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US Export-Import Bank proves to be bad target for assault on
US federal power

 


FOR the longest time the US Export-Import Bank has been the target of choice of people want to cut the US Federal Government down to size. Not because the Ex-IM Bank was so bad, but because its would-be destroyers felt they could get leftists on side to wholeheartedly back its destruction. It's role, after all, was to dispense soft loans to "corporate welfare bums" to use the parlance of the socialists.

One hesitates to say that the US Export-Import Bank is dead even now that a Republican controlled Congress refused to reauthorise it. One hesitates because we live in a world when deadlines are not things that signal the end of things, but only spawn new deadlines. Like bankruptcies, they are no longer the end of the story, but the turning the page into Chapter 11. So it is better than even money that the US Export-Import Bank will rise again.

In this we find ourselves with, rather than against, Al Hunt, an erstwhile leftist opponent, in joining him defending US Export-Import Bank, which subsidises American exports, but is also held up by congressional critics as an example of crony capitalism.

Among the companies lobbying to keep it going were General Electric, whose revenue was almost US$150 billion last year, with a profit of $15 billion.

 As liberal commentator Al Hunt points out, it was started by Franklin D Roosevelt, to provide direct loans and loan guarantees at low interest rates to foreign entities to buy American products. This makes it something of a lesser shrine of leftist in the Rooseveltian pantheon of secular deities. Many countries require its kind of financial support as a condition for importing American goods, and in many cases these are transactions that private banks won't undertake.

Most other nations have export credit agencies and some, especially China, are much more aggressive about selling abroad than the United States. Less dramatically Canada has Export Development Canada, which has yet to arouse controversy, but does the same thing in much the same way.

Last year, the US bank returned $675 million to the United States Treasury, mostly from the fees and interest it charges on loans. The deals it underwrote helped create more than 160,000 jobs. The default rate was less than one per cent. That is to say cronies tend to be reliable bill payers, unlike the needy darlings of the left, always wanting and needing things.

Critics contend that a big chunk of Ex-Im's lending goes to a few large companies such as Boeing and GE There is some truth to that, though US Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker says, "They're forgetting about the supply chains, the thousands of small- and medium-size companies that benefit." GE gets Ex-Im Bank assistance for projects such as locomotives for Angola or a water project for Cameroon, which are among the dozens of countries that require export credit funding, and where private financing wouldn't be available.

Which is all well and good. But while the destruction of the Ex-Im Bank was a bad choice, it is clear that many baroque and rococco extentions of the US bureaucracy can well do with a haircut. The problem is that many an ox will be gored in the process and the howls of protest will ring throughout the land. One only need to look at Greece, where a great many, perhaps most voters, believe that they deserve to live beyond their means if they democratically vote to do so.

Such notions must to be promptly disabused. So while the quest to cut the US Federal Government down to siize was a worthy one, the choice of a the Ex-Im Bank was not. It is too useful tool to discard.

 

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