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Biggest
Bourget Ever for AIA
Fielding
its largest international presence here at Le Bourget is the
Aerospace Industries Association of America, led by president
& CEO John W. Douglass.
The Washington-based
trade association has seen its membership more than double
over the last three years to 200 companies even as the industry
consolidates. And at Paris it's hosting exhibition space for
20 of them.
"We
are growing rapidly, mainly with medium-sized companies,"
he says. They are joining as another step in surviving, rather
than succumbing to global consolidation.
Also signing
up are an increasing number of international companies. British
members include GKN, Rolls-Royce, British Aerospace and Smiths
Industries (all with substantial U.S. manufacturing operations);
Fairchild Dornier has also joined, and Embraer recently applied.
"This
has brought a predominantly British-American texture to our
membership," Douglass explained. "Frankly we are
not sure where this is going to lead; our board already has
divided views about how much to integrate this. But there
remains a bedrock feeling among our members that we represent
production here in the U.S."
Nevertheless,
the diversifying membership has made AIA one of the most important
forums for discussing transatlantic issues-and for defusing
them before they escalate into trade battles, Douglass says.
-- J.M.
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Surplus
Headed South?
A plunge
of more than a third in America's aerospace trade surplus
since 1998 "is a big concern," AIA president &
CEO John W. Douglass told Show News.
Record
imports-mostly of Airbus airliners-and lower exports-mostly
of Boeings-combined in 2000 to slash the surplus to $26.7
billion from a record $41 billion two years before. Imports
jumped $2.9 billion to $28 billion, while exports dropped
$7.8 billion to $55 billion.
"It
is not a decline in U.S. competitiveness -- it is Boeing,"
Douglass says, where the cyclical nature of air transport
manufacturing coincided with a surge two years ago in U.S.
orders for Airbus. "But Boeing's strong backlog should
make the situation self-correcting," he says.
Douglass
nevertheless called on President George W. Bush to reconsider
plans to cut funding for the Ex-Im Bank by 25%. "With
imports rising and exports falling, it hardly seems appropriate
to reduce the bank's appropriations at this time," he
says.
Also contributing
to the export decline was a collapse in satellite sales following
the transfer of export licensing from Commerce to the State
Department.
Government
policy regarding exports should be studied by the ongoing
President's Commission on the Future of the U.S. Aerospace
Industry. "Before the budget for the Ex-Im bank is cut,
the government should be aware that this will adversely affect
billions in foreign aerospace sales," Douglass says.
"These
recent statistics reflect the need for a more focused national
plan for the future of the American aerospace industry."
-- J.M.
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