America
and the European Union have had their share of trade disputes in
the past, but the one looming over airplanes will raise the ante
in several ways. If the two sides cannot prevent what is starting
out as a trade dispute from spinning out of control, it can have
an outsized impact on broader political and security relations.
The
catalyst is the pre-Christmas announcement by the European
consortium Airbus that it was launching its superjumbo A380 jet
project. The decision has political and economic dimensions.
First, the 555-seat A380, which is due to enter service in 2006.
could come to dominate long-haul air travel in much the same way
as the Boeing 747 did when it first carried passengers some 30
years ago.
Second
and perhaps more importantly, the announcement immediately spawned
a personal warning by U.S. President Bill Clinton to his EU
counterparts that the proposed government financing of the project
could mean big trouble for trans-Atlantic relations. The deciding
factor will be whether the financing violates internationally
accepted rules against subsidization.
Betting
the Company
The
commercial stakes are huge -- Airbus and its government backers
are all but betting the company on the A380. And by deciding
against building an all-new superjumbo of its own, Boeing has, in
effect, taken the bet in the opposite direction.
Airbus
has 50 orders in hand for the new airplane. Boeing has yet to find
a customer for the updated version of its 747. The A380 is
expected to cost nearly $11 billion to develop, about one-third of
which would be funded by European governments. If Airbus’
estimates are right, it will sell some 600 to 700 A380s over the
next 20 years, - and create some 225,000 direct and indirect jobs.
In
doing so, it will break Boeing’s Virtual monopoly on the
long-haul commercial-aircraft market, and deal a body blow to its
highly profitable 747 program (which, not incidentally, is a major
American export and a key reason why the U.S. trade deficit is not
even larger).
If
Airbus’s estimates are wrong, the result could be both
economically devastating to the company and politically
humiliating to its European government backers.
As
demonstrated by President Clinton’s quick and personal response,
the new Airbus project is shaping up as a fight that neither the
U.S. nor Europe believes it can afford to lose. And that is why,
impressive as the commercial considerations are, even more is at
stake in the question of European financing of A380. Unless both
sides focus on the larger stakes of trans-Atlantic unity, what
ought to be no more than a trade dispute could inflict widespread
political, economic, and security damage to the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization. This issue not only is quantitatively
different than previous EU-U.S. fights over beef and bananas-- it
also is about a lot more than airplanes.
The
United States has warned that the $2.5 billion in loans that
European governments will be making to Airbus to help fund the
development of the A380 must be priced at commercial rates.
Otherwise, President Clinton told French President Jacques Chirac,
the financing would constitute a subsidy that could create ‘a
serious problem affecting the U.S.-EU relationship.”
For
their part Europeans have followed a two-pronged strategy: first
the EU denies that the proposed financing will constitute an
illegal subsidy, and second Airbus reiterates charges that
Boeing’s commercial-aircraft business benefits from what amounts
to implicit U.S. government subsidies in the form of Pentagon and
NASA contracts.
Independent
observers -- and there aren’t many -- have a difficulty in
parsing the issue: Neither side is being very forthcoming with
facts. On Airbus’s side, neither the European Commission nor the
various member states will disclose the terms of the loan
agreements the member states have struck with Airbus, beyond vague
assurances that they comply with international agreements. If the
loans do pass muster, however, there would appear to be no good
reason to keep their terms secret. As Airbus continues its
transformation from shadowy conglomerate to public company, it
will do well to get into the habit of disclosing its financial
position and obligations. Such a disclosure now would go a long
way toward relieving U.S. anxieties over illegal subsidies.
Boeing’s
situation is more difficult, as it is faced chiefly with so-far
unsubstantiated charges from the EU that there is “evidence”
that military and government contracts are used to subsidize
Boeing’s commercial Operations. If such evidence exists, the EU
should lay it out, at which point Boeing would have to explain
itself or change the way it does business. But hiding behind
secrecy and veiled threats behooves neither party in the long run.
There
can be little argument with the proposition that European
government loans to Airbus should be consistent with bilateral and
World Trade Organization commitments undertaken by the EU member
states. At the same time the United States likewise has an
obligation to demonstrate that its military and space contracts do
not constitute hidden subsidies to Boeing. What must be resisted
at all 6 however, is a situation in which competition between two
companies turns into political acrimony between allies over
commercial terms and official commitments.
Commercially
Viable
Both
sides then should avoid making “national champions” out of
these two companies. That is, the U.S. government should no more
intervene to protect Boeing from the consequences of a bad
business decision than the EU should intervene to ensure the
success of what otherwise would not be a commercially viable new
Airbus aircraft. If the two sides do succumb to that temptation,
they risk doing grave damage to trans-Atlantic relations in
general, and to defense and security cooperation in particular. A
trade war with such political and military implications would
signal both to Europeans and to Americans that their fates are
more separate than common, that commitments to free trade can
trumped by parochial political considerations, and that the
growing military capabilities gap between the United States and
its NATO allies will not be bridged by the evolution of a
trans-Atlantic defense industry.
Added
to existing differences over everything from missile defense and
an independent European defense identity to genetically engineered
food, it would accelerate an unhealthy and unnecessary drifting
apart that, at the extreme, could culminate in a serious
fracturing of the NATO alliance.
There
is no guarantee that a trans-Atlantic train wreck can be avoided
even if both sides recognize these larger stakes and demonstrate
the kind of leadership that looks beyond the present controversy.
But if they fail to do so, we may all look back on the A380 as the
crisis that spawned the unraveling of NATO.