Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 163— - RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, COMPETITION, AND INNOVATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - MISCELLANEOUS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PROVISIONS › Part Part B— - National Science and Technology Strategy › § 19221
The President, through the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), must, within 90 days after each national security strategy is sent, work with relevant federal councils and agencies and consult outside partners to do three things: review that strategy and related plans, create or update a national plan to keep the United States competitive in science, technology, research, innovation, and technology transfer for national security, and send Congress a report of findings plus the new or updated strategy. This requirement ends 5 years after August 9, 2022. Key terms: "foreign country of concern" names China, North Korea, Russia, Iran, or others the State Department designates; "foreign entity of concern" means certain sanctioned, terror-listed, government-linked, or accused organizations or any entity Commerce finds harmful to U.S. security; "national security strategy" means the required national security strategy under federal law. The required report must assess U.S. efforts to keep leadership in critical technologies and stop rivals from gaining military or economic advantage; public and private investment; key economic security goals; global tech trends and threats; the national debt’s security effects; regional STEM and workforce needs; barriers for startups and key industries; how well federal labs and centers move tech to market; manufacturing, logistics, and supply chains; inclusion of underrepresented groups; public-private partnerships and how federal-funded intellectual property is used, especially whether it ends up in countries or companies of concern; and recommendations on recruiting people with critical skills, export controls, and other protections. The strategy must set specific agency objectives, tasks, metrics, research priorities, plans to protect federally funded research and technology, support investment and domestic manufacturing, work with allies, strengthen the industrial base, update burdensome rules, encourage industry partnerships, help keep federally funded IP commercialized in the United States and away from foreign entities of concern, and list extra resources or actions needed. OSTP must consult OMB so these priorities inform budget requests and, to the extent possible without harming national security, post the report online; a classified annex may be added if needed.
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42 U.S.C. § 19221
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73