McCarthy Rolls Over for Tea Party on Ex-Im Bank
Congressional Deal May Doom Export-Import Bank to Slow Death · The Fiscal Times

Kevin McCarthy wasted no time getting right with the Tea Party after his election as House Majority Leader last week. The California Republican, whose ascension to the second-highest position in House Republican leadership came after his predecessor lost a primary to a Tea Party opponent, seems eager to make his bones with the hard right by killing the Export-Import Bank of the United States.

The Ex-Im Bank, which sells loan guarantees to foreign purchasers of goods manufactured in the U.S., has been around since the 1930s with the mission of making it easier for U.S. companies to sell their products overseas. In recent years, it has been a target of the rightmost wing of the Republican Party, which believes the private market, not the government, ought to be funding trade finance deals.

Related: Kevin McCarthy Slams the Brakes on a Gas Tax Hike

Appearing on Fox News Sunday over the weekend, McCarthy told host Chris Wallace that the bank’s authorization, scheduled to end in September, should be allowed to expire. “One of the biggest problems with government is they go and take hard-earned money so others do things that the private sector can do. That’s what the Ex-Im Bank does,” McCarthy said.

The problem, according to supporters of the banks, is that the private market simply won’t do what the Ex-Im Bank does, at least not at prices that the small- and medium-sized businesses it serves can afford.

“The idea that the private sector will step in to do this kind of trade finance is not realistic at all,” said Tony Fratto, former Deputy White House Press Secretary under George W. Bush, now a partner with Hamilton Place Strategies in Washington.

Most of the companies that benefit from Ex-Im Bank financing, said Fratto, whose firm represents the National Association of Manufacturers, are small companies doing businesses in markets where even large banks don’t have the ability or inclination to offer loan guarantees.

Related: New House Leaders Primed for internal Struggle

By way of example, he said, most U.S. banks “don’t have the ability to price country risk or political risk in Tanzania.”

The Ex-Im Bank has often been ridiculed as the “Bank of Boeing” because in certain years, transactions benefiting customers of the U.S.-based airplane firm have made up the vast majority – in dollar terms – of the bank’s loan guarantees.

Supporters, however, point out that Boeing has only one real competitor, Europe’s Airbus, which receives substantial subsidies from multiple European countries where it operates. And beyond Boeing, a large percentage of major industrialized countries have trade finance programs that benefit domestic producers.