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Ranjan Jindal
By Ranjan Jindal June 17, 2024

Biden puts tariffs on Chinese personal protective equipment to protect domestic manufacturing

Following the COVID-19 pandemic and a monkeypox outbreak, the Biden administration has worked to boost U.S. medical supplies. 

During his 2020 campaign, Biden promised to develop domestic manufacturing of medical equipment and rebuild the Strategic National Stockpile, which contains emergency medical supplies including vaccines and antibiotics. 

The finalized 2024 Department of Health and Human Services budget included $4.27 billion more funding for the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, which focuses on addressing U.S. public health emergencies by distributing resources and educating health officials on current challenges.

The funding included: 

  •  $995 million to the Strategic National Stockpile, which will help secure supplies to deliver emergency medical equipment quickly. 

  • A new long-term $400 million investment for pandemic preparedness and biodefense, specifically for "securing the domestic supply chain and developing countermeasures to counter high priority biological threats."

Biden issues Chinese tariffs to protect American supply

The Biden campaign also promised to increase U.S. medical equipment manufacturing and to address supply chain vulnerabilities. 

Tinglong Dai, Bernard T. Ferrari Professor of Business at Johns Hopkins University, was skeptical about how much the stockpile funding will help medical preparedness.

"You can't get out of a pandemic by stockpiling a lot of stuff — you have to make new stuff," Dai said. "To do that, we need to expand our domestic manufacturing capacity, or at least not lose our existing manufacturing capacity, which is unfortunately what is happening."

In 2023, the U.S. imported $640 million of Chinese personal protective equipment, such as gloves and masks. This year, to decrease reliance on global supply, the Biden administration levied new tariffs on Chinese personal protective equipment in May. Tariffs on syringes and needles will increase from 0% to 50%, and PPE including masks from 0%-7.5% to 25%. 

Dai said the tariffs are "overdue, but helpful," and can help the struggling domestic producers. 

However, because domestic medical device manufacturing has waned, the effect of these tariffs is unclear. American companies have less reason to produce with decreased demand after the pandemic. 

Dai believes the Biden administration should invest in "cutting-edge medical device research" and incentivize domestic production by "guaranteeing federal purchases at fair prices."

Biden announced a new initiative in March for agencies outlined in the Make PPE in America Act, which was part of the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill. 

The departments of Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs and Health and Human Services will hold workshops with domestic industry leaders to discuss demand and help them collaborate in production and innovation. 

This is an attempt to alleviate supply chain shortages and production coordination concerns from recent years. It is not yet clear whether this initiative will help American medical device manufacturing. 

"We've seen some incentives, but we just don't see concrete results," Dai said. "This lack of results will haunt us when we desperately need medical supplies when the next public health crisis hits."

Our rating

The Biden administration has invested heavily in stockpiles and has moved to bolster American manufacturing. But there is still work to be done for experts to feel prepared to face another pandemic. Therefore, we still rate this promise In the Works. 

RELATED: Biden Promise Tracker

Our Sources

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Fiscal Year 2024 Budget in Brief, October 26, 2023

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Strategic National Stockpile, accessed June 14, 2024

Council on Strategic Risks, The National Security Rationale for Stockpiling Key Pharmaceutical Ingredients - The Council on Strategic Risks, March 5, 2024

Reuters, US makers of masks and gloves get lifeline: higher tariffs on Chinese-made products, May 14, 2024

American Medical Manufacturers Association, President Biden Bolsters Domestic Manufacturing of Personal Protective Equipment with New Tariffs on China, May 14, 2024

White House, Biden Administration Publishes Notice to Industry About Demand Forecast for PPE in Support of the Make PPE in America Act, March 13, 2024

Health Industry Distributors Association, Supply Chain: A Look Ahead, March 2023

Email Interview with Tinglong Dai, PhD, Bernard T. Ferrari Professor of Business, Johns Hopkins University Carey Business School

Email Correspondence with The White House

Amy Sherman
By Amy Sherman January 17, 2023

Funding to rebuild health stockpiles has increased under Biden, but more work needed to meet promise

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit the United States in March 2020, it exposed the shortcomings of the nation's stockpile of emergency medical supplies.

The secretly located Strategic National Stockpile had supplies, but not enough to handle this particular pandemic. For example, there weren't sufficient N95 masks because they were used during the 2009 H1N1 outbreak.

While campaigning in 2020, Joe Biden promised to prepare the country for future pandemics by rebuilding critical health stockpiles, being able to boost manufacturing as needed and reviewing supply chain vulnerabilities. Biden has taken steps toward rebuilding the stockpile, but Congress has not provided long-term funding for it.

The Strategic National Stockpile was created in 1999 to prepare for chemical, radiological, biological or nuclear attacks. It's expanded to include tools to respond to terrorism attacks, hurricanes, the H1N1 flu and ebola. The stockpile contains supplies like N95 masks, medicines and devices that can be used when local and state supplies run out. 

Annual funding for the stockpile has risen since COVID-19 began

Annual appropriations for the stockpile have risen in recent years, from about $705 million in fiscal year 2021 to $845 million in 2022 and $965 million in 2023. But Congress has largely ignored Biden's requests for $88 billion over five years  to prepare for biological threats and other pandemics. 

In December, the White House said it had added more at-home COVID-19 tests to the stockpile. Federal officials said that they have "hundreds of millions of N95 masks, billions of gloves, tens of millions of gowns, and over 100,000 ventilators" ready to ship out to states. 

But Biden's promise is  not exclusively related to COVID-19. New pandemics or threats can emerge, such as monkeypox. Politico reported that before the 2022 monkeypox outbreak that officials knew for years they didn't have enough smallpox vaccine to combat monkeypox.

Ellen Carlin, a Georgetown University assistant research professor, said, "There's been movement and effort in the right direction, but it won't be enough if we were hit with another pandemic tomorrow, or even in the next couple of years."

The U.S. is already years behind where it needs to be for a stockpile that is comprehensively prepared for unknown threats, Carlin said. 

"I'm not seeing a marked pivot toward really building a no-holds-barred modern stockpile (whether physical or virtual) that can ready the nation for a quick and successful response to the next unknown virus domestically, nor one that is oriented toward helping to stop outbreaks in other nations from becoming pandemics to begin with," Carlin said.

Biden has tried to improve health care stockpiles 

The COVID-19 pandemic exposed weaknesses in the nation's supply chain, including its reliance on foreign manufacturing.

Biden vowed to be able to increase U.S. manufacturing during crisis, and to regularly review supply chain vulnerabilities. 

Biden in 2021 issued an executive order directing officials to identify supply chain risks and solutions for multiple industries, including health care.

The Biden administration has developed a National Strategy for a Resilient Public Health Supply Chain and elevated an office to a stand-alone agency to help handle emergencies including pandemics. 

But two supply chain experts told us that the Biden administration hasn't taken enough steps to increase domestic manufacturing. The U.S. needs a domestic manufacturing ecosystem that includes everything from new product innovation to job training to manufacturing to distribution, said Tinglong Dai, professor of operations management and business analytics at Johns Hopkins University's Carey Business School. 

A small number of U.S.-based personal protective equipment manufacturers emerged during the pandemic's first year, but they're facing "a survival crisis if they have not gone bankrupt," Dai said.

The federal government's supply chain response to monkeypox "contradicts any assumptions of progress made during the COVID-19 pandemic," in terms of our ability to respond to a surge in demand, Dai said. "I don't think the U.S. is any better off now than before in terms of being able to quickly make more supplies if we need to."

The Biden administration's solutions "are predominantly government-driven, and less about industry-driven solutions," said George Ball, an expert on supply chains and associate professor in Indiana University's Kelley School of Business. Making U.S. tax policy more attractive than overseas options will bring back manufacturing, Ball said. 

"Manufacturers respond moderately to government spending, but sustainable profitability is more likely when tax policies change," Ball said.

Our rating

Where does this leave Biden's promise to rebuild health stockpiles and be ready for crises? His administration has requested more funding for the Strategic National Stockpile, added supplies to combat COVID-19, and is trying to improve U.S. supply chains. But experts say more work is needed.

We will continue to monitor progress on this promise. For now, we rate it In the Works. 

RELATED: Joe Biden and manufacturing jobs: A closer look

RELATED: Is COVID-19 'under control' in the U.S.? Experts say yes

RELATED: All of the promises we are tracking on our Biden Promise Tracker

Our Sources

White House, American Pandemic Preparedness: Transforming Our Capabilities, September 2021

White House, Fact Sheet: Biden Administration Announces COVID-⁠19 Winter Preparedness Plan, Dec. 15, 2022

Administration for Strategic Response and Preparedness, ASPR Industrial Base Expansion Portfolio, January 2023

MSNBC, Transcript of Andrea Mitchell Reports, Dec. 13, 2022

CBS, Face the Nation, July 17, 2022

Politico, ​​Before monkeypox outbreak, U.S. officials knew for years they didn't have enough of key shot, Aug. 18, 2022

Center for Strategic and International Studies, Takeaways from President Biden's Supply Chain Plan for 2022, Feb. 28, 2022

National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine, Building Resilience into the Nation's Medical Product Supply Chains, 2022

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, HHS Strengthens Country's Preparedness for Health Emergencies, Announces Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR), July 22, 2022

PolitiFact, Fact-checking Jared Kushner's comments on the national stockpile, April 3, 2020

PolitiFact, Trump said the Obama admin left him a bare stockpile. Wrong, April 8, 2020

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Statement to PolitiFact, Jan. 11, 2023

Email interview, Ellen Carlin, assistant research professor Georgetown University, Jan. 9, 2023

Email interview, Jen Kates, senior vice president; director, global health & HIV policy at Kaiser Family Foundation, Jan. 12, 2023

Email interview, George Ball, associate professor in the operations and decision technologies department at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University, Jan. 13, 2023

Email interview, Tinglong Dai, Professor of Operations Management & Business Analytics at Johns Hopkins University Carey Business School, Jan. 17, 2023

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