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Help US Companies Compete Against China on Technology Standards

The Chinese government has made leadership in international technology standards setting a key priority and it is working to give their firms an unfair leg up. While the U.S. government needs to defend the current voluntary, industry-led standards process in the face of this unfair competition, they also need to play a more active helping role. To do that Congress should modify the research and experimentation tax credit to allow international standard setting costs to qualify as expenditures for purpose of the credit. This will help U.S. firms better afford standards setting activities, helping them win over China.

But as Robert D. Atkinson and Martijn Rasser write in RealClearPolicy, standards are universal technical specifications agreed to usually by commercial actors, and sometimes involving governments and non-governmental organizations. The standard-setting process is a voluntary one, typically conducted on an international basis and led by industry. The spirit and intent of standard-setting is based on technological merit; the best technology is chosen as standard.

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