2002 Ron Paul 30:1
Mr. Chairman, I rise in strong support of this amendment, being a
cosponsor
of this amendment. I am opposed to the Export-Import Bank because I see
there is
no benefit to it, it has nothing to do with capitalism and freedom. It
has a lot
to do with special interests, and I am opposed to that.
2002 Ron Paul 30:2
One thing I am convinced of over the years from looking at bad
agencies of
government, tinkering on the edges does not do a lot of good. Members
might ask
why am I tinkering here? Why do I want to tell corporations what to do?
I am a
capitalist. I believe in capitalism. I do not want to tell the
corporations what
to do at all as long as they do not commit fraud and live up to their
promises,
but this is different because they are getting taxpayer money. That is
different
than if they were just a corporation making it on their own.
2002 Ron Paul 30:3
The gentleman from Nebraska (Mr. Bereuter) said if we do not give
them these
loans, the companies will not get any money and they will have to go
overseas.
This is a fallacy to believe if all of a sudden we took all of the
Export-Import
Bank money away from corporations, that they would have no funding.
That is not
true at all. There is a lot of funding available. It is just that they
do not
get the benefit, they do not get the subsidy.
2002 Ron Paul 30:4
What we are trying to do is make it fair to everyone so that the
little guy
who is competing for these same funds can compete on a level playing
field and
not give the advantage to the big guys. What happens so often when
government
gets involved is there are unintended consequences. The original intent
was to
boost exports and jobs. After 70 years, there are unintended
consequences. The
world is a more world market. I am not opposed to that. I believe in
free trade;
but I think this is more protectionism. This is so minor and so modest
that
anybody who wants to be on record for fairness into curtailing the
political
power of the Export-Import Bank, has to vote for this. This will be a
little bit
of help to a few people in order to say to these corporations that if
they are
going to get tax subsidies for their loans, and they start laying off
people,
they better lay them off someplace else other than here. That is pretty
modest.
I have no interest in ever telling a corporation to do this if they
were not
getting the special benefits from government. That makes the big
difference.
2002 Ron Paul 30:5
Mr. Chairman, there is a market allocation of credit and there is
credit
allocation by politicians, and that is what we are talking about here.
We have
credit allocation, and we have mal-investment and over capacity which
causes the
conditions to exist for the recession. Of course, a lot of this comes
from what
the Federal Reserve does in artificially lowering interest rates; but
this is a
compounding problem when government gets in and allocates credit at
lower rates.
It causes more distortions. This is why allocations to companies like
Enron
contributes to the bubble that ends up in a major correction.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2002/cr050102b.htm