15 May 2002
Source:
http://usinfo.state.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=02051402.clt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml
US Department of State
International Information Programs
Washington File
_________________________________
14 May 2002
U.S. Exporters Seek More Active Government Support, Evans Says
(Export strategy focuses on tied aid, project development) (480) By Andrzej Zwaniecki Washington File Staff Writer Washington -- U.S. companies want government to take a more coordinated and more aggressive approach to helping them compete internationally, Commerce Secretary Donald Evans says. Testifying May 14 before the Senate Banking Committee Evans said that exporters particularly want the U.S. government to discourage foreign tied and untied aid, advance their interests in major project development and highlight commercial opportunities in areas affected by crises. Tied aid is concessional financing for public projects provided by some developed nations' governments on condition that the recipient country uses the money to purchase goods and services from the donor country. Countries including Japan have circumvented an international agreement restricting the use of tied aid by a practice called untied aid -- essentially tied aid with the prohibited elements concealed. Evans said the Bush administration is proposing to use more aggressively a special U.S. Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im Bank) fund to pressure countries participating in international negotiations on untied aid to reach an agreement on disciplines faster. Presenting to Congress the administration's annual National Export Strategy report, Evans said that the Ex-Im Bank would match or counter tied or untied aid provided by foreign governments for selected projects that are also of interest to U.S. exporters. The report said that the U.S. Trade Development Agency would fund on an experimental basis engineering studies that often set the standards and specifications for future projects to counter an increasing use of concessionary financing of these studies by Japan and some other countries. Evans said that U.S. competitors often gain an advantage in major project competitions by building long-term relationships with officials in target markets and sending early signals that government financing or technical assistance would likely support a project. He said that U.S. trade-promotion agencies were going to meet this challenge by working together to identify priority projects sooner, thus gaining a chance to indicate likelihood of government financing at an earlier stage in project development. The report said that the administration would initiate interagency cooperation for early project development in a group of pilot countries that include Brazil, China, South Africa, Mexico, Russia and Turkey. In those countries, Evans said, the administration will now have a coordinated, team approach to bringing buyers and sellers together. In addition, the administration will develop a coordinated, commercial approach to the needs of nations that underwent serious crises, the report said. In the near future, this approach that would entail providing timely information about assistance needs to U.S. exporters and identifying business opportunities related to aid projects would apply to Afghanistan reconstruction, it added. U.S. exporters indicated that the U.S. government's lack of a coordinated, commercial strategy led to lost commercial opportunities for them in post-crisis areas of the world including Bosnia-Herzegovina, the report said. (The Washington File is a product of the Office of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)