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USA News Updated May 22, 2026

US Bill Targets Biotech Workforce to Counter China’s Rising Tech Edge

Two bipartisan lawmakers have introduced the Federal Biotechnology Workforce Assessment Act to evaluate the US government's biotechnology staffing needs. The legislation aims to maintain American leadership amid growing competition with China in emerging technologies like AI and biotech. It directs federal agencies to define and assess the biotechnology workforce, with a report to Congress for future hiring policies. The bill is part of a broader package to align federal research priorities with industry needs and address workforce gaps.

Biotech bill targets US edge over China

Washington, May 22

Two bipartisan lawmakers have introduced legislation seeking a federal assessment of America's biotechnology workforce as Washington sharpens its competition with China in critical emerging technologies.

Indian American Congressman Ro Khanna and Representative Rich McCormick on Thursday unveiled the Federal Biotechnology Workforce Assessment Act, aimed at evaluating whether the US government has enough skilled personnel to support the fast-growing biotechnology sector.

The legislation directs the Office of Personnel Management and Budget (OPM) to work with federal agencies to define the biotechnology workforce and assess current and future staffing needs for "bio-literate" employees across the government.

According to the lawmakers, the report would then be submitted to Congress to help shape future hiring and workforce development policies tied to biotechnology, artificial intelligence and advanced manufacturing.

The move comes amid growing concern in Washington that the United States could lose ground to China in emerging strategic sectors, including biotechnology, AI and quantum technologies.

The two Congressmen said the proposal follows an April 2025 assessment by the National Security Commission on Emerging Biotechnology (NSCEB), which concluded that a properly trained biotechnology workforce within the US government was essential for maintaining American leadership in emerging technologies.

The bill is part of a broader legislative package paired with McCormick's Biotechnology Workforce Alignment Act. Together, the measures are designed to identify workforce gaps and align federal research priorities with industry needs.

"Investments into bolstering America's federal biotechnology workforce will pave a path toward economic and scientific leadership for the US the 21st-century economy," Khanna said.

"I'm proud to lead the Federal Biotechnology Workforce Assessment Act alongside Rep. Rich McCormick (GA-06) that will assess America's preparedness to beat China in biotechnology discovery, invention, and entrepreneurship," he added.

McCormick framed the legislation as both an economic and national security initiative.

"America leads the world in biotechnology, and we need to keep it that way," McCormick said.

"Right now, we're making historic investments in biotech research and biomanufacturing. Still, we're leaving talent on the table because we don't have a coordinated strategy to build the workforce that industry actually needs," he said.

"This legislation fixes that. By aligning federal research priorities with real workforce development and getting a clear-eyed assessment of our gaps, we can ensure America stays ahead of our adversaries and continues to lead the world in the industries of tomorrow," McCormick added.

The lawmakers also stressed that the biotechnology workforce extends beyond laboratory scientists and researchers.

NSCEB Commissioner Paul Arcangeli described the biotechnology workforce as "a national security asset".

"These bills are an important step toward making sure the United States can stay ahead in scientific innovation, AI-enabled discovery, and advanced biomanufacturing," Arcangeli said.

"That pipeline has to be broad to include life scientists, but also industrial technicians, mechanics, pipefitters, and other skilled workers who will power the biotechnology economy of the future," he added.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Interesting timing. The article mentions "pipefitters and mechanics" being part of the biotech workforce—refreshing that they acknowledge skilled trades. In India, we often ignore industrial technicians in our science policies. Hope this bill creates real jobs and not just more committee meetings. America needs to stay competitive, but talent mobility should be global, not just nationalistic.

Vikram M

As someone working in biotech R&D, this feels like the US trying to protect its lead while China has already mastered mass production of biologics. India should take notes—we're a pharmacy to the world but missing the high-value innovation piece. The workforce assessment is pragmatic, but implementation matters more than another report. @RoKhanna, hope you remember your Indian roots while helping America compete.

James A

Finally a bipartisan bill that makes sense. The NSCEB report highlighted the workforce gap clearly. I work in pharma manufacturing in the US—our bioprocessing teams are short-staffed, and many new hires are from India. Nothing wrong with that, but we need homegrown pipeline too. Glad to see Congress thinking about technicians and not just PhDs.

Ananya R

A fair concern from the US side 🇮🇳 India should see this as a challenge and opportunity. We already have biotech clusters in Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune. The government should launch a similar workforce mapping exercise. Otherwise, China will overtake both US and India in next-gen bio-manufacturing. Also, why no mention of Indian researchers who might benefit from this bill?

Michael C

Another bill, another committee. I'm in biotech

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