
Image credit – FYI
Image credit – FYI
Negotiations to reconcile the House’s America COMPETES Act of 2022
The bills reflect broad bipartisan interest in improving U.S. capabilities in research and technology development relative to China and other competitor nations, and each includes $52 billion in direct funding for semiconductor R&D and manufacturing. However, the bills sharply diverge over matters such as how to shape a multiagency R&D push, how to build up regional R&D capacity, whether to expedite visas for technically skilled foreign citizens, and how to protect U.S.-funded research from exploitation by rival governments.
Lawmakers also attached a host of provisions unrelated to science policy to each bill, opening up debates over far-flung matters such as trade and environmental policy. Any final bill will require the support of at least 10 Republican senators to avoid a filibuster, which gives the Senate additional leverage in the negotiations.
Negotiators have been working behind closed doors since the 107-member conference committee tasked with reconciling the legislation held its first meeting
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said earlier this month that they are “narrowing”
“We expressed our belief that there is no reason that we should not pass this bill through Congress in July,” Pelosi and Schumer said in a statement
However, some Republicans reportedly
The semiconductor funding has put lawmakers under particular pressure to complete the bill, with some leaders in the industry warning
“Pass the damn bill and send it to me,” Biden said in May
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger testified at a March hearing on the case for semiconductor industry subsidies. (Image credit – Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee)
The semiconductor money would fund programs authorized in the CHIPS for America Act, which Congress passed in early 2021. Of the total, $39 billion is for manufacturing incentives and most of the remainder is for R&D initiatives, with almost all the money channeled through the Commerce Department.
Backers of the CHIPS Act have also advocated
The top Republican for tax policy in the House, Rep. Kevin Brady (R-TX), argued at the conference kickoff meeting that the legislation should not include tax provisions, especially any that favor a specific industry. Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), a lead advocate of the semiconductor tax credit, told FYI that he and Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) attempted to include it in the original legislation.
“We were told [the credit] wasn’t going to be feasible in the Senate when we passed the CHIPS Act, and so we opted for the emergency spending. But I still think in the long term it’s going to take a reliable source of support, and that probably means an investment tax credit, not just spending,” he said.
While the semiconductor funding is among the most consequential aspects of the bills, their R&D policy sections would also set ambitious targets for ramping up selected federal science agency budgets. Actually meeting those targets would still require Congress to supply the funding through the annual appropriations process.
Nearly three years ago, Schumer first floated
The bill the Senate ultimately passed
Meanwhile, the House Science Committee disagreed with the Senate focus on technology development and advanced a distinct vision
The committee ultimately produced bipartisan legislation that recommends Congress ramp up NSF’s annual budget to nearly $18 billion over five years, with the new directorate growing only to $3.4 billion. Over the same period it also recommends increasing the Office of Science budget from $7.5 billion to $11.1 billion and the NIST budget from about $1 billion to almost $1.8 billion.
The committee has argued its proposals reflect a deeper understanding of the agencies’ strengths and have broader support
The House ultimately made the committee’s legislation a central plank of the COMPETES Act, which it passed in February on a party-line vote, with Republicans primarily objecting to provisions not arising from the Science Committee.
Some senators have embraced aspects of the House’s vision, with leaders of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee introducing legislation for the DOE Office of Science that hews closely
Map depicting the 25 states and three U.S. territories eligible to participate in the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research. (Image credit – NSF)
Among other issues being negotiated, one of the most closely watched is the bills’ contrasting approaches to expanding the geographic distribution of federal R&D funding beyond its historical concentration in a handful of states.
USICA proposes to dramatically expand the Established Program for Competitive Research (EPSCoR), which funds projects in designated states and territories
Among the top proponents of the idea is Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS), a lead negotiator for the legislation, who has argued it was a decisive factor in securing Republican support for USICA. The idea also enjoys significant support from Democratic senators, 15 of whom joined 24 Republican senators to formally endorse it
Lawmakers from non-EPSCoR states have pushed back on the idea, with a bipartisan group of 18 senators and 76 representatives arguing it undercuts well-established institutions and unfairly excludes institutions in their states that would benefit from research capacity-building funds.
“Arbitrarily walling off a sizable percentage of a science agency’s budget from a sizable majority of the country’s research institutions would fundamentally reduce the entire nation’s scientific capacity and damage the research profiles of existing institutions,” they wrote
Consistent with this view, the COMPETES Act does not mandate a specific set-aside for EPSCoR and instead proposes creating location-agnostic programs for building research capacity at institutions outside the top-tier.
One compromise approach reportedly under consideration
Many Republican lawmakers have insisted that any major push to increase federal funding for R&D should be paired with new policies to prevent rival governments from exploiting the U.S. R&D system. Democrats have supported some measures proposed by Republicans but have generally advocated to narrow their scope to avoid chilling productive international collaborations.
For instance, both USICA and the COMPETES Act would bar federal science grantees from participating in talent recruitment programs
One exception to this dynamic is that there is strong bipartisan interest in creating a mechanism for blocking U.S. entities from investing in sensitive industries in “countries of concern.” A version of the proposal is included in the COMPETES Act and its backers are actively seeking to include it in the final legislation. A compromise proposal reportedly under development
Prior to passing the COMPETES Act, Democrats attached provisions that would exempt STEM doctoral graduates and some master’s degree graduates from numerical caps on employment-based visas, a move colloquially known as “stapling a green card” to diplomas.
Some Senate Republicans have said they are open to including
Asked for clarification by FYI, Grassley said he does not want to “establish the principle of doing immigration bills on other bills,” while noting he is open to creating fast-track visas for STEM graduates through separate immigration reform legislation. “I’ve changed my mind in the last 7, 8, 9 years on that whole issue. I didn’t want to give that just because they got degrees here, but I’ve changed my mind completely and I would open up the door,” he said.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), a leading advocate for the STEM immigration provisions, conceded