2001 Ron Paul 91:1
Mr. Chairman, the Financial
Services
committee should reject HR 2871, the Export-Import Reauthorization Act,
for economic, constitutional, and moral reasons. The Export-Import Bank
(Eximbank) takes money from American taxpayers to subsidize exports by
American companies. Of course, it is not just any company that receives
Eximbank support- rather, the majority of Eximbank funding benefits
large, politically powerful corporations.
2001 Ron Paul 91:2
Proponents of continued American
support
for the Eximbank claim that the bank creates jobs and promotes
economic growth. However, this claim rests on a version of what the
great economist Henry Hazlitt called the broken window fallacy. When
a hoodlum throws a rock through a store window, it can be said he has
contributed to the economy, as the store owner will have to spend money
having the window fixed. The benefits to those who repaired the window
are visible for all to see, therefore it is easy to see the broken
window as economically beneficial. However, the benefits of the
broken window are revealed as an illusion when one takes into account
what is not seen: the businesses and workers who would have benefited
had the store owner not spent money repairing a window, but rather had
been free to spend his money as he chose.
2001 Ron Paul 91:3
Similarly, the beneficiaries of
Eximbank
are visible to all; what is not seen is the products that would have
been built, the businesses that would have been started, and the jobs
that would have been created had the funds used for the Eximbank been
left in the hands of consumers.
2001 Ron Paul 91:4
Some supporters of this bill equate
supporting Eximbank with supporting free trade, and claim that
opponents are protectionists and isolationists. Mr. Chairman, this
is nonsense, Eximbank has nothing to do with free trade. True free
trade involves the peaceful, voluntary exchange of goods across
borders, not forcing taxpayers to subsidize the exports of politically
powerful companies. Eximbank is not free trade, but rather managed
trade, where winners and losers are determined by how well they please
government bureaucrats instead of how well they please consumers.
2001 Ron Paul 91:5
Expenditures on the Eximbank
distort the
market by diverting resources from the private sector, where they could
be put to the use most highly valued by individual consumers, into the
public sector, where their use will be determined by bureaucrats and
politically powerful special interests. By distorting the market and
preventing resources from achieving their highest valued use, Eximbank
actually costs Americans jobs and reduces Americas standard of living!
2001 Ron Paul 91:6
The case for Eximbank is further
weakened
considering that small businesses receive only 12-15% of Eximbank
funds; the vast majority of Eximbank funds benefit large corporations.
These corporations can certainly afford to support their own exports
without relying on the American taxpayer. It is not only bad economics
to force working Americans, small business, and entrepreneurs to
subsidize the exports of the large corporations: it is also immoral. In
fact, this redistribution from the poor and middle class to the wealthy
is the most indefensible aspect of the welfare state, yet it is the
most accepted form of welfare. Mr. Chairman, it never ceases to amaze
me how members who criticize welfare for the poor on moral and
constitutional grounds see no problem with the even more objectionable
programs that provide welfare for the rich.
2001 Ron Paul 91:7
The moral case against Eximbank is
strengthened when one considers that the government which benefits most
from Eximbank funds is communist China. In fact, Eximbank actually
underwrites joint ventures with firms owned by the Chinese government!
Whatever ones position on trading with China, I would hope all of us
would agree that it is wrong to force taxpayers to subsidize in any way
this brutal regime. Unfortunately, China is not an isolated case:
Colombia, Yemen, and even the Sudan benefit from taxpayer-subsidized
trade courtesy of the Eximbank!
2001 Ron Paul 91:8
There is simply no constitutional
justification for the expenditure of funds on programs such as
Eximbank. In fact, the drafters of the Constitution would be horrified
to think the federal government was taking hard-earned money from the
American people in order to benefit the politically powerful.
2001 Ron Paul 91:9
In conclusion, Mr. Chairman,
Eximbank
distorts the market by allowing government bureaucrats to make economic
decisions in place of individual consumers. Eximbank also violates
basic principles of morality, by forcing working Americans to subsidize
the trade of wealthy companies that could easily afford to subsidize
their own trade, as well as subsidizing brutal governments like Red
China and the Sudan. Eximbank also violates the limitations on
congressional power to take the property of individual citizens and use
them to benefit powerful special interests. It is for these reasons
that I urge my colleagues to reject HR 2871, the Export-Import Bank
Reauthorization Act.
Note:
This is a statement before a committee, so it did not appear in Congressional Record. The text was posted in Ron Pauls Congressional website, and downloaded therefrom.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2001/cr103101.htm