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GE Says 500 Jobs Leaving U.S. Over Export-Import Bank Standoff

GE said on Tuesday that it will move 500 manufacturing jobs to Europe and China because it can no longer access U.S. Export-Import Bank financing.
Image: General Electric
A worker looks at the 9HA Gas Turbine, at the General Electric (GE) plant in Belfort, France, on May 28.FREDERICK FLORIN / AFP-Getty Images file

WASHINGTON - General Electric Co. said on Tuesday that it will move 500 U.S. power turbine manufacturing jobs to Europe and China because it can no longer access U.S. Export-Import Bank financing after Congress allowed the agency's charter to lapse in June.

GE said that France's COFACE export agency has agreed to support some of the industrial giant's global power project bids with a new line of credit in exchange for moving production of 50-hertz heavy duty gas turbines to Belfort, France, along with 400 jobs.

GE also said in a statement that 100 additional jobs will move from the United States to Hungary and China.

Image: General Electric
A worker looks at the 9HA Gas Turbine, at the General Electric (GE) plant in Belfort, France, on May 28.FREDERICK FLORIN / AFP-Getty Images file

The company said it is now bidding on $11 billion worth of international power projects that require export credit agency financing, including some in Indonesia.

The U.S. jobs will be moved from facilities in South Carolina, New York, Texas and Maine, but no U.S. facility will close, a GE spokeswoman said.

GE Vice Chairman John Rice said the company would soon announce agreements with other foreign export credit agencies to finance GE products.

"If the Ex-Im Bank were open, it would be business as usual," GE Vice Chairman John Rice told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Six Things to Know About the Export-Import Bank

Given the bitter fight in Congress over the bank's future, Rice said that GE cannot afford to wait and must make other long-term financing arrangements for large industrial projects.

"If Ex-Im isn't going to happen, or it's going to be a regular fight to be reauthorized, we've got to make other plans," he said.

Conservative Republicans in Congress who say that the bank represents "corporate welfare" and "crony capitalism" successfully blocked renewal of the 81-year-old export credit agency's charter at the end of June.

EXIM supporters have thus far been unsuccessful in attaching renewal to other legislation, but new efforts are expected to be made this autumn as Congress considers government "must-pass" agency funding, a transportation bill and an increase in the federal debt limit.

GE last year vowed to add 1,000 jobs in France to gain the blessing of the French government for the U.S. conglomerate’s acquisition of the power business of France’s Alstom. GE won European regulatory approval for the deal last week, and expects it to close by the end of the year.

GE is also seeking to wring out $3 billion in cost savings as it combines with Alstom, including by reducing overlap and consolidating manufacturing operations.

In its statement, GE said the job move "reinforces the need for Congress to promptly reauthorize the U.S. Export-Import Bank."

Aerospace giant Boeing Co has also said it was considering moving work overseas due to uncertainty over the future of the EXIM bank.