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Export–Import Bank of the United States

The Export–Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) is the official export credit agency (ECA) of the United States federal government.[1][2] Operating as a wholly owned federal government corporation,[1] the bank "assists in financing and facilitating U.S. exports of goods and services",[1] particularly when private sector lenders are unable or unwilling to provide financing. Its current chairman and president, Reta Jo Lewis, was confirmed by the Senate on February 9, 2022.[3]

Export–Import Bank of the United States
Agency overview
FormedFebruary 2, 1934; 89 years ago (1934-02-02)
HeadquartersLafayette Building
Washington, D.C.
Employees370 (2018)
Agency executive
Websitewww.exim.gov

The Export-Import Bank was established in 1934 as the Export-Import Bank of Washington by an executive order of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Its stated goal was "to aid in financing and to facilitate exports and imports and the exchange of commodities between the United States and other Nations or the agencies or nationals thereof." The bank's first transaction was a $3.8 million loan to Cuba in 1935 for the purchase of U.S. silver ingots. In 1945, it was made an independent agency within the executive branch by Congress.

Under federal law, the EXIM must be reauthorized by Congress every four to five years.[4] Following a brief lapse in Congressional authorization on July 1, 2015,[5][6] which prevented the bank from engaging in new business,[7] it was reauthorized through September 2019 via the Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act of December 2015.[8] In December 2019, President Donald Trump signed the Export-Import Bank Extension into law as part of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020, which authorized the bank until December 31, 2026.[9]

Over its lifetime, the Export-Import Bank has helped finance several historic projects including the Pan-American Highway, the Burma Road, and post-WWII reconstruction. While supporters argue that the bank allows small and medium-sized business to participate in the global market, critics allege that it shows favoritism to large corporations and special interests.

Overview edit

 
US exports during 2006
 
Export–Import Bank of the United States Regional Export Centers

The Export–Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) is a government agency that provides a variety of tools intended to aid the export of American goods and services. The mission of the Bank is to create and sustain U.S. jobs by financing sales of U.S. exports to international buyers. EXIM equips U.S. exporters and their customers with tools such as buyer financing, export credit insurance, and access to working capital. Second, when U.S. exporters face foreign competition backed by other governments, EXIM provides buyer financing to match or counter the financing offered by almost 96 ECAs around the world. The Bank is chartered as a government corporation by the Congress of the United States; it was last chartered for a three-year term in 2012. The Charter details the Bank's authorities and limitations. Among them is the principle that EXIM does not compete with private sector lenders, but rather provides financing for transactions that would otherwise not occur because commercial lenders are either unable or unwilling to accept the political or commercial risk inherent in the deal.[10][11]

The EXIM's products are intended to assist export sales for any American export company regardless of size. The bank's charter provides that EXIM makes available "not less than 20%" of its lending authority to small businesses although they have often fallen short of the 20% threshold.[12][13] In fiscal year 2013 however, 76% of the value of loans and guarantees went to the top 10 recipients.[14]

Similar banks, known generally as export credit agencies (ECAs), are operated by 60 foreign countries.[15] As the United States is a member of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) they conduct their activities by obeying OECD rules and principles. The goal is to permit exporters in various countries to compete on the basis of the quality of their goods and services, not on preferential financing terms. ECAs of countries, which are not participants of the OECD, such as the China Exim Bank,[16] Ex-Im Bank of Russia, Brazil, and India, are not required by their governments to follow OECD rules.

Offices edit

The bank has offices in Chicago, Detroit, Minneapolis, New York, Miami, Atlanta, Houston, McKinney (Dallas), Orange County (California), San Diego, San Francisco and Seattle.

List of EXIM chairmen and presidents
List of EXIM directors

History edit

Early history (1934–1944) edit

EXIM was organized originally as a District of Columbia banking corporation by Executive Order 6581 from Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 2, 1934, under the name Export–Import Bank of Washington. The stated goal was "to aid in financing and to facilitate exports and imports and the exchange of commodities between the United States and other Nations or the agencies or nationals thereof", with the immediate goal of making loans to the USSR and Latin America. Roosevelt created a Second Export–Import Bank of Washington with Executive Order 6638 on March 9, 1934, with the specific goal of aiding trade with Cuba.[19] The Bank's first transaction was a $3.8 million loan to Cuba in 1935 for the purchase of U.S. silver ingots.[20] The First and Second Export–Import Banks were combined in 1936 when Congress transferred the obligations of the Second Export–Import Bank to the first.[21] Congress continued the bank as a government agency, using a series of laws between 1935 and 1943 to make it subordinate to various government departments.

Independent agency (1945–present) edit

Congress made the bank an independent agency on July 31, 1945, with the Export–Import Bank Act of 1945.[22] On March 13, 1968, further legislation changed the name to "Export–Import Bank of the United States".[23][24] EXIM became a self-sustaining (self-funding) agency in 2007, though the loans remain backed by the government.[25]

The Government Corporation Control Act of 1945[4] requires the Bank to be reauthorized by Congress every four to five years. Reauthorizations were approved in 1947, 1951, 1957, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1974, 1978, 1983, 1986, 1992, 1997, 2002, 2006, 2012, 2014, 2015, and 2019:

Bill name Date signed into law Bank authorized until
S. 3938 December 20, 2006 May 30, 2012[26]
H.R. 2072 May 30, 2012[26] September 30, 2014[26]
H.J.Res. 124 September 19, 2014[27][28] June 30, 2015[27]
H.R. 22 December 4, 2015[29] September 30, 2019[30]
H.R. 1865 December 20, 2019[31][32] December 31, 2026[33]

It was last chartered for a three-year term in 2012 and in September 2014 was extended through June 30, 2015. Congressional authorization for the bank lapsed as of July 1, 2015.[5][6] As a result, the bank could not engage in new business, but it continued to manage its existing loan portfolio.[7] Five months later, after the successful employment of the rarely used discharge petition procedure in the House of Representatives, Congress reauthorized the bank until September 2019 via the Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act signed into law on December 4, 2015, by President Barack Obama.[8] In December 2019, President Donald Trump signed the Export-Import Bank Extension into law as part of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (P.L. 116–94) which authorized the bank until December 31, 2026.[9]

Projects assisted edit

Pan-American Highway edit

The Pan-American Highway runs from Alaska to Chile through 14 countries with important transportation links to nearly all of continental Latin America. The highway was constructed beginning in 1936 with the last phase complete in 1980.[34]

EXIM Bank credits and loans supported construction of the Pan-American Highway in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Chile.[35] In Paraguay, Argentina, and Bolivia EXIM supported construction of highway spurs connected to the Pan-American Highway.[36] EXIM approved twenty credits to U.S. companies including Caterpillar, Koehring Co., Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing, The Galion Iron Works, and Thew Shovel to help build the highway.[37]

Burma Road edit

Constructed between 1937 and 1938, the 717-mile Burma Road links Lashio in present-day Myanmar (previously Burma) to Kunming in Yunnan Province, China.[38] Construction of the road began in 1937 at the start of the second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945). With Japan able to control port access in China and most of Southeast Asia, the Chinese built a road that would allow transportation of men and goods from a railhead at Rangoon that had access to Burma's ports. From 1939 to 1942 the Burma Road served as a lifeline for military goods and support in the fight against the Japanese in the Far East.

The $25 million credit approved by EXIM in December 1938 was crucial in ensuring that the supply route remained open by providing the transportation vehicles and support material to operate the new road and by providing China with purchasing power during WWII. An additional $20 million to the Universal Trading Corporation was approved in 1940.[39] A 1939 journal article in Foreign Affairs noted that China used part of the $25 million to purchase 2,000 three-ton trucks from Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors.[40]

Post-WWII reconstruction and the Marshall Plan edit

EXIM played a critical role during the years between the end of Lend-Lease (September 1945) and the beginning of the Marshall Plan and the World Bank's first authorizations (May 1947 – 1948). At the end of WWII, it was recognized that the U.S. did not have a credit facility capable of handling the demand that would result from the cessation of hostilities. One of the major rationales behind the Export–Import Bank Act of 1945, the basis of EXIM's current charter document, was the necessity to dramatically increase EXIM's lending capacity to adequately respond to Europe's post-war reconstruction needs. The 1945 EXIM Annual Report predicated EXIM's role in the immediate post-WWII period: "the Export–Import Bank was to be the principal source of long-term dollar loans for an extended period of time." This assertion was based on the lack of interest by private capital in lending to foreign government buyers and delays in ratification of the Articles of Agreement for the International Monetary Fund and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.[41] The Export–Import Bank Act of 1945 increased lending authority from $750 million to $3.5 billion, almost a fourfold increase to help address these shortfalls.[42]

In 1945 and 1946 credit was offered to France, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, the Netherlands, Turkey, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Italy, Ethiopia, Greece, Poland and Austria to purchase equipment, facilities, and services from the United States. The financing was designed to aid reconstruction of the nations and to repair their import and export capability through the purchase of new machinery, currency exchange, and improvements and repairs to infrastructure and transportation systems.[43]

When the Marshall Plan was initiated in 1948, EXIM concentrated its lending on non-Economic Recovery Act nations in North and South America.[44]

First credits to post-Soviet nations edit

When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 and the USSR was dissolved in 1991, U.S. companies were able to conduct business freely with Eastern Europe for the first time since the end of WWII. EXIM was one of the first financial institutions to provide financing for exports to the former Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia and the newly independent nations that emerged after 1991. In 1990, President George H.W. Bush waived the Jackson–Vanik amendment, which had officially blocked normal trade relations with communist countries since 1975. This waiver permitted all E guarantee and insurance programs to U.S. companies wanting to do business with the USSR and several former communist countries.[45]

EXIM resumed business with Czechoslovakia in March 1990. On January 25, 1991, EXIM approved the first transaction to Czechoslovakia since 1947. Financed by First Interstate Bank of Los Angeles, CA, the guarantee allowed Tonak Hat Company[46] to purchase computers from a U.S. company, Digital Equipment Corporation of Massachusetts. Since 1991, EXIM has supported exports to 25 of the nations that emerged after the fall of the Iron Curtain.[47]

First credit to India edit

After a visit to India in January 2015, President Obama announced that the EXIM will finance $1 billion of exports of 'Made-in-America' products, the U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corporation will lend $1 billion to small- and medium-sized rural enterprises and the U.S. Trade and Development Agency will commit $2 billion for renewable energy. Obama and Modi agreed on issues that had previously stopped U.S. companies from establishing nuclear reactors in India.[48]

Support edit

Supporters say that the bank emphasizes trying to help small and medium size businesses expand their exporting capabilities. CEO and president of the National Association of Manufacturers Jay Timmons stated: "The EXIM plays a critical role in manufacturer's ability to export to new markets and keep up with growing global competition. The Bank assists nearly 290,000 export related jobs and each year is helping more and more small and medium-sized manufacturers grow their businesses and hire new workers. More than 85% of all EXIM transactions directly benefit small business exporters—the economic engine that powers our economy and job creation."[49]

When Obama was campaigning for president in 2008, he stated that the Export–Import Bank had "become little more than a fund for corporate welfare."[50] During the Bank's reauthorization struggle, May 2012, he said that the Export–Import Bank plays a very important role in reaching his goal of doubling exports over 5 years. At the reauthorization ceremony Obama stated: "We're helping thousands of businesses sell more of their products and services overseas, in the process, we're helping them create jobs here at home. And we're doing it at no extra cost to the taxpayer." [51]

Criticism edit

Special interests-based criticism edit

The Bank has been criticized for favoring special interests. These interests have included corporations such as Boeing or Enron as well as foreign governments and nationals, such as a 1996 $120 million low-interest loan to the China National Nuclear Power Corporation (CNNP) supporting the export of US-made technology.[52]

More recently the bank authorized $33.6 million in loans to Abengoa, a Spanish Green energy company on which former Governor Bill Richardson is a member of the board of directors. As of May 2014, Richardson was also listed as a member of the advisory committee of the Export–Import Bank.[53]

Boeing edit

65% of loan guarantees over 2007 and 2008 went to companies purchasing Boeing aircraft.[54] In 2012, the Bank's loan guarantees became even more skewed, with 82 percent of them going to Boeing customers.[55]

However, EXIM supporters note that Boeing is the largest exporter in the United States by dollar value,[56] and must be protected in their capacity as the only remaining comprehensive U.S. commercial aircraft manufacturer. Support of Boeing is seen as particularly critical as Comac, China's state-owned and heavily subsidized commercial aircraft manufacturer, aggressively seeks to leech market share from both Boeing and Airbus. Also important to note, Boeing is not the only US aircraft manufacturer previously supported by EXIM. During the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, EXIM supported other US aviation manufacturers such as the Douglas Aircraft Company, the Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Company (Convair), and the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation,[57] before the firms were driven out of existence by competition or acquisition.

The cost and effectiveness of the bank are controversial. While the EXIM projects will earn the U.S. government an average of $1.4 billion per year for the next 10 years, an alternative analysis from the Congressional Budget Office found that the program would lose about $2 billion during the same period, partly due to discrepancies in how credit risk is accounted for. Both conservative and liberal groups have been critical of the bank, and some continue to demand its termination.[citation needed]

Budget-based criticism edit

Critics also purport the existence of "unseen" costs created by the Export–Import Bank's subsidies, including artificially raising the price of new airplanes and potentially adding $2 billion to the deficit over the next decade.[58]

Forbes contributor Doug Bandow wrote in 2014, "The agency piously claims not to provide subsidies since it charges fees and interest, but it exists only to offer business a better credit deal than is available in the marketplace. The Bank uses its ability to borrow at government rates to provide loans, loan guarantees, working capital guarantees, and loan insurance."[59]

If the normal principles of economics or finance are applied, then it is seen by critics as unlikely that the bank has profited and most unlikely that it makes the annual profit that it has stated, because the bank's calculations of profit fail to make proper adjustment for risk.[60][61][62][63][64][65] Best practice in finance and economics, as well as in banking, is to adjust the cost of capital or discount rate to reflect risk,[66] or, equivalently, to use a fair-value estimate. On this basis the criticism is that "This simple approach—which is based on a method outlined in a National Bureau of Economic Research paper by Debbie Lucas of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology—suggests that the EXIM's long-term loan guarantee program actually provides guarantees at a loss for taxpayers, not a profit. Moreover, this analysis reveals that the EXIM's loan guarantees are made at sufficiently generous terms that borrowers receive subsidies of about 1% of the amount borrowed. That translates into a $200 million cost for taxpayers on the $21 billion in loans that the bank will make in 2012."[67]

Environment-based criticism edit

In February 2009, the EXIM settled a seven-year-long legal proceeding brought by Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace together with the cities of Boulder, Arcata and Oakland. The plaintiffs said that the EXIM and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation provided financial assistance to oil and other fossil fuel projects without first evaluating the projects' climate change impacts.[68] In 2005, the plaintiffs were granted legal standing to sue. This is considered a landmark decision because it is the first time that a federal court has specifically granted legal standing for a lawsuit exclusively challenging the federal government's failure to evaluate the impacts of its actions on the Earth's climate and U.S. citizens.[69] In its settlement agreement, the EXIM agrees to evaluate the carbon dioxide emissions as part of its determination for qualification for a project.[70][71][72] However, EXIM fossil fuel financing and associated greenhouse gas emissions grew swiftly after the settlement agreement, coinciding with Chairman Hochberg's tenure. Between 2009 and 2012, EXIM fossil fuel financing grew from $2.56 billion to nearly $10 billion.[73][74]

Environmental groups in 2010 said that the EXIM was on a "fossil fuel binge", which "makes a mockery" of President Obama's stated commitment to phase out fossil fuel subsidies.[75][76] In December 2009, EXIM Directors approved $3 billion in financing for the ExxonMobil-led Papua New Guinea Liquid Gas project in December 2009.[77] The project has reportedly caused violence and in April 2012, the Papua New Guinea government ordered in troops to quell opposition from villagers after a landslide linked to a quarry that had been used by the project killed an estimated 25 people.[78][79]

In 2010, environmental groups criticized the EXIM Directors for approving $917 million worth of financing for the 3,960 megawatt coal-fired Sasan Ultra Mega Power Project in India after initially rejecting the project on climate change grounds. Environmental groups say that in reversing the decision the agency's Chairman, Fred Hochberg and Board of Directors "caved in" to political pressure from Wisconsin politicians.[80][81][82][83][84] In 2011, several environmental groups protested at Export–Import Bank headquarters, unsuccessfully urging Chairman Hochberg and Board of Directors to reject $805 million in financing for the 4,800 megawatt Kusile coal-fired power plant in South Africa,[85] which environmental groups say is the largest carbon emitting project in the agency's history, which will not alleviate poverty but will emit excessive local air pollution, which health experts say causes damage the respiratory, cardiovascular, and nervous systems and deaths resulting from heart disease, cancer, stroke, and chronic lower respiratory diseases.[86][87][88][89] EXIM's 2011 announcement of support for Kusile asserted claims of environmental advancements including that “Kusile will be the first coal-fired power plant in South Africa to include sulfur dioxide scrubbers.”[90]  However, in 2023 the South African energy utility Eskom proposed to circumvent the Kusile sulfur dioxide pollution control system, which the Helsinki-based Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air estimates could result in 680 deaths.[91]

In December 2012, the Center for Biological Diversity, Pacific Environment, and Turtle Island Restoration Network filed a lawsuit against Chairman Hochberg and the EXIM for the agency's financing of Australia Pacific LNG's liquid natural gas projects inside the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area. The lawsuit alleged that EXIM financing for the projects violates U.S. environmental and cultural heritage laws.[92] Their amended lawsuit included EXIM's loan for the Australia Pacific LNG project and a $1.8 billion loan for the Queensland Curtis which together totaled $4.8 billion. In March 2016, a California federal judge ruled against the environmentalists arguing that the EXIM financing represented only 10% of the project which is backed by ConocoPhillips, Origin Energy Ltd. and Sinopec and rejecting the loan would not stop the project. The environmentalists appealed the decision.[93]

In 2019 Friends of the Earth (US) criticized EXIM President Kimberly A Reed for supporting the liquid natural gas (LNG) industry despite the lifecycle climate impacts of the fossil fuel, citing the U.S. government's Fourth National Climate Assessment finding that more frequent and extreme weather events are severely damaging the environment and the economy, while increasing harm to human health and loss of life. Friends of the Earth (US) also criticized EXIM for approving $5 billion in financing the Mozambique LNG project, citing the project's damage to the surrounding ecosystem (including to endangered species), displacement of local communities, and lack of economic benefits for local people.[94][95]

In May, 2023 EXIM Chair Reta Jo Lewis, Vice Chair Judith Pryor and Director Spencer Bachus voted to approve nearly $100 million in Export-Import Bank financing for an oil refinery expansion project in Indonesia (EXIM Director Owen Herrnstadt abstained).[35] Environmental groups criticize the approval as directly violating President Biden's commitments to end overseas fossil fuel financing, including at the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference.[37] The approval was also repudiated by the White House National Security Council, which stated the “decision does not reflect administration policy.”[39]

Criticism of green energy-based financings edit

Conversely the EXIM has also faced scrutiny for pursuing green energy projects. The EXIM provided $10 million of loan guarantees in 2011 to Solyndra, a company that ultimately became bankrupt.[96]

See also edit

References edit

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  72. ^ Order Denying Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment, in the case of Friends of the earth, Greenpeace, Inc. and City of Boulder Colorado versus Peter Watson (Overseas Private Investment Corporation) and Phillip Lerrill (Export-Import Bank of the United States), No. C 02-4106 JSW December 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, United States District Court for the Northern District of California, 2005.
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  85. ^ "Protestors: Why Lock the World into a Coal Powered Future". The Sierra Club.
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  87. ^ "Your Tax Dollars at Work: A Giant Coal Plant in South Africa". Mother Jones. December 9, 2009.
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  89. ^ March 14, 2011, Letter to EXIM Chairman Fred Hochberg from Physicians for Social Responsibility October 25, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  90. ^ "Ex Im Board Provides Preliminary Approval For $805 Million In Financing For Kusile Power Plant In South Africa | EXIM.GOV". www.exim.gov. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
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  92. ^ "Lawsuit Targets $3 Billion in U.S. Funding for Fossil Fuel Project in Australia's Great Barrier Reef" (Press release). Center for Biological Diversity. December 13, 2012.
  93. ^ Juan Carlos Rodriguez (May 27, 2016), "Enviros Appeal To 9th Circ. In Aussie LNG Loan Suit", Law360, New York, retrieved April 21, 2017
  94. ^ EXIM should not fund detrimental natural gas project in Mozambique, September 24, 2019
  95. ^ "$5 billion in EXIM financing for Mozambique LNG plant fuels U.S. contribution to climate emergency" (Press release). Friends of the Earth (US). August 22, 2019.
  96. ^ Mark Osborne. "Solyndra using EXIM loan guarantees system to support commercial rooftop projects". Retrieved May 22, 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Assessing Reform at the Export–Import Bank: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade of the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives, One Hundred Thirteenth Congress, First Session, June 13, 2013
  • Robert Higgs Against Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society. Oakland, Calif.: The Independent Institute, 2004
  • The Use of Environmental and Social Criteria in Export Credit Agencies' Practices May 29, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, by Markus Knigge et al. Published in 2003 by the

External links edit

export, import, bank, united, states, exim, official, export, credit, agency, united, states, federal, government, operating, wholly, owned, federal, government, corporation, bank, assists, financing, facilitating, exports, goods, services, particularly, when,. The Export Import Bank of the United States EXIM is the official export credit agency ECA of the United States federal government 1 2 Operating as a wholly owned federal government corporation 1 the bank assists in financing and facilitating U S exports of goods and services 1 particularly when private sector lenders are unable or unwilling to provide financing Its current chairman and president Reta Jo Lewis was confirmed by the Senate on February 9 2022 3 Export Import Bank of the United StatesAgency overviewFormedFebruary 2 1934 89 years ago 1934 02 02 HeadquartersLafayette BuildingWashington D C Employees370 2018 Agency executiveReta Jo Lewis President and Chair of the Board of DirectorsWebsitewww wbr exim wbr govThe Export Import Bank was established in 1934 as the Export Import Bank of Washington by an executive order of President Franklin D Roosevelt Its stated goal was to aid in financing and to facilitate exports and imports and the exchange of commodities between the United States and other Nations or the agencies or nationals thereof The bank s first transaction was a 3 8 million loan to Cuba in 1935 for the purchase of U S silver ingots In 1945 it was made an independent agency within the executive branch by Congress Under federal law the EXIM must be reauthorized by Congress every four to five years 4 Following a brief lapse in Congressional authorization on July 1 2015 5 6 which prevented the bank from engaging in new business 7 it was reauthorized through September 2019 via the Fixing America s Surface Transportation Act of December 2015 8 In December 2019 President Donald Trump signed the Export Import Bank Extension into law as part of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act 2020 which authorized the bank until December 31 2026 9 Over its lifetime the Export Import Bank has helped finance several historic projects including the Pan American Highway the Burma Road and post WWII reconstruction While supporters argue that the bank allows small and medium sized business to participate in the global market critics allege that it shows favoritism to large corporations and special interests Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Offices 2 History 2 1 Early history 1934 1944 2 2 Independent agency 1945 present 3 Projects assisted 3 1 Pan American Highway 3 2 Burma Road 3 3 Post WWII reconstruction and the Marshall Plan 3 4 First credits to post Soviet nations 3 5 First credit to India 4 Support 5 Criticism 5 1 Special interests based criticism 5 1 1 Boeing 5 2 Budget based criticism 5 3 Environment based criticism 5 4 Criticism of green energy based financings 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksOverview edit nbsp US exports during 2006 nbsp Export Import Bank of the United States Regional Export CentersThe Export Import Bank of the United States EXIM is a government agency that provides a variety of tools intended to aid the export of American goods and services The mission of the Bank is to create and sustain U S jobs by financing sales of U S exports to international buyers EXIM equips U S exporters and their customers with tools such as buyer financing export credit insurance and access to working capital Second when U S exporters face foreign competition backed by other governments EXIM provides buyer financing to match or counter the financing offered by almost 96 ECAs around the world The Bank is chartered as a government corporation by the Congress of the United States it was last chartered for a three year term in 2012 The Charter details the Bank s authorities and limitations Among them is the principle that EXIM does not compete with private sector lenders but rather provides financing for transactions that would otherwise not occur because commercial lenders are either unable or unwilling to accept the political or commercial risk inherent in the deal 10 11 The EXIM s products are intended to assist export sales for any American export company regardless of size The bank s charter provides that EXIM makes available not less than 20 of its lending authority to small businesses although they have often fallen short of the 20 threshold 12 13 In fiscal year 2013 however 76 of the value of loans and guarantees went to the top 10 recipients 14 Similar banks known generally as export credit agencies ECAs are operated by 60 foreign countries 15 As the United States is a member of the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD they conduct their activities by obeying OECD rules and principles The goal is to permit exporters in various countries to compete on the basis of the quality of their goods and services not on preferential financing terms ECAs of countries which are not participants of the OECD such as the China Exim Bank 16 Ex Im Bank of Russia Brazil and India are not required by their governments to follow OECD rules Offices edit The bank has offices in Chicago Detroit Minneapolis New York Miami Atlanta Houston McKinney Dallas Orange County California San Diego San Francisco and Seattle List of EXIM chairmen and presidentsR Walton Moore chairman 1934 1941 17 George N Peek President 1934 1935 17 R Walton Moore chairman 1934 1941 17 Warren Lee Pierson President 1936 1945 17 Wayne Chatfield Taylor President 1945 17 Jesse H Jones chairman 1941 1943 17 Leo T Crowley chairman 1943 1945 17 William McC Martin Jr chairman 1946 1949 17 Herbert E Gaston chairman 1949 1953 17 Glen E Edgerton chairman 1953 1953 17 Glen E Edgerton chairman 1954 1955 17 Lynn U Strambaugh Vice Chairman 1954 1960 17 Samuel C Waugh chairman 1955 1961 17 Tom Killefer Vice Chairman 1960 1962 17 Harold F Linder chairman 1961 1968 17 Walter C Sauer Vice Chairman 1962 1976 17 Henry Kearns chairman 1969 1973 17 William J Casey chairman 1974 1976 17 Stephen M DuBrul Jr chairman 1976 1977 17 Delio E Gianturco Vice Chairman 1976 1977 17 John L Moore Jr chairman 1977 1981 17 H K Allen Vice Chairman 1978 1981 17 William H Draper III chairman 1981 1986 17 Charles E Lord Vice Chairman 1982 1983 17 John A Bohn Jr Vice Chairman 1984 1986 17 John A Bohn Jr chairman 1986 1989 17 William F Ryan Vice Chairman 1986 1989 17 John D Macomber chairman 1989 1992 17 Eugene K Lawson Vice Chairman 1989 1993 17 Rita M Rodriguez Acting Chairman 1993 1993 17 Kenneth D Brody chairman 1993 1995 17 Martin A Kamarck Vice Chairman 1993 1996 17 Martin A Kamarck chairman 1996 1997 17 Rita M Rodriguez Acting Chairman 1997 1997 17 James A Harmon chairman 1997 2001 17 Jackie M Clegg Vice Chairman 1997 2001 17 John E Robson chairman 2001 2002 17 Eduardo Aguirre Vice Chairman 2001 2003 17 Philip Merrill chairman 2002 2005 17 April Foley Vice Chairman 2003 2005 17 James H Lambright chairman 2005 2009 17 Linda M Conlin Vice Chairman 2006 2009 17 Wanda Felton Vice Chairman 2011 2013 2014 2016 17 18 John A McAdams Acting Vice Chairman 2013 17 Fred P Hochberg chairman 2009 2017 17 Charles J Hall Acting Vice Chairman 2016 2017 Acting Chairman 2017 17 Scott Schloegel Acting Vice Chairman 2017 2019 17 Jeffrey Gerrish Acting Chairman 2018 2019 Kimberly A Reed chairman 2019 2021 17 Reta Jo Lewis chairman 2022 present 17 List of EXIM directorsWilliam McC Martin Jr 1945 1946 17 Clarence E Gauss 1946 1952 17 Wilson L Townsend 1952 1953 17 Hawthorne Arey 1949 1953 17 Hawthorne Arey 1954 1961 17 George A Blowers 1954 1961 17 Vance Brand 1954 1959 17 James S Bush 1959 1963 17 George Docking 1961 1964 17 Charles M Meriwether 1961 1965 17 Elizabeth S May 1964 1969 17 Hobart Taylor Jr 1965 1968 17 Tom Lilley 1965 1972 17 John C Clark 1969 1976 17 R Alex McCullough 1969 1977 17 Mitchell P Kobelinski 1973 1976 17 Margaret W Kahliff 1976 1982 17 Donald E Stingel 1977 1981 17 Thibaut de Saint Phalle 1977 1981 17 Richard W Heldridge 1982 1988 17 Rita M Rodriguez 1982 1999 17 James E Yonge 1982 1984 17 Richard H Hughes 1985 1985 17 Simon C Fireman 1986 1989 17 Richard Houseworth 1988 1991 17 Constance B Harriman 1991 1994 17 Cecil B Thompson 1991 1994 17 Maria Luisa Haley 1994 1999 17 Julie Belaga 1994 1999 17 Dan Renberg 1999 2003 17 Dorian Vanessa Weaver 1999 2003 17 Max Cleland 2003 2007 17 Linda M Conlin 2004 2006 17 J Joseph Grandmaison 2006 2009 17 Bijan R Kian 2006 2011 17 Diane Farrell 2007 2011 17 Larry Walther 2011 2013 17 Wanda Felton 2011 2013 2014 2016 17 Fred P Hochberg 2009 Present 17 Sean Robert Mulvaney 2011 2015 17 Patricia M Loui 2011 2015 17 Charles J Hall 2016 2017 17 History editEarly history 1934 1944 edit EXIM was organized originally as a District of Columbia banking corporation by Executive Order 6581 from Franklin D Roosevelt on February 2 1934 under the name Export Import Bank of Washington The stated goal was to aid in financing and to facilitate exports and imports and the exchange of commodities between the United States and other Nations or the agencies or nationals thereof with the immediate goal of making loans to the USSR and Latin America Roosevelt created a Second Export Import Bank of Washington with Executive Order 6638 on March 9 1934 with the specific goal of aiding trade with Cuba 19 The Bank s first transaction was a 3 8 million loan to Cuba in 1935 for the purchase of U S silver ingots 20 The First and Second Export Import Banks were combined in 1936 when Congress transferred the obligations of the Second Export Import Bank to the first 21 Congress continued the bank as a government agency using a series of laws between 1935 and 1943 to make it subordinate to various government departments Independent agency 1945 present edit Congress made the bank an independent agency on July 31 1945 with the Export Import Bank Act of 1945 22 On March 13 1968 further legislation changed the name to Export Import Bank of the United States 23 24 EXIM became a self sustaining self funding agency in 2007 though the loans remain backed by the government 25 The Government Corporation Control Act of 1945 4 requires the Bank to be reauthorized by Congress every four to five years Reauthorizations were approved in 1947 1951 1957 1963 1968 1971 1974 1978 1983 1986 1992 1997 2002 2006 2012 2014 2015 and 2019 Bill name Date signed into law Bank authorized untilS 3938 December 20 2006 May 30 2012 26 H R 2072 May 30 2012 26 September 30 2014 26 H J Res 124 September 19 2014 27 28 June 30 2015 27 H R 22 December 4 2015 29 September 30 2019 30 H R 1865 December 20 2019 31 32 December 31 2026 33 It was last chartered for a three year term in 2012 and in September 2014 was extended through June 30 2015 Congressional authorization for the bank lapsed as of July 1 2015 5 6 As a result the bank could not engage in new business but it continued to manage its existing loan portfolio 7 Five months later after the successful employment of the rarely used discharge petition procedure in the House of Representatives Congress reauthorized the bank until September 2019 via the Fixing America s Surface Transportation Act signed into law on December 4 2015 by President Barack Obama 8 In December 2019 President Donald Trump signed the Export Import Bank Extension into law as part of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act 2020 P L 116 94 which authorized the bank until December 31 2026 9 Projects assisted editPan American Highway edit The Pan American Highway runs from Alaska to Chile through 14 countries with important transportation links to nearly all of continental Latin America The highway was constructed beginning in 1936 with the last phase complete in 1980 34 EXIM Bank credits and loans supported construction of the Pan American Highway in Mexico Honduras Guatemala Nicaragua El Salvador Costa Rica Panama Colombia Ecuador Peru and Chile 35 In Paraguay Argentina and Bolivia EXIM supported construction of highway spurs connected to the Pan American Highway 36 EXIM approved twenty credits to U S companies including Caterpillar Koehring Co Allis Chalmers Manufacturing The Galion Iron Works and Thew Shovel to help build the highway 37 Burma Road edit Constructed between 1937 and 1938 the 717 mile Burma Road links Lashio in present day Myanmar previously Burma to Kunming in Yunnan Province China 38 Construction of the road began in 1937 at the start of the second Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 With Japan able to control port access in China and most of Southeast Asia the Chinese built a road that would allow transportation of men and goods from a railhead at Rangoon that had access to Burma s ports From 1939 to 1942 the Burma Road served as a lifeline for military goods and support in the fight against the Japanese in the Far East The 25 million credit approved by EXIM in December 1938 was crucial in ensuring that the supply route remained open by providing the transportation vehicles and support material to operate the new road and by providing China with purchasing power during WWII An additional 20 million to the Universal Trading Corporation was approved in 1940 39 A 1939 journal article in Foreign Affairs noted that China used part of the 25 million to purchase 2 000 three ton trucks from Ford Chrysler and General Motors 40 Post WWII reconstruction and the Marshall Plan edit EXIM played a critical role during the years between the end of Lend Lease September 1945 and the beginning of the Marshall Plan and the World Bank s first authorizations May 1947 1948 At the end of WWII it was recognized that the U S did not have a credit facility capable of handling the demand that would result from the cessation of hostilities One of the major rationales behind the Export Import Bank Act of 1945 the basis of EXIM s current charter document was the necessity to dramatically increase EXIM s lending capacity to adequately respond to Europe s post war reconstruction needs The 1945 EXIM Annual Report predicated EXIM s role in the immediate post WWII period the Export Import Bank was to be the principal source of long term dollar loans for an extended period of time This assertion was based on the lack of interest by private capital in lending to foreign government buyers and delays in ratification of the Articles of Agreement for the International Monetary Fund and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development 41 The Export Import Bank Act of 1945 increased lending authority from 750 million to 3 5 billion almost a fourfold increase to help address these shortfalls 42 In 1945 and 1946 credit was offered to France Denmark Norway Belgium the Netherlands Turkey Czechoslovakia Finland Italy Ethiopia Greece Poland and Austria to purchase equipment facilities and services from the United States The financing was designed to aid reconstruction of the nations and to repair their import and export capability through the purchase of new machinery currency exchange and improvements and repairs to infrastructure and transportation systems 43 When the Marshall Plan was initiated in 1948 EXIM concentrated its lending on non Economic Recovery Act nations in North and South America 44 First credits to post Soviet nations edit When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 and the USSR was dissolved in 1991 U S companies were able to conduct business freely with Eastern Europe for the first time since the end of WWII EXIM was one of the first financial institutions to provide financing for exports to the former Soviet Union Poland Czechoslovakia and the newly independent nations that emerged after 1991 In 1990 President George H W Bush waived the Jackson Vanik amendment which had officially blocked normal trade relations with communist countries since 1975 This waiver permitted all E guarantee and insurance programs to U S companies wanting to do business with the USSR and several former communist countries 45 EXIM resumed business with Czechoslovakia in March 1990 On January 25 1991 EXIM approved the first transaction to Czechoslovakia since 1947 Financed by First Interstate Bank of Los Angeles CA the guarantee allowed Tonak Hat Company 46 to purchase computers from a U S company Digital Equipment Corporation of Massachusetts Since 1991 EXIM has supported exports to 25 of the nations that emerged after the fall of the Iron Curtain 47 First credit to India edit After a visit to India in January 2015 President Obama announced that the EXIM will finance 1 billion of exports of Made in America products the U S Overseas Private Investment Corporation will lend 1 billion to small and medium sized rural enterprises and the U S Trade and Development Agency will commit 2 billion for renewable energy Obama and Modi agreed on issues that had previously stopped U S companies from establishing nuclear reactors in India 48 Support editSupporters say that the bank emphasizes trying to help small and medium size businesses expand their exporting capabilities CEO and president of the National Association of Manufacturers Jay Timmons stated The EXIM plays a critical role in manufacturer s ability to export to new markets and keep up with growing global competition The Bank assists nearly 290 000 export related jobs and each year is helping more and more small and medium sized manufacturers grow their businesses and hire new workers More than 85 of all EXIM transactions directly benefit small business exporters the economic engine that powers our economy and job creation 49 When Obama was campaigning for president in 2008 he stated that the Export Import Bank had become little more than a fund for corporate welfare 50 During the Bank s reauthorization struggle May 2012 he said that the Export Import Bank plays a very important role in reaching his goal of doubling exports over 5 years At the reauthorization ceremony Obama stated We re helping thousands of businesses sell more of their products and services overseas in the process we re helping them create jobs here at home And we re doing it at no extra cost to the taxpayer 51 Criticism editSpecial interests based criticism edit The Bank has been criticized for favoring special interests These interests have included corporations such as Boeing or Enron as well as foreign governments and nationals such as a 1996 120 million low interest loan to the China National Nuclear Power Corporation CNNP supporting the export of US made technology 52 More recently the bank authorized 33 6 million in loans to Abengoa a Spanish Green energy company on which former Governor Bill Richardson is a member of the board of directors As of May 2014 Richardson was also listed as a member of the advisory committee of the Export Import Bank 53 Boeing edit 65 of loan guarantees over 2007 and 2008 went to companies purchasing Boeing aircraft 54 In 2012 the Bank s loan guarantees became even more skewed with 82 percent of them going to Boeing customers 55 However EXIM supporters note that Boeing is the largest exporter in the United States by dollar value 56 and must be protected in their capacity as the only remaining comprehensive U S commercial aircraft manufacturer Support of Boeing is seen as particularly critical as Comac China s state owned and heavily subsidized commercial aircraft manufacturer aggressively seeks to leech market share from both Boeing and Airbus Also important to note Boeing is not the only US aircraft manufacturer previously supported by EXIM During the 1930s 40s and 50s EXIM supported other US aviation manufacturers such as the Douglas Aircraft Company the Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Company Convair and the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation 57 before the firms were driven out of existence by competition or acquisition The cost and effectiveness of the bank are controversial While the EXIM projects will earn the U S government an average of 1 4 billion per year for the next 10 years an alternative analysis from the Congressional Budget Office found that the program would lose about 2 billion during the same period partly due to discrepancies in how credit risk is accounted for Both conservative and liberal groups have been critical of the bank and some continue to demand its termination citation needed Budget based criticism edit Critics also purport the existence of unseen costs created by the Export Import Bank s subsidies including artificially raising the price of new airplanes and potentially adding 2 billion to the deficit over the next decade 58 Forbes contributor Doug Bandow wrote in 2014 The agency piously claims not to provide subsidies since it charges fees and interest but it exists only to offer business a better credit deal than is available in the marketplace The Bank uses its ability to borrow at government rates to provide loans loan guarantees working capital guarantees and loan insurance 59 If the normal principles of economics or finance are applied then it is seen by critics as unlikely that the bank has profited and most unlikely that it makes the annual profit that it has stated because the bank s calculations of profit fail to make proper adjustment for risk 60 61 62 63 64 65 Best practice in finance and economics as well as in banking is to adjust the cost of capital or discount rate to reflect risk 66 or equivalently to use a fair value estimate On this basis the criticism is that This simple approach which is based on a method outlined in a National Bureau of Economic Research paper by Debbie Lucas of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology suggests that the EXIM s long term loan guarantee program actually provides guarantees at a loss for taxpayers not a profit Moreover this analysis reveals that the EXIM s loan guarantees are made at sufficiently generous terms that borrowers receive subsidies of about 1 of the amount borrowed That translates into a 200 million cost for taxpayers on the 21 billion in loans that the bank will make in 2012 67 Environment based criticism edit In February 2009 the EXIM settled a seven year long legal proceeding brought by Friends of the Earth Greenpeace together with the cities of Boulder Arcata and Oakland The plaintiffs said that the EXIM and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation provided financial assistance to oil and other fossil fuel projects without first evaluating the projects climate change impacts 68 In 2005 the plaintiffs were granted legal standing to sue This is considered a landmark decision because it is the first time that a federal court has specifically granted legal standing for a lawsuit exclusively challenging the federal government s failure to evaluate the impacts of its actions on the Earth s climate and U S citizens 69 In its settlement agreement the EXIM agrees to evaluate the carbon dioxide emissions as part of its determination for qualification for a project 70 71 72 However EXIM fossil fuel financing and associated greenhouse gas emissions grew swiftly after the settlement agreement coinciding with Chairman Hochberg s tenure Between 2009 and 2012 EXIM fossil fuel financing grew from 2 56 billion to nearly 10 billion 73 74 Environmental groups in 2010 said that the EXIM was on a fossil fuel binge which makes a mockery of President Obama s stated commitment to phase out fossil fuel subsidies 75 76 In December 2009 EXIM Directors approved 3 billion in financing for the ExxonMobil led Papua New Guinea Liquid Gas project in December 2009 77 The project has reportedly caused violence and in April 2012 the Papua New Guinea government ordered in troops to quell opposition from villagers after a landslide linked to a quarry that had been used by the project killed an estimated 25 people 78 79 In 2010 environmental groups criticized the EXIM Directors for approving 917 million worth of financing for the 3 960 megawatt coal fired Sasan Ultra Mega Power Project in India after initially rejecting the project on climate change grounds Environmental groups say that in reversing the decision the agency s Chairman Fred Hochberg and Board of Directors caved in to political pressure from Wisconsin politicians 80 81 82 83 84 In 2011 several environmental groups protested at Export Import Bank headquarters unsuccessfully urging Chairman Hochberg and Board of Directors to reject 805 million in financing for the 4 800 megawatt Kusile coal fired power plant in South Africa 85 which environmental groups say is the largest carbon emitting project in the agency s history which will not alleviate poverty but will emit excessive local air pollution which health experts say causes damage the respiratory cardiovascular and nervous systems and deaths resulting from heart disease cancer stroke and chronic lower respiratory diseases 86 87 88 89 EXIM s 2011 announcement of support for Kusile asserted claims of environmental advancements including that Kusile will be the first coal fired power plant in South Africa to include sulfur dioxide scrubbers 90 However in 2023 the South African energy utility Eskom proposed to circumvent the Kusile sulfur dioxide pollution control system which the Helsinki based Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air estimates could result in 680 deaths 91 In December 2012 the Center for Biological Diversity Pacific Environment and Turtle Island Restoration Network filed a lawsuit against Chairman Hochberg and the EXIM for the agency s financing of Australia Pacific LNG s liquid natural gas projects inside the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area The lawsuit alleged that EXIM financing for the projects violates U S environmental and cultural heritage laws 92 Their amended lawsuit included EXIM s loan for the Australia Pacific LNG project and a 1 8 billion loan for the Queensland Curtis which together totaled 4 8 billion In March 2016 a California federal judge ruled against the environmentalists arguing that the EXIM financing represented only 10 of the project which is backed by ConocoPhillips Origin Energy Ltd and Sinopec and rejecting the loan would not stop the project The environmentalists appealed the decision 93 In 2019 Friends of the Earth US criticized EXIM President Kimberly A Reed for supporting the liquid natural gas LNG industry despite the lifecycle climate impacts of the fossil fuel citing the U S government s Fourth National Climate Assessment finding that more frequent and extreme weather events are severely damaging the environment and the economy while increasing harm to human health and loss of life Friends of the Earth US also criticized EXIM for approving 5 billion in financing the Mozambique LNG project citing the project s damage to the surrounding ecosystem including to endangered species displacement of local communities and lack of economic benefits for local people 94 95 In May 2023 EXIM Chair Reta Jo Lewis Vice Chair Judith Pryor and Director Spencer Bachus voted to approve nearly 100 million in Export Import Bank financing for an oil refinery expansion project in Indonesia EXIM Director Owen Herrnstadt abstained 35 Environmental groups criticize the approval as directly violating President Biden s commitments to end overseas fossil fuel financing including at the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference 37 The approval was also repudiated by the White House National Security Council which stated the decision does not reflect administration policy 39 Criticism of green energy based financings edit Conversely the EXIM has also faced scrutiny for pursuing green energy projects The EXIM provided 10 million of loan guarantees in 2011 to Solyndra a company that ultimately became bankrupt 96 See also edit nbsp Banks portalCoBank List of federal agencies in the United States Independent agencies of the United States government Title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations List of export credit agenciesReferences edit a b c Shayerah Ilias Akhtar David H Carpenter Grant A Driessen Julia Taylor April 13 2016 Export Import Bank Frequently Asked Questions PDF Congressional Research Service Report p 72 Retrieved April 21 2017 The Facts about EXIM Export Import Bank of the United States Archived from the original on August 6 2013 Retrieved August 7 2013 Reta Jo Lewis Sworn in as U S Export Import Bank President and Chair a b Title 31 Money and Finance United States Code 2009 Edition United States Government Publishing Office a b Bill Summary amp Status 112th Congress 2011 2012 H R 2072 Library of Congress May 30 2012 Archived from the original on December 25 2019 Retrieved June 27 2012 which became Public Law 112 122 on May 30 2012 a b House Joint Resolution 124 which became Public Law No 113 164 on September 19 2014 a b Calmes Jackie June 30 2015 Its Charter Expired Export Import Bank Will Keep the Doors Open The New York Times a b Calmes Jackie December 7 2015 EXIM Is Reopened but Big Loans Are Stalled The New York Times a b Charter and Bylaws EXIM GOV www exim gov Retrieved September 26 2022 Export Import Bank Reauthorization of 2012 PDF Export Import Bank of the United States Retrieved June 10 2013 The Charter of the Export Import Bank of the United States PDF Export Import Bank of the United States Archived from the original PDF on August 18 2014 Retrieved June 10 2013 Assessing Reform at the Export Import Bank Congressional Hearing June 13 2013 Retrieved May 22 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Charter of the Export Import Bank of the United States Sec 2 b 1 E v PDF Export Import Bank of the United States Archived from the original PDF on August 18 2014 Retrieved June 10 2013 Veronique De Rugy The Biggest Beneficiaries of the EXIM Mercatus Center Retrieved May 22 2013 OECD Better Policies For Better Lives Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development Retrieved June 17 2013 The Export Import Bank of China English eximbank gov cn Retrieved December 27 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm EXIM History Export Import Bank of the United States Archived from the original on January 23 2015 Retrieved August 7 2013 Board of Directors Export Import Bank of the United States Retrieved June 13 2013 s Author Franklin Delano Roosevelt Executive orders A Reporter s Guide To EXIM Archived from the original on July 15 2007 Retrieved November 15 2007 Becker William McClenahan William 2003 The Market the State and the Export Import Bank of the United States New York Cambridge University Press pp 10 40 Public Law 79 173 79th Congress H R 3771 An Act to provide for increasing the lending authority of the Export Import Bank of Washington and for other purposes Export Import Bank Act of 1945 William McChesney Martin Jr Papers July 31 1945 Records of the Export Import Bank of the United States EIBUS Retrieved November 15 2007 Notes to 12 U S C 635 Retrieved November 15 2007 Annual Report 2008 Washington D C Export Import Bank of the United States 2008 p 3 a b c Susan Crabtree May 30 2012 Obama signs reauthorization of Export Import Bank despite earlier opposition The Washington Times Retrieved September 13 2015 a b Rebecca Shabad September 9 2014 Obama signs 1 trillion stopgap spending bill with Syria measure The Hill Retrieved September 13 2015 HJ Res 124 PDF House of Representatives Retrieved September 17 2014 H R 22 FAST Act Congress gov 2015 U S Export Import Bank Bloomberg com Retrieved April 9 2016 Ackerman Andrew Wise Lindsay January 9 2020 A Reversal by Trump Revives Agency That Aids Exporters WSJ Retrieved June 16 2020 Ex Im Bank gets seven year extension SpaceNews com December 21 2019 Retrieved June 16 2020 Charter and Bylaws Export Import Bank of the United States Retrieved July 3 2022 Jones Jesse Angly Edward 1951 Fifty Billion Dollars My Thirteen Years with the RFC 1932 1945 New York MacMillan Company p 220 a b Annual Report to Congress 1941 Washington D C Export Import Bank of the United States 1941 Export Import Bank Annual Reports to Congress 1936 1961 Export Import Bank of the United States a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help a b Export Import Bank of the United States Annual Reports to Congress 1936 1961 Export Import Bank of the United States a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Burma Road Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved June 10 2013 a b First Semiannual Report to Congress for the period July December 1945 Washington D C Export Import Bank of the United States 1946 pp 48 49 Mallory Walter April 1939 The Burma Road Foreign Affairs Retrieved June 10 2013 First Semiannual Report to Congress for the period July December 1945 Washington D C Export Import Bank of the United States 1946 p 10 Export Import Bank Act of 1945 P L 79 173 STAT 526 Export Import Bank of the United States Seventh Semiannual Report to Congress for the period July December 1948 Washington D C Export Import Bank of the United States 1949 pp 32 33 Seventh Semiannual Report to Congress for the period July December 1948 Washington D C Export Import Bank of the United States 1949 p 2 Press release EximBank Offers Support for U S Exports to the Soviet Union Export Import Bank Press Release Export Import Bank of the United States Tonak Hat Company Export Import Bank Annual Reports 2008 2011 Albania Armenia Azerbaijan Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Czech Republic Estonia Germany Unified Hungary Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Latvia Lithuania Moldova Montenegro Poland Romania Russia Serbia Slovak Republic Slovenia Tajikistan Ukraine and Uzbekistan Export Import Bank of the United States Sanjeev Miglani and Roberta Rampton January 26 2015 Obama ends day of Indian pageantry with 4 billion pledge Reuters Retrieved January 27 2015 Ostermayer Jeff March 15 2012 Manufacturers Export Import Bank Supports Jobs National Association of Manufacturers Archived from the original on February 26 2013 Retrieved June 13 2013 Goldfarb Zachary June 26 2014 Candidate Obama echoing tea party called EXIM little more than a fund for corporate welfare Washington Post Retrieved August 25 2014 Landler Mark May 30 2012 Obama Extends the Export Import Bank New York Times Retrieved July 24 2015 Carney Timothy May 31 2002 Bank Scam National Review Retrieved December 19 2007 Veronique De Rugy May 21 2014 EXIM A Big Double Dipping Opportunity for Green Energy Firms National Review Retrieved May 22 2014 Pew Analysis Shows More Than 60 Percent of Export Import Bank Loan Guarantees Benefited Single Company Archived May 5 2011 at the Wayback Machine Boeing and Obama sitting in a tree K I S S I N G Boeing says it s flying high despite recession USATODAY com usatoday30 usatoday com Retrieved October 6 2017 1959 Twenty Fifth Anniversary Review 1934 1959 EXIM Annual Reports Collection www digitalarchives exim gov Retrieved October 6 2017 Matthew Mitchell Mercatus Center August 25 2014 Is the EXIM a Win Win YouTube Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Doug Bandow May 5 2014 Close the Export Import Bank Cut Federal Liabilities Kill Corporate Welfare Promote Free Trade Forbes Fama Eugene and MacBeth James D Risk Return and Equilibrium Empirical Tests Journal of Political Economy Vol 81 No 3 May June 1973 pp 607 636 Fama and French Common Risk Factors in the Returns on Stocks and Bonds Journal of Financial Economics 33 1993 3 56 Scholes Myron Williams Joseph 1977 Estimating betas from nonsynchronous data Journal of Financial Economics 5 3 309 327 doi 10 1016 0304 405X 77 90041 1 Bandow Doug July 1 2015 Close the Export Import Bank to Cut Federal Liabilities and Promote Economic Fairness Cato Institute Retrieved July 2 2015 Cochrane J H The risk and return of venture capital Journal of Financial Economics Volume 75 Issue 1 January 2005 pp 3 52 Arditti Fred D Risk and the Required Return on Equity Journal of Financial Economics Vol 22 No 1 Mar 1967 pp 19 36 Brealey Myers 2007 Principles of Corporate Finance 9th Edition Maidenhead McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 340510 0 Jason Delisle Christopher Papagianis March 29 2012 Critics of the Export Import Bank Have a New Weapon at Their Disposal Fair Value Accounting e21 Economic Policies for the 21st Century The Manhattan Institute Retrieved May 22 2014 Douglas Starr The carbon accountant Richard Heede pins much of the responsibility for climate change on just 90 companies Others say that s a cop out Science volume 353 issue 6302 August 26 2016 pages 858 861 Climate Change Lawsuit Archived from the original on August 28 2009 Retrieved June 25 2009 EXIM Settlement text PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 2 2009 Retrieved June 25 2009 Litigation related to climate change Archived November 4 2018 at the Wayback Machine IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Climate Change 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Order Denying Defendants Motion for Summary Judgment in the case of Friends of the earth Greenpeace Inc and City of Boulder Colorado versus Peter Watson Overseas Private Investment Corporation and Phillip Lerrill Export Import Bank of the United States No C 02 4106 JSW Archived December 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine United States District Court for the Northern District of California 2005 Annual Reports Fact Sheet U S Export Import Bank s Fossil Fuel and Renewable Energy Financing Pacific Environment Drajem Mark March 11 2010 Obama s Trade Goal Fights his Clean Energy Plan Bloomberg McCabe Jess August 12 2010 EXIM Urged to End Fossil Fuel Binge Support Renewables Environmental Finance Archived from the original on May 17 2013 Retrieved May 20 2012 Terrance Samuel It s Not Just About Copenhagen The American Prospect December 10 2009 Work on LNG Project Resumes in PNG s Hella locals confused over troop deployment Further Updates on Tumbi Landslide from RNZI LNG Watch Papua New Guinea Summary of Minutes of Meeting of Board of Directors Item 2 Export Import Bank June 24 2011 Archived from the original on September 16 2012 Retrieved May 20 2012 Summary of Minutes of Meeting of Board of Directors Item 7 Export Import Bank October 21 2010 Archived from the original on September 16 2012 Retrieved May 20 2012 Jess McCabe July 1 2010 U S EXIM Flip Flops on Giant Indian Coal Project Environmental Finance Archived from the original on May 17 2013 Retrieved May 20 2012 Andrew Bast July 16 2010 It s Not Easy Being Green Newsweek Michelle Chan July 15 2010 U S Taxpayer Funded Bank Under Pressure from Obama Administration Gives Green Light to Giant Dirty Coal Plant in India The Huffington Post Protestors Why Lock the World into a Coal Powered Future The Sierra Club South African Coal Plant Wins U S Backing Over Environmentalist Protests Bloomberg April 14 2011 Your Tax Dollars at Work A Giant Coal Plant in South Africa Mother Jones December 9 2009 U S EXIM Finances Largest Carbon Emitting Project in its History Friends of the Earth et al March 14 2011 Letter to EXIM Chairman Fred Hochberg from Physicians for Social Responsibility Archived October 25 2014 at the Wayback Machine Ex Im Board Provides Preliminary Approval For 805 Million In Financing For Kusile Power Plant In South Africa EXIM GOV www exim gov Retrieved May 9 2023 Sguazzin Antony Eskom s plan to bypass pollution controls at Kusile could kill hundreds study shows Business Retrieved May 9 2023 Lawsuit Targets 3 Billion in U S Funding for Fossil Fuel Project in Australia s Great Barrier Reef Press release Center for Biological Diversity December 13 2012 Juan Carlos Rodriguez May 27 2016 Enviros Appeal To 9th Circ In Aussie LNG Loan Suit Law360 New York retrieved April 21 2017 EXIM should not fund detrimental natural gas project in Mozambique September 24 2019 5 billion in EXIM financing for Mozambique LNG plant fuels U S contribution to climate emergency Press release Friends of the Earth US August 22 2019 Mark Osborne Solyndra using EXIM loan guarantees system to support commercial rooftop projects Retrieved May 22 2014 Further reading editAssessing Reform at the Export Import Bank Hearing before the Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade of the Committee on Financial Services U S House of Representatives One Hundred Thirteenth Congress First Session June 13 2013 Robert Higgs Against Leviathan Government Power and a Free Society Oakland Calif The Independent Institute 2004 The Use of Environmental and Social Criteria in Export Credit Agencies Practices Archived May 29 2008 at the Wayback Machine by Markus Knigge et al Published in 2003 by the Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Technische Zusammenarbeit GTZExternal links editOfficial website Export Import Bank in the Federal Register Portals nbsp Companies nbsp United States nbsp Business and economics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Export Import Bank of the United States amp oldid 1182221265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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