THE HILL
 

Hell No! We Won’t Send Our Tax Dollars to China

By Leo W. Gerard, USW International President - 11/06/09 05:04 PM ET

Taking candy from a baby: A consortium of Chinese and American companies goes to Washington and announces plans to build a $1.5 billion windmill farm in West Texas using $450 million in U.S. Stimulus funds, which will create 2,330 jobs – 2,000 of them in China. 

The baby – Washington -- doesn’t cry or whine or spit in the consortium’s face. That’s what’s really wrong with this story.

So accustomed to being bought and sold, Washington simply begins processing forms so it can hand over your tax dollars to create jobs in a turbine factory in the city of Shenyang, China at a subsidy of $193,133 each.

It’s like these bureaucrats live in Wonderland. Or an America where the unemployment rate isn’t 10.2 percent. Or where 40,000 American manufacturing facilities didn’t disappear in the past decade. Or where banks didn’t repossess nearly a quarter million American homes in the past three months.

We’ve got a message for Washington: Hell no! We’re not giving tax dollars to China. What’s wrong with these businesses and our government? It is the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. It’s not the Chinese Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

It’s bad enough that we’ve off-shored our factories and technology and jobs over the past 20 years.  We’re not off-shoring our Stimulus cash too. In fact, we’re tired of serving as the schoolyard wimp of the world. We need our own industrial policy so we can stand up and compete in the world market manufacturing the likes of wind turbines. And we need it now.

China has an industrial policy. And it uses that policy to dominate.  Here is how Keith Bradsher of the New York Times described China’s policy to become a world leader in renewable energy, which of course, would include construction of wind turbine factories:

“Calling renewable energy a strategic industry, China is trying hard to make sure that its companies dominate globally. Just as Japan and South Korea made it hard for Detroit automakers to compete in those countries – giving their own automakers time to amass economies of scale in sheltered domestic markets – China is shielding its clean energy sector while it grows to a point where it can take on the world.”


China protects its chosen industries in many ways. It provides low interest loans, some of which don’t have to be repaid. It may give free land on which to construct buildings. And there are other perks that Bradsher described:

“When the Chinese government took bids this spring for 25 large contracts to supply wind turbines, every contract was won by one of seven domestic companies. All six multinationals that submitted bids were disqualified on various technical grounds, like not providing sufficiently detailed data. . . even as Chinese companies that had never built a turbine were approved. . .”

Later, Bradsher describes European disgust at the Chinese treatment:


“European wind turbine makers have stopped even bidding for some Chinese contracts after concluding that their bids would not be seriously considered, said Jorg Wuttke, the president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.”

China has a policy. It ruthlessly protects its own industries.

China was among the many countries that complained bitterly when the U.S. included “Buy American” provisions in the Stimulus Bill. In fact, Vice Commerce Minister Jiang Zengwei told a press conference in Beijing in February that China would not do such a thing, “We won’t practice a ‘Buy China’ policy,” he said. Four months later, that’s exactly what China did, instituting its own, stricter “Buy China” policy as part of its economic stimulus program.

China did what China felt was necessary for its economy. And it ignored foreign criticism.

That’s hardly the U.S. tactic. Wilting under criticism, Congress diminished the Buy American provisions before passing the Stimulus.

As a result, we’ve got a consortium -- U.S. Renewable Energy Group, Cielo Wind Power and A-Power Energy Generation Systems – so bold that it believes it can get nearly half a billion dollars in American Stimulus money for 2,000 Chinese wind turbine jobs. The consortium says it would import 240 Chinese turbines to Texas where 300 temporary construction jobs would be created and another 30 permanent jobs established.

The wind turbines could easily be made in the USA. Bradsher, of the Times, says the Chinese concede that while their turbines cost slightly less initially, they have higher repair costs. He wrote, “United Nations data from trading of carbon credits shows that the Chinese-brand turbines produce less electricity because they are more frequently out of action.”

Really, is that what we want to buy with American tax dollars for a wind farm in West Texas?

If the United States put half the effort into supporting its renewable energy industry that China does, there’d be no way this consortium building windmills in Texas would be looking overseas for turbines.

China has a plan. In its strategy, it doesn’t consider America first or the remainder of the world first. And that’s what the USA must do. We need an industrial policy that makes no apologies for putting America and American workers first. And when that’s the calculus, no American official would ever countenance a request to give $450 million in American taxpayers’ dollars to a turbine factory in China. And no American consortium would consider making such a stupid request.  

In the meantime: Hell no! They don’t get our dough! 



Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/economy-a-budget/66769-hell-no-we-wont-send-our-tax-dollars-to-china-

Comments (13)

Get over it! Without China's involvment and funding, the project would never happen. US companies are involved too and will benefit…GE will be supplying the gearboxes. We are in a global economy. Long term, the US benefits from clean renewable energy. How many jobs did the billions of dollars that went to GM, AIG, Citi, BofA, Chrystler create? At least this project will create some jobs and have a positive impact on global climate control.This project may not even need US stimulous.BY PhilKi on 11/06/2009 at 18:33
Right on brother…you got my vote. (Actually, you would if I lived in Okie country). More like-minded congressman need to echo your voice and SHOUT IT LOUD—AND I MEAN LOUDLY— FROM THE ROOFTOPS.Find youradministrat ion jobs in london hereBY hatake on 11/06/2009 at 19:31
Shut the F up Leo… Think things out before you open your mouth… because you sound stupid. This is a win win deal..Opens the doors for a lot other things. I will let you imagine the possibilities I have.Some people have vision obviously you don'tIf you don't mind can call you an idiotBY Jay R. Patel on 11/06/2009 at 19:39
sheeesh,what dolts! this nation used to be an awesome industrial nation. we went from being proud builders of industry to lazy ass consumers.do us a favor and STFU! industry is the backbone of any country and we dont have much of one due to …wait for it…wait for it…jobs moving overseas? cheap cheap labor?remember the sweat shops…yeah still happenin.theres a reason those windmills didnt make it in the 70s when i was a kid..cause they werent worth the time and they werent effort,and they arent worth fixing.they really dont help much but they make you dumb ass tree huggin morons feel better.meanwhile in the real world kids 16 million people are out of work and how many more do ya think before washington gets a voter facelift? do you think its gonna be a fun trip?we should be cutting spending and paying chinas asses back and fast.but no our illustrious president and his new admin want to print and spend money like its xmas.not to mention theres approx 150 politicians are millionares.less 1pct of normal americans are millionares…it is obvious how they have come by it.im so sick of morons in our country.i cant wait till the worst comes around.im so ready to fight for freedom.BY tranzwarr on 11/06/2009 at 22:21
U.S. Renewable Energy Group and Cielo will tell Senator Schumer he can have his $450M back and they will finance the entire deal through Commercial Bank of China and the deal will proceed.BY getplaning on 11/07/2009 at 01:25
Look at GM. It's now Government Motors. Working on getting it's THIRD bailout. The union is the largest voting share at 85%. They haven't shut down one non-union plant in Mexico, but have shut numerous plants in the US. They are moving more engine production to Red China and now building a 350 million dollar truck plant in RED CHINA. This is the UNITED AUTO WORKERS UNION that has the largest share of voters. They ALL are the pupets of the TRANS NATIONAL KAPITALIST's who's goal is to establish their New World Order by destroying America.BY Mac-101 on 11/07/2009 at 06:06
Thinking like Philki is why were in our present economic crisis: he's another dare devil. If you join a 100 dollar polka game with 5 dollars, you won't last long. Money follows money. With the help of American "economic traitors" and our "paid off" government officials, this is how they've been jacking us off all the while. It's time for a Constitutional Convention. Institute the draft, lock the country down, put the two legislative branches under house arrest and straighten out "our own" internal affairs.How else can you do it?BY Edmond on 11/07/2009 at 06:48
The County gave them property tax abatements too.BY Bob on 11/07/2009 at 10:48
Hey Philki-did you read how many jobs were being created in China and how many in the U.S.? Why don't we just sign away the U.S. to China. Oh wait-we already have. VOTE FOR CONSERVATISM IN 2010.BY attitudijudi on 11/07/2009 at 14:39
Bob, There's no "Conservatism Party" to vote for. The Republocrats are securely indebted to big money interests, not to us. We need a government that governs in our interests, something we've not had for 30 years.BY Tony Jordan on 11/07/2009 at 20:13

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