{ "id": "R46304", "type": "CRS Report", "typeId": "R", "number": "R46304", "active": true, "source": "CRSReports.Congress.gov, EveryCRSReport.com", "versions": [ { "source_dir": "crsreports.congress.gov", "title": "COVID-19: China Medical Supply Chains and Broader Trade Issues", "retrieved": "2021-01-19T04:03:30.298490", "id": "R46304_5_2020-12-23", "formats": [ { "filename": "files/2020-12-23_R46304_1c85c8c7f05ed4c55be266fc66640dcabd7b61bf.pdf", "format": "PDF", "url": "https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R46304/5", "sha1": "1c85c8c7f05ed4c55be266fc66640dcabd7b61bf" }, { "format": "HTML", "filename": "files/2020-12-23_R46304_1c85c8c7f05ed4c55be266fc66640dcabd7b61bf.html" } ], "date": "2020-12-23", "summary": null, "source": "CRSReports.Congress.gov", "typeId": "R", "active": true, "sourceLink": "https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/details?prodcode=R46304", "type": "CRS Report" }, { "source_dir": "crsreports.congress.gov", "title": "COVID-19: China Medical Supply Chains and Broader Trade Issues", "retrieved": "2021-01-19T04:03:30.296932", "id": "R46304_3_2020-10-08", "formats": [ { "filename": "files/2020-10-08_R46304_5c8d74f56fb8c28e4ef2e5b0ed4932dd0e5761d9.pdf", "format": "PDF", "url": "https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R46304/3", "sha1": "5c8d74f56fb8c28e4ef2e5b0ed4932dd0e5761d9" }, { "format": "HTML", "filename": "files/2020-10-08_R46304_5c8d74f56fb8c28e4ef2e5b0ed4932dd0e5761d9.html" } ], "date": "2020-10-08", "summary": null, "source": "CRSReports.Congress.gov", "typeId": "R", "active": true, "sourceLink": "https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/details?prodcode=R46304", "type": "CRS Report" }, { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 621989, "date": "2020-04-06", "retrieved": "2020-04-11T23:07:11.855756", "title": "COVID-19: China Medical Supply Chains and Broader Trade Issues", "summary": "The outbreak of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), first in China, and then globally, including in the United States, is drawing attention to the ways in which the U.S. economy depends on manufacturing and supply chains based in China. This report aims to assess current developments and identify immediate and longer range China trade issues for Congress.\nAn area of particular concern to Congress is U.S. shortages in medical supplies\u2014including personal protective equipment (PPE) and pharmaceuticals\u2014as the United States steps up efforts to contain COVID-19 with limited domestic stockpiles and insufficient U.S. industrial capacity. Because of China\u2019s role as a global supplier of PPE, medical devices, antibiotics, and active pharmaceutical ingredients, reduced export from China have led to shortages of critical medical supplies in the United States. Exacerbating the situation, in early February 2020, the Chinese government nationalized control of the production and distribution of medical supplies in China\u2014directing all production for domestic use\u2014and directed the bureaucracy and Chinese industry to secure supplies from the global market. Now apparently past the peak of its COVID-19 outbreak, the Chinese government may selectively release some medical supplies for overseas delivery, with designated countries selected, according to political calculations.\nCongress has enacted legislation to better understand and address U.S. medical supply chain dependencies, including P.L. 116-136, The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, that includes several provisions to \nexpand drug shortage reporting requirements; \nrequire certain drug manufacturers to draw up risk management plans; \nrequire the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to maintain a public list of medical devices that are determined to be in shortage; and \ndirect the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine to conduct a study of pharmaceutical supply chain security. \nOther potential considerations for Congress include whether and how to incentivize additional production of health supplies, diversify production, address other supply chain dependencies (e.g., microelectronics), fill information and data gaps, and promote U.S. leadership on global health and trade issues.\nThe crisis that has emerged for the U.S. economy is defined, in large part, by a collapse of critical supply, as well as a sharp downturn in demand, first in China and now in the United States and globally. As China\u2019s manufacturing sector recovers, while the United States and other major global markets are grappling with COVID-19, some fear China could overwhelm overseas markets, as it ramps up export-led growth to compensate for the sharp downturn of exports in the first quarter of 2020, secure hard currency, and boost economic growth. China may also seek to make gains in strategic sectors\u2014such as telecommunications, microelectronics, and semiconductors\u2014in which the government undertook extraordinary measures to sustain research and development and manufacturing during the COVID-19 outbreak in China.", "type": "CRS Report", "typeId": "REPORTS", "active": true, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "https://www.crs.gov/Reports/R46304", "sha1": "eb118726bdc67022d3e8b0d09e76381b23e0a485", "filename": "files/20200406_R46304_eb118726bdc67022d3e8b0d09e76381b23e0a485.html", "images": { "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/7.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_3d65be7eeded8e66d88f757e309e0d8531dd7690.png", "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/3.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_8646cc650f958dbbf11217e4d1383382e6a6d111.png", "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/4.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_e822a24f80a6c32f18d767cdacb3c9114c11453b.png", "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/5.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_c162e8b5bbc11d4ad548a4adf720e31c8348bd60.png", "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/0.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_7d30ad8ce5027918c26ca276f1c0d1c6ab674eb5.png", "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/1.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_fdf4c6807645b51a758a48f8311f778d8c24e46c.png", "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/2.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_89859914c92d13a986be1b9ec35d708e6c62e4b3.png", "/products/Getimages/?directory=R/html/R46304_files&id=/6.png": "files/20200406_R46304_images_f636a1c581a421b92bb98964777337a23721f24b.png" } }, { "format": "PDF", "encoding": null, "url": "https://www.crs.gov/Reports/pdf/R46304", "sha1": "e2253330d53f6fc8b6394030e8e2eafd2035bfad", "filename": "files/20200406_R46304_e2253330d53f6fc8b6394030e8e2eafd2035bfad.pdf", "images": {} } ], "topics": [ { "source": "IBCList", "id": 4938, "name": "Major Economies & U.S. Trade Relations" } ] } ], "topics": [ "Asian Affairs", "Economic Policy", "Foreign Affairs", "Industry and Trade", "National Defense" ] }