Key facts
- Congress is considering strengthening foreign funding disclosure requirements for U.S. universities within the National Defense Authorization Act.
- Recent congressional investigations revealed hundreds of millions in U.S. taxpayer-funded research contributing to China's military and technological advancement.
- Current law requires reporting of foreign gifts and contracts over $250,000, but a 2019 enforcement push revealed billions in previously undisclosed funds.
- Proposed measures would lower the reporting threshold to $50,000 and mandate full disclosure for countries including China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea.
- The aim is to increase transparency into foreign influence and potential conflicts of interest without barring foreign students or legitimate academic exchange.
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is being considered by Congress as a vehicle to address concerns about foreign influence and funding within American universities, particularly from China. Recent congressional investigations have revealed that hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. taxpayer-funded research has contributed to China's military and technological advancement through university partnerships in sensitive fields like artificial intelligence and quantum technology.
Current regulations under Section 117 of the Higher Education Act require universities to report foreign gifts and contracts exceeding $250,000 from the same source annually. However, increased enforcement in 2019 led to the reporting of approximately $6.5 billion in previously undisclosed foreign funding. Further disclosures show around $405 million in university transactions linked to entities on U.S. government watchlists, including those on the Commerce Department's Entity List and the Defense Department's Section 1260H list.
Lawmakers are weighing proposals to strengthen these disclosure requirements within the defense bill. These potential measures include lowering the general reporting threshold to $50,000 and mandating full disclosure for transactions with countries designated as concerns, such as China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea. The aim is to provide Congress, federal agencies, universities, and the public with a clearer view of foreign money flowing into higher education, helping to identify potential conflicts of interest and security risks.
Proponents emphasize that these transparency measures are not intended to restrict foreign students or legitimate academic exchange, but rather to separate lawful collaboration from relationships that pose hidden risks. The focus is on disclosure to ensure that U.S. institutions can identify and scrutinize foreign influence, similar to how China's access to supply chains and sensitive technologies is already scrutinized.
