Delta
Air CEO to back U.S. Export-Import Bank support to
Boeing: WSJ
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[June 24, 2014]
(Reuters) - Delta Air Lines
Inc's CEO is expected to support the U.S. Export-Import
Bank's assistance for sales of Boeing Co's widebody
jets, softening his stance at a time when critics are
mounting pressure to wind down the agency, the Wall
Street Journal reported.
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Delta Airlines has long argued that Ex-Im Bank financing allows
foreign competitors to buy Boeing planes on better credit terms than
it can obtain.
Delta's chief executive, Richard Anderson, plans to use a speech at
the Aero Club in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday to distance the company
from the calls of some Republicans and small-government advocates
for the bank to be wound down, the Journal said. (http://on.wsj.com/1wq8PT4)
According to a draft of the speech obtained by the Journal, Anderson
is expected to propose that the bank continue supporting sales of
Boeing widebody jets to a limited number of airlines that lack
alternative finance options, at least for as long as rival Airbus
Group NV enjoys similar backing from European export-credit
agencies.
"Delta's position in regard to the U.S. Export Import Bank hasn't
changed. Delta has consistently said reforms are needed to stop U.S.
taxpayer subsidized financing to our foreign competitors. The Bank
should not be reauthorized without significant reforms," Hiroko
Okada, a Delta spokeswoman, said in an email to Reuters.
There is a heightened scrutiny of the Ex-Im Bank as U.S. lawmakers
debate whether to reauthorize the 80-year-old agency. The newly
elected No. 2 Republican in the House of Representatives said on
Sunday he opposed renewing its charter.
Anderson is expected to emphasize in his speech that he doesn't want
Ex-Im to shut down, arguing that the bank has a vital role in
preserving U.S. manufacturing jobs, the daily reported.
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The Export-Import Bank backed $37.4 billion in exports in 2013.
Scrapping the bank would be a blow to Boeing, Caterpillar, General
Electric and other U.S. companies that rely on Ex-Im financing to
make sales in export markets where commercial lending is scarce.
(Reporting by Supriya Kurane in Bangalore; Editing by Gopakumar
Warrier)
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