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Thousands Of U.S.
Aerospace Jobs Threaten By Airline
Industry By Bill Goldston |
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January 12, 2012 - A decision is expected soon on a
lawsuit filed by an airline industry trade group that
has the potential to cost thousands of U.S. aerospace
jobs and cripple the work of the U.S. Export-Import
Bank.
The Airlines for America (formerly Air Transport
Association Inc.), the industry trade organization for
the leading U.S. airlines, on November 16, 2011, filed
suit against the Export-Import Bank of the United States
(Ex-Im Bank) to halt a pending deal for $3.4 billion in
loan guarantees for the sale of dozens of Boeing
aircraft to Air India, saying that it fails to meet
statutory requirements, including consideration of the
impact on the U.S. airline industry and U.S. airline
jobs. Airlines for America asserts that the practices of Ex-Im Bank put U.S. carriers at a commercial disadvantage to foreign carriers. Specifically, the U.S. loan guarantees enable foreign carriers to obtain financing for aircraft at considerably lower rates, in some cases up to 50 percent lower, than what U.S. airlines must pay on the commercial market. |
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Airlines for America believes, having received more than $52 billion in U.S. taxpayer-funded loan guarantees over the last 10 years, foreign carriers have added capacity and gained market share. Lower financing costs have allowed foreign airlines to add 12 percent more capacity on U.S.-international routes than they would have without Ex-Im Bank guarantees. That overcapacity already has crowded out U.S. airlines and forced some carriers to cut routes. In addition to the lawsuit, Delta Airlines and Airlines for America are lobbying Congress to further restrict the bank?s activity by preventing any increase in the bank?s lending limit, which is currently set at $100 billion. ?Delta Airlines? CEO Richard Anderson, who also serves as the Chairman of the Board at Airlines for America, is promoting a campaign designed to benefit his airline at the expense of thousands of American jobs in dozens of states,? said IAM Headquarters Vice President Rich Michalski. The Export-Import Bank has a long history of supporting global trade deals that create U.S. jobs, particularly in the manufacturing, aerospace and heavy equipment sectors. The bank provides loan guarantees rather than direct loans and operates at no cost to U.S. taxpayers. |