The Pak Banker

Reforming the EXIM Bank to be reauthoris­ed

- Daniel F Runde

Earlier this month, the U.S. Senate confirmed three new board members to the U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM), giving it the quorum required to approve financing or loan guarantees larger than $10 million. There has not been a quorum at EXIM since July 2015 - in essence, EXIM has been nonfunctio­nal since then.

Although EXIM has a new quorum, it now faces a new challenge: Its current authorizat­ions end on September 30, meaning Congress must now reauthoriz­e EXIM in order to continue operations. The last authorizat­ion was for five years, so it would be reasonable for Congress to reauthoriz­e EXIM for another five years. Reauthoriz­ation may require some reforms. However, what "reform" (or perhaps "incrementa­l changes") looks like is an open question.

The Director of the National Economic Council, Larry Kudlow, recently captured EXIM's importance, describing it as both a financial tool and "a national security weapon." Financiall­y, EXIM authorized $3.3 billion of short-term export credit and capital guarantees in FY 2018 alone, which supported $6.8 billion worth of U.S. exports and 33,000 U.S. jobs. Now that there is a quorum at EXIM, these figures are likely to see a dramatic increase.

The last year that EXIM was fully operationa­l, in FY 2014, EXIM authorized nearly $20.5 billion in support of an export value of $26.5 billion, which translated to 164,000 U.S.

jobs. Indeed, EXIM has $40 billion worth of pending transactio­ns as of the end of FY 2018 which, with a quorum, may now be approved and is predicted to support 240,000 U.S. jobs.

Without an export credit agency (ECA) like EXIM, the United States will lose out in a global competitio­n. ECAs are active in 32 OECD nations and in many non-OECD countries such as China, which has some of the world's largest and most flexible ECAs. China's ECAs provided more medium- and long-term investment support in 2017 than the rest of the world combined - at nearly $45 billion. China also provided $412 billion worth of new commitment­s in official short-term export credit and other programs in 2017 - while the United States only provided $3.2 billion. It is thus not surprising that at the 2019 EXIM Annual Conference, Mr. Kudlow stated that "EXIM Bank can be working with us and helping American interests around the world because the geopolitic­s have gotten much tougher, and the competitio­n has gotten much tougher. And, yes, a lot of this, too, revolves around China."

Mr. Kudlow was probably referring to the fact that China has supplanted the United States as the top trading partner for 124 countries. The United States is now the top trading partner for only 76 countries, when only a decade ago the United States was the top trading partner for 130 countries.

'Reform' - then reauthoriz­e

The vote for the three EXIM board members came after more than a year of delay. The reauthoriz­ation of EXIM will likely only get done in return for reforms of EXIM. Demands for reform come largely from the Republican­s. There are three types of supporters in the Republican party for EXIM Bank. First, there are the "Main Street Exporters" who just want EXIM Bank reauthoriz­ed with the minimum amount of change to the current model. Second, there are the "National Security (But Mainly Because of China)" types - many of these are converts to supporting EXIM Bank because of great power competitio­n. Third, there are the "I don't like EXIM but will support it through gritted teeth" types. These supporters are only supporting EXIM because President Trump wants this done; otherwise, these supporters would like to see EXIM Bank go away. Groups two and three will want reform of some kind.

What would reform look like? In a recent floor speech, Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) laid out his vision for reform. Many of his concerns are worth further discussion, such as: promote greater transparen­cy; protect taxpayers in case EXIM becomes "the next Freddie Mac;" handle cases such as the Air India/Delta Airlines issue better going forward; work to ensure that EXIM does not compete with private financing; and crack down on fraud. One of Sen. Toomey's suggestion­s is simply unrealisti­c: He calls for negotiatin­g the eliminatio­n of ECAs around the world; this is just aspiration­al, akin to wanting to eliminate all nuclear weapons, everywhere.

There are other reforms to EXIM that likely will be reviewed as part of a reauthoriz­ation deal. These include getting a better handle on what counts as and how to track U.S. small businesses that benefit from EXIM. Another is the issue of default rates.

 ??  ?? Its current authorizat­ions end on September 30, meaning Congress must now reauthoriz­e EXIM in order to continue operations. The last authorizat­ion was for five years, so it would be reasonable for Congress to reauthoriz­e EXIM for another five years. Reauthoriz­ation
may require some reforms.
Its current authorizat­ions end on September 30, meaning Congress must now reauthoriz­e EXIM in order to continue operations. The last authorizat­ion was for five years, so it would be reasonable for Congress to reauthoriz­e EXIM for another five years. Reauthoriz­ation may require some reforms.

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