months, I spoke with our own USCBC analysts Jack Kamensky,

China Business Review (Archive Only)