March 27, 2023 Updated: March 28, 2023
The U.S. Capitol
building in Washington on Feb. 24, 2023. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)
The House of
Representatives has passed a bipartisan bill to strip communist China of its
international status as a developing nation, thereby limiting the regime’s
access to certain aid from the United States and other nations.
H.R. 1107, colloquially
referred to as the “PRC is Not a Developing Country Act,” aims to ensure that
China’s communist regime does not receive any of the preferential treatment in
international treaties, agreements, and organizations that might otherwise be
afforded to a developing nation.
The bill passed 415-0,
with 20 representatives not voting, and will now move to the Senate for
consideration.
“The Chinese Communist
Party is exploiting countries in need and receiving preferential treatment in
international treaties and organizations,” said bill co-sponsor Rep. Young Kim
(R-Calif.) in a statement. “We must take action to right this
wrong.”
“The PRC is Not a
Developing Country Act will ensure that the Chinese government is not getting
unfairly favorable treatment and influence at the expense of truly developing
nations. I will keep working to ensure that the CCP is held accountable, and
the United States and our values lead the way in supporting developing
countries around the world.”
Many international
organizations, including the World Trade Organization, provide developing
countries with special treatment to increase their economic opportunities.
To that end, the bill
would require the State Department to take actions to stop China from being
classified as a developing country by international organizations.
Likewise, the bill would
direct the State Department to advocate for international organizations to
change China’s status from a “developing country” to either an upper-middle
income country, high income country, or developed country.
“We cannot let the PRC
continue exploiting countries in need and taking unfair advantage of
international treaties and organizations,” Kim said in a prepared speech before the House.
“It is time that we give
developing countries a better chance at participating in programs meant for
them, and not meant for the world’s second largest economy.”
The bipartisan bill comes
amid renewed interest in Congress to counter and overcome malign influence by
the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which rules China as a single-party state.
It also comes amid
increased scrutiny of how the CCP regime exploits the rules-based international
order to its own benefit.
“China has a
well-established record of manipulating the international system to its benefit
and continues to use its historical status as a developing country to its
benefit,” said one report published earlier in the month by conservative think
tank the Heritage Foundation, “even though it is an economic power rivaling the
U.S.”
“China was a
low-income country, but it no longer is. The U.S. should take steps to ensure
that these benefits do not aid wealthy powerful nations like China, but target
poor nations as intended.”
No comments:
Post a Comment