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Taxpayers subsidizing Chinese communists
Boeing receives bulk of benefits from government loan program

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Editor's note: In collaboration with the hard-hitting Washington, D.C.,
newsweekly Human Events, WorldNetDaily brings you this special report every
Monday. Readers can subscribe to Human Events through WND's online store.
By Timothy P. Carney
© 2001 Human Events

Measured in terms of dollar values, more than half of the taxpayer-funded
Export-Import Bank's loans and long-term loan guarantees over the last two
years have gone to just one corporation – Boeing. Many of these loans and
loan guarantees have been used to subsidize transactions between Boeing and
the government of the People's Republic of China.

In the last two fiscal years, the Export-Import Bank has subsidized more than
50 Boeing sales, with loans and long-term loan guarantees totaling $8.9
billion in value.

The Export-Import Bank is a taxpayer-subsidized federal agency that
facilitates exports by direct loans to foreign buyers and by insuring or
guaranteeing private bank loans. In fiscal years 1999 and 2000, 59 percent of
the bank's loans and long-term guarantees were for Boeing sales. (Short-term
loan guarantees, not included in this figure, represent an additional, but
very minimal, part of the Export-Import Bank's activities. Some of these
short-term guarantees were also used to benefit Boeing.)

Not surprisingly, Boeing executives are now lobbying hard on Capitol Hill to
increase Export-Import Bank funding for fiscal year 2002 over the $633
million proposed by President Bush. Last year, President Clinton and the
Republican Congress gave the bank $863 million.

In requesting re-authorization and more money this year, Ex-Im has stressed
its aid to small businesses. In a choice of words worthy of a Clinton
appointee, outgoing Ex-Im Chairman and President James A. Harmon told a
congressional committee on May 2 that in fiscal year 2000, "86 percent of
Ex-Im Bank's transactions directly benefited small businesses." (Emphasis
added.) Ian Vasquez of the Cato Institute testified a few days later,
however, that, in terms of total dollars, 85.9 percent of Ex-Im's loans and
long-term guarantees went to just ten large companies, most with revenues in
the billions.

Boeing topped the list in fiscal 2000, receiving 42 percent of Export-Import
Bank loans and long-term loan guarantees. In fiscal 1999, the company
received a whopping 68 percent of the bank's loans and long-term guarantees.

Bechtel, a huge San Francisco-based engineering firm that is helping China
build nuclear power plants with the aid of Ex-Im loans, is the second largest
recipient of Export-Import Bank subsidies. Also in the top ten are Vice
President Dick Cheney's former employer, Halliburton, and General Electric,
which is moving jobs from Indiana to a new facility in Mexico built with aid
from the bank.

Boeing spokesman Cheryl Russell justified the large percentage of Ex-Im
financing used by Boeing by noting that Boeing is the No. 1 U.S. exporter of
manufactured goods. However, the airplane giant is 10 times more likely to
get Export-Import Bank financing than the typical U.S. exporter. Ex-Im
President Harmon testified that the bank finances 2 percent of all U.S.
exports. But Russell told Human Events that 20 percent of Boeing's overseas
sales get Ex-Im backing.

This, she says, is because "we don't sell products that you can go out and
buy for $100,000. We sell big-ticket items. Some of these sales will be the
largest purchase that our overseas customers have ever made." Accordingly,
she says, Boeing sales couldn't happen without Ex-Im backing.

But, then, why is Boeing getting taxpayer funding through the Export-Import
Bank to make sales to some the world's wealthiest regimes and biggest
national economies?

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the People's Republic of China, for example,
are two principal recipients of Export-Import Bank subsidies for the purchase
of Boeing aircraft. In 1999, a Saudi state-owned airline bought a fleet of
Boeing jets. The sale was financed with two loans worth a combined $1.9
billion that were guaranteed by U.S. taxpayers through the Export-Import
Bank. Ex-Im considered this a good risk to take on behalf of taxpayers in
order to boost Boeing's business.

But it means that people who are now paying exorbitant prices for gasoline
here in the United States, in part because the OPEC cartel to which Saudi
Arabia belongs is artificially suppressing the world supply of petroleum,
must also subsidize jumbo jets sold to the Saudi royal family.

Additionally, parts of those Boeing jets are actually made in China –
creating jobs there, not in the United States.

China, moreover, benefited directly from over $1.3 billion in Export-Import
Bank loan guarantees for its own Boeing purchases.

Considering all outstanding loans, guarantees and credit insurance
agreements, U.S. taxpayers now have a liability of $6.2 billion in the
Chinese regime thanks to the Export-Import Bank. Moreover, in the case of
Boeing sales, Ex-Im-guaranteed loans are usually made by a
Chinese-government-owned bank to a Chinese-government-owned airline. That
means that if a Chinese-government-owned airline defaults, U.S. taxpayers
would be forced to pay cash to the Chinese treasury on behalf of another
agency of the Chinese government.

This is the kind of "free trade" Boeing favors with Beijing, and that, some
argue, will help inspire freedom and free enterprise in China.

While Boeing has formed joint ventures and partnerships with the communist
government in Beijing to build aircraft parts and major elements of its jets
in China, all Ex-Im/Boeing/China transactions over the last two years have
involved the sale of Boeing jets. In 1998, every action the Export-Import
Bank took involving China was a subsidy of Boeing aircraft sales. Given that
elements of these aircraft are actually built in China by
Chinese-government-owned firms that have formed partnerships with Boeing, the
Export-Import Bank was, in part, subsidizing the government of China to buy
goods produced by the government of China at the expense of U.S. taxpayers.

Russell told Human Events that in the "last 10 years," Ex-Im has not had to
cover a single default on an airline sale.

But this also means that the Export-Import Bank has an interest in the
survival of the communist regime in Beijing – a regime that, according to the
State Department's latest "Country Report on Human Rights in China,"
routinely violates every human right recognized by our Constitution.

Boeing and Ex-Im spokesmen say that Boeing and the Chinese government are not
the only ones who benefit from these taxpayer-backed loans. First, they say,
the sales create jobs at Boeing. Second, they say, Boeing relies on other
U.S. companies, as subcontractors, to build parts of the plane. Boeing's
Russell says 60 percent of every Boeing airplane is made by non-Boeing
employees in the U.S.

Ex-Im requires that a majority of the parts being exported be made
domestically, but that means that up to 49 percent of a Boeing jet could be
made in China and China would still qualify for a U.S. Export-Import Bank
loan to buy the plane.

In 1995, Boeing's machinists union went on strike, protesting the company's
deal with the PRC because it required that a portion of the jets sold to
China be made with Chinese labor.

Bill Johnson, president of Machinists Local 751 said at the time: "This
export of technology and jobs is why we're on strike today. Boeing used to
make tail sections for the 737 in Wichita, but they moved the work to a
military factory in Xian, China. Is this Boeing's definition of free trade,
to have American workers compete with Chinese labor making $50 a month under
military discipline?"

Lawrence Clarkson of Boeing told the Seattle Times that the company's
strategy was to "do whatever it takes to remain the preferred supplier" of
jet aircraft for China.

Besides exporting jobs to the Chinese government, Boeing has been a major
lobbyist pushing for Normal Trade Relations status and World Trade
Organization membership for the Chinese communists. This is understandable,
considering that throughout the 1990s, China regularly accounted for 10
percent of Boeing's annual sales. Boeing reportedly has contracts worth more
than $6 billion there.

"The Boeing Co. has invested several hundred million dollars in
infrastructure development [in China] since 1993," the company says on its
website. "From 1993 to 2000, Boeing has instructed over 11,000 Chinese
aviation professionals, half of whom are pilots, maintenance and flight
operations people."

Xinhua, the official news agency of the Chinese government, reports: "[T]he
company has also cooperated with the Civil Aviation Administration of China
[CAAC] in pilot and crew training, improvement of China's air traffic control
systems, and has established a plane parts supply center in Beijing's capital
airport and field service bases in 16 Chinese cities."

Boeing gave $1,565,644 to candidates for federal office in the last election
cycle, approximately 60 percent going to Republicans. Looking toward the 2002
elections, Boeing has already given over $100,000 in soft money, mostly to
Republicans.


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