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US vs. EU. Airbus

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US feels money given to Airbus is illegal. EU feels Boeing has ... Teal Group analyst that the outcome may depend on who is able to show it has been hurt ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: US vs. EU. Airbus


1
US vs. EU. Airbus Boeing Subsidies Case.
(Pending)
  • Kurt Kasun
  • Tarek Khedr
  • Michelle Lammers
  • Sandrine Mabya

2
US vs. EU Airbus Boeing
  • Largest Legal Case in WTO history.
  • US feels money given to Airbus is illegal.
  • EU feels Boeing has benefited from unfair support

3
Commercial Jetliners
  • Chicago Based Boeing
  • France Based Airbus
  • Only two manufacturers of large commercial
    jetliners.

4
Why Such a Big Deal??
  • Control of the market
  • Illegal Subsidies
  • WTO is being tested
  • Canada and Brazil

5
The 1992 Agreement
  • Under the 1992 agreement, the US had recognized
    Airbus, founded in 1970 with support from several
    European countries
  • On October 6, 2004, the US complained to the WTO
    that the European governments have broken trade
    rules with its government loans to Airbus,
    including 3.2 Billions for the super jumbo A 380

6
The U.S. Boeing Case
  • The U.S. claimed in its WTO complain last October
    that Airbus had received more than 15 Billion in
    government loans amounted to illegal subsidies
    under global trade rule.
  • The US and EU decided last December to try for a
    settlement of the aircraft issue outside the WTO
    to avoid bruising their 400 Billion-a-year trade
    relationship.

7
The U.S. Boeing Case
  • As part of the agreement, both US and EU accepted
    that neither carrier will seek launch aid during
    three-month negotiations.
  • The launch aid was spelled out in the 1992
    agreement. Under the deal, the European
    governments could finance one-third of the cost
    of any aircraft Airbus develops
  • However the negotiations will have to settle the
    tricky question of which of these subsidies will
    be prohibited, actionable or permitted

8
The U.S. Boeing Case
  • Unfortunately, the US has withdrawn because of
    the attempt from the EU to broaden the scope of
    negotiations
  • At stake may well be Boeing 22- Billion-a-year
    commercial aircraft business, which for the first
    time in 2003 sold fewer passenger jets than
    Airbus

9
The U.S. Boeing Case
  • Airbus overtook Boeing in 2003, becoming the
    first manufacturer in the worlds 50 billion
    airliner market.
  • The U.S. argued that the growth of the Airbus
    indicates that there is no more need for aid that
    was justifiably at the startup industry

10
The U.S. Boeing Case
  • Europeans have justified subsidies to Airbus as
    necessary to an infant industry
  • Boeing has long asserted that Airbus has an
    unfair advantage because it gets government money
    and now that it does not need money because it
    took the lead in the commercial aerospace
    business in 2003 delivering 305 commercial planes
    while Boeing delivered 281,whereas Boeing in 1999
    had delivered more than 600 planes.

11
The Airbus Side
  • In October 2004, the United States said Airbus
    received more than 15 billion in government
    loans since 1967, helping it overtake Boeing as
    the world's largest airplane maker by sales.
  • According to U.S. estimates (also hotly
    disputed), Airbus has used 15 billion in
    subsidies to build its global aircraft market
    share from 30 percent to near 60 percent.

12
The Airbus Defense
  • Airbus has been receiving "repayable launch aid"
    in the form of commercial loans that it pays back
    to the government as it sells airplanes
  • The Airbus launch aid causes less trade
    distortion than the Boeing aid, according the
    industry analysts

13
Airbus Challenges Boeing Subsidies
  • RD subsidies 20B
  • From 1992, Boeing has received RD grants worth
    more than 20 billion, mostly through NASA and
    the Pentagon.
  • Tax break subsidies 3.2B
  • Washington state will give Boeing tax incentives
    worth 3.2 billion over 20 years.
  • Infrastructure improvement subsidies 4.2B
  • Washington State has dedicated 4.2 billion in
    subsidies for physical improvements of Boeing
    plants and infrastructure.

14
Boeing Subsidies, cont.
  • Foreign Sales Corporation 200M annually
  • Up to now, Boeing receives about 200 million a
    year through a federal tax loophole called the
    Foreign Sales Corporation program, which has been
    ruled in violation of WTO rules.
  • Japanese Launch Aid 1.6B
  • Boeing has received Japanese launch aid of 1.6
    billion thus far to build the wings for its new
    787 Dreamliner.
  • In contrast to the E.U. investment in Airbus,
    none of these subsidies needs to be repaid

15
Request for Consultations
  • Possibly precipitated by politics of 2004 US
    presidential election
  • US files first in early October, followed hours
    later by the European Communities counter filing
  • Both site subsidies inconsistent with obligations
    under the SCM Agreement and GATT 1994
  • US principally sites launch aid
  • EC sites
  • State and local subsidies
  • NASA, DOD, and other RD subsidies
  • FSC/ETI subsidies

16
Détente in January
  • On January 11 both sides agreed to negotiate the
    phasing out of subsidies over a 90-day period
  • Agree to create fair market competition for the
    development and production on large civilian
    aircraft made in the US and the EU
  • Efforts motivated in part to sooth relations in
    preparation for Bushs European tour

17
Ides of MarchSpell High Drama
  • On March 18 the spurious details of contentions
    discussions between Zoellick and Mandelson are
    made public
  • The US went public first
  • The EU wants to conclude the talks quickly so it
    can start on the A380 to compete against Boeings
    new 787
  • USTR voices displeasure over EU seeking to
    broaden the terms of the January agreement
  • EU wants to include Japanese subsidized
    production of Boeing 787 fuselage
  • EU wants to bring FCS into the deal
  • US also accusing EU of backtracking on commitment
    to cut subsidies
  • EU wants Cast-Iron guarantee

18
Are Cooler Heads Prevailing?
  • March 21, Mandelson
  • The ball is in Americas courtIm looking for
    clarification of the US position.
  • US threats are premature and unnecessary.
  • Zoellick From my last conversation with
    Mandelson, I do not see the probability of
    reaching fulfillment in the time we set forth.
  • The clock is tickingone week away from the
    deadline

19
Resolution Scenarios
  • Agree to extend consultations beyond 11 APR
    deadline
  • WTO oversee further consultations in Geneva
  • Either side could ask for a panel of judges to
    hear the case
  • Dynamics make an out-of-court settlement unlikely
  • High tech, high-paying jobs at stake for both
  • Boeing in tough shape rocked by scandal and
    losing market share
  • Airbus has been a tremendous successful
    industrial policy for the EU
  • Perhaps they could agree to binding arbitration
    by a third-party (John Major and Frank Carlucci
    or Cap Weinberger)
  • Odds are WTO would find both guilty and levy
    sanctions on both
  • Teal Group analyst that the outcome may depend on
    who is able to show it has been hurt

20
Broader Issues
  • Outsourcing becoming increasingly global
  • Much of the Boeing 787 is being constructed with
    the JADC
  • Both Airbus and Boeing outsource to Asia and
    Latin America making the case global and raising
    the stakes
  • Large portions of engineering for Boeing handled
    by Russian BDC
  • Concerns that the conflict will infect the rest
    of the trade agenda, Doha Round
  • If sanctions are levied and ignored, the
    credibility of the WTO would be damaged
  • 400 Billion trade relationship between the US
    and EU is at stake

21
Sources
  • Boeing chief hopeful on U.S., EU subsidy talks,
    Thomas Mulier, Bloomberg News, February 18, 2005
  • Not an Issue for the WTO Peter Mandelson,
    Washington Post, 1 April 2005
  • The Big Blowout Why the Airbus-Boeing case
    could wreck the WTO, and how to stop it, Jeffrey
    E. Garten, Newsweek International, April 4, 2005
  • An ill-timed spat, The Economist, March 26,
    2005
  • Why the Airbus-Boeing case would wreck the WTO,
    and how to stop it, Jeffrey E. Garten, Newsweek,
    March 27, 2004
  • See you in court, The Economist, March 16, 2005
  • Russians rally to Boeings cause, Nick Cook,
    Financial Times, April 2, 2005
  • Boeing-Airbus talks fall apart, James Wallace,
    Seattle Post-Intelligencer, October 1, 2004
  • EU Demands Clarification on Boeing-Airbus,
    Constant Brand, AP, March 21, 2005

22
Sources
  • Boeing vs. Airbus Time to Escalate, Stanley
    Holmes, BusinessWeek Online, March 22, 2005
  • US Seeks Return to Boeing-Airbus Talk, Dow
    Jones Newswires, March 21, 2005
  • Battle over Boeing, Airbus shows thorny
    relations, Dow Jones Newswires, March 21, 2005
  • U.S.,E.U. Take Boeing, Airbus Dispute WTO. The
    Seattle Post- Intelligencer, October 7,2004
  • Blustein, Paul. U.S. Files Grievance Over Airbus
    With WTOE.U. Responds With Boeing Complaint.
    October 7, 2004
  • International Trade U.S., E.U Complain of
    Aircraft Subsidies. October 28,2004
  • http//www.bloomber g.com/apps/news
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