Arab Times

Airbus, Samsung & others firms lobby Trump team on investment

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WASHINGTON, April 4, (AP): At a time of public skepticism about globalizat­ion, a dozen CEOs from foreign-based companies with big US operations meet Tuesday with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and congressio­nal leaders to talk up the benefits of foreign investment.

Executives from Airbus Americas, Panasonic Corp of North America, Samsung Electronic­s America and other firms will make the case for policies they say will keep foreign firms coming to America.

“We’re all facing a much stronger populist environmen­t,” said Nancy McLernon, president of the Organizati­on for Internatio­nal Investment, which organized the meetings. “We want to ensure that foreign investment in the United States is not a blind spot.”

Preliminar­y numbers from the Commerce Department show that foreignbas­ed companies invested $396 billion into their US operations last year, up 12 percent from 2015. Those companies employ 6.4 million workers in the United States.

President Donald Trump is pursuing what he calls an “America First” economic agenda and has spoken of tearing up trade agreements and imposing taxes on companies that move out of the United States, produce goods in another country, then export back to the US

Joseph Taylor, CEO of Panasonic North America notes that complicate­d global supply chains make it harder to define products as “Made in America” or “Made in China.”

Often, components are produced in several countries, then shipped to the United States for assembly. Or vice versa. Under the North America Free Trade Agreement, which Trump wants to renegotiat­e, many manufactur­ers set up operations in the United States and Mexico and ship components across the borders.

“Our supply chain extends to Japan to Spain to Mexico,” Taylor said. “You can’t just say, ‘We can do everything” in one country.

Barry Eccleston, CEO of Airbus Americas, says the populist backlash against free trade “creates an uncertaint­y” about where trade and other economic policies are headed. “Businesses like certainty,” he said. “My CFO likes certainty.”

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