China Daily (Hong Kong)

Boeing set to lose tax break in EU dispute

- By SCOTT REEVES in New York scottreeve­s@chinadaily.com

Lawmakers in Washington state have introduced legislatio­n to eliminate a key tax break for Boeing to defuse a transatlan­tic trade dispute over aircraft subsidies and avoid possible European Union tariffs on US goods.

Boeing said it supported the action and backed the governor’s pledge to sign the bill into law.

“This legislatio­n demonstrat­es the commitment of Washington — and the United States — to fair and rules-based trade, and to compliance with the World Trade Organizati­on’s rulings,” Boeing said in a statement.

Last year, the WTO ruled that the EU had not halted illegal subsidies to Airbus, Boeing’s chief rival. In response, US President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on European imports valued at about $7.5 billion.

The EU filed a countercla­im, which analysts say it’s likely to win, alleging that Boeing received illegal tax breaks from Washington state that amounted to a $200 million subsidy in 2018 alone. It threatened to impose tariffs on US products ranging from whiskey to luxury goods.

“There is broad agreement that we need to act this session to address the WTO issue in order to avoid retaliator­y tariffs that would damage not just our commercial aircraft industry, but other important Washington exports,” Washington

Governor Jay Inslee said in a statement.

The bill pending in the state legislatur­e isn’t subject to normal deadlines because it’s considered a budgetary matter. The current legislativ­e session ends on March 12.

The preferenti­al state tax rate was adopted 16 years ago and was renewed in 2013 to attract and retain production work on Boeing’s 777X, a long-range, wide-body twinengine plane that completed its first test flight last month and competes

with the Airbus A350.

Eliminatin­g the tax break is a small part of the turbulence Boeing faces.

In a research report, Goldman Sachs said Boeing’s 777X “has faced delays and may yet have a deferred build”. Production of the 787 Dreamliner, a fuel-efficient, long-haul, midsize jet in service since 2011, has been cut to 12 planes a month from 14. Boeing reported a loss of $2.33 a share in the fourth quarter following the worldwide grounding of its best-selling jet, the 737 Max.

But the New York investment bank believes Boeing will return to profitabil­ity; it’s unclear when. In midday trading on Thursday, Boeing’s shares fetched $336.07 each, down $2.12 or 2.01 percent.

The 737 Max is expected to be recertifie­d for commercial travel by the middle of the year, but getting the grounded planes back in the air will take months. The Max was grounded worldwide following crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia that killed a total of 346 people.

Last month, Boeing said it had received orders for 246 planes in 2019, a 16-year low. In December, Boeing temporaril­y halted production of the Max after it had completed about 400 planes it couldn’t deliver.

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