Recent weeks have seen debates in Congress over the future of the Export-Import Bank, a government agency that provides financing for exporters. While the Bank’s opponents accuse it of ‘corporate welfare’, Sarah Cleeland Knight argues that its benefits are not just economic. She writes that since its inception 80 years ago, the Export-Import Bank has kept firms engaged in countries where the U.S. would like to effect change, and that for the continuation of this important role, it should be reauthorized by Congress
The banking difficulties of the 1980s prompted Congress to enact the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo...
This article compares the U.S. export incentives, the Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC...
After discussing briefly some of the statute\u27s economic implications and limitations, this articl...
This report discusses the Export-Import Bank (Ex-In Bank), the chief U.S. government agency that hel...
The latest addition to the US law of international trade, the Export Trading Company Act of 1982 (th...
The Export-Import Bank is an independent U.S. government agency that is charged with financing and p...
There is an almost universally held perceptoin that expanded export trade is essential to a robust U...
The purpose of this article is multi-faceted. Part I provides an overview of the Export-Import Bank ...
Export growth is seen by governments as being a key to economic recovery. In the United States, the ...
Eximbank, a wholly-owned government corporation with the status of an independent agency, operates u...
This report discusses the ongoing debate regarding the Export-Import Bank of the United States, a fe...
The US Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im) celebrated its 65th birthday in 1999. While congratulations were i...
This report provides: (1) a general background of Ex-Im Bank; (2) a discussion of the international ...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Exp...
During the past three years, a highly-publicized controversy has raged over the question of whether ...
The banking difficulties of the 1980s prompted Congress to enact the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo...
This article compares the U.S. export incentives, the Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC...
After discussing briefly some of the statute\u27s economic implications and limitations, this articl...
This report discusses the Export-Import Bank (Ex-In Bank), the chief U.S. government agency that hel...
The latest addition to the US law of international trade, the Export Trading Company Act of 1982 (th...
The Export-Import Bank is an independent U.S. government agency that is charged with financing and p...
There is an almost universally held perceptoin that expanded export trade is essential to a robust U...
The purpose of this article is multi-faceted. Part I provides an overview of the Export-Import Bank ...
Export growth is seen by governments as being a key to economic recovery. In the United States, the ...
Eximbank, a wholly-owned government corporation with the status of an independent agency, operates u...
This report discusses the ongoing debate regarding the Export-Import Bank of the United States, a fe...
The US Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im) celebrated its 65th birthday in 1999. While congratulations were i...
This report provides: (1) a general background of Ex-Im Bank; (2) a discussion of the international ...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Exp...
During the past three years, a highly-publicized controversy has raged over the question of whether ...
The banking difficulties of the 1980s prompted Congress to enact the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo...
This article compares the U.S. export incentives, the Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC...
After discussing briefly some of the statute\u27s economic implications and limitations, this articl...