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LAX772LR wrote:Doubt anything's going to come of it.
Trump will likely bluster and talk sanctions/tariffs against Airbus and Europe (anything to distract)... but there's too many interested parties on both sides of the aisle that would lose money over any real punitive action. Doubt he'd be able to do it.
seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
mercure1 wrote:Outcome hardly a shock. Its no secret EU states have greatly aided Airbus and its projects. Afterall the entire endeavour was a pet project by national governments to start with. So yet again Airbus+EU get admonished for offering monies for projects outside of normal commercial terms such as the benefit of loans offered at token low-interest rates.
seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
SelseyBill wrote:mercure1 wrote:Outcome hardly a shock. Its no secret EU states have greatly aided Airbus and its projects. Afterall the entire endeavour was a pet project by national governments to start with. So yet again Airbus+EU get admonished for offering monies for projects outside of normal commercial terms such as the benefit of loans offered at token low-interest rates.
......thanks for clearing that up for us 'mercure1' ...... we had no idea......
Other summaries of this investigation are of course available.
Looking forward to hearing what the WTO thinks of all the state aid packages, political leveraging, costing deferrals, below cost pricing and military cross-subsidies Boeing adopts, when the WTO reports on their activities next year.
Look; at the end of the day; we all know it takes countless billions to launch a new aircraft type, and both large OEM's have taken part in naturally taking advantage of whatever finances are on offer. What we end up with as passengers and enthusiasts are wonderful machines like the A350, A380, B787 and B777 to marvel at and fly us around the world; I personally am in awe at the engineering achievements of both Airbus and Boeing, and long may they both continue pushing the envelope of civil aviation.
Both OEM's have been guilty of accepting aid-packages that are being judged now as maybe 'unacceptable' and we can only guess at how new aircraft projects in China and Russia are being funded.
All of these A v B arguments 'mercure1' IMO are just one huge pi$$ing contest......
bigjku wrote:......... launch NMA and make it clear that state funding of further products will trigger action. Airbus will either need a lot of financing or bank loans as I believe they have a lot of major projects coming up........
bigjku wrote:SelseyBill wrote:mercure1 wrote:Outcome hardly a shock. Its no secret EU states have greatly aided Airbus and its projects. Afterall the entire endeavour was a pet project by national governments to start with. So yet again Airbus+EU get admonished for offering monies for projects outside of normal commercial terms such as the benefit of loans offered at token low-interest rates.
......thanks for clearing that up for us 'mercure1' ...... we had no idea......
Other summaries of this investigation are of course available.
Looking forward to hearing what the WTO thinks of all the state aid packages, political leveraging, costing deferrals, below cost pricing and military cross-subsidies Boeing adopts, when the WTO reports on their activities next year.
Look; at the end of the day; we all know it takes countless billions to launch a new aircraft type, and both large OEM's have taken part in naturally taking advantage of whatever finances are on offer. What we end up with as passengers and enthusiasts are wonderful machines like the A350, A380, B787 and B777 to marvel at and fly us around the world; I personally am in awe at the engineering achievements of both Airbus and Boeing, and long may they both continue pushing the envelope of civil aviation.
Both OEM's have been guilty of accepting aid-packages that are being judged now as maybe 'unacceptable' and we can only guess at how new aircraft projects in China and Russia are being funded.
All of these A v B arguments 'mercure1' IMO are just one huge pi$$ing contest......
That last line is garbage. While I don’t think much will come of it do you think it’s an Internet pissing contest to the MD line worker who lost his job when the whole company went under? There are actual real people involved in these things.
It’s not just about pretty airplanes for people here to slobber over.
aaexecplat wrote:seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
You seriously want that?
SelseyBill wrote:bigjku wrote:SelseyBill wrote:
......thanks for clearing that up for us 'mercure1' ...... we had no idea......
Other summaries of this investigation are of course available.
Looking forward to hearing what the WTO thinks of all the state aid packages, political leveraging, costing deferrals, below cost pricing and military cross-subsidies Boeing adopts, when the WTO reports on their activities next year.
Look; at the end of the day; we all know it takes countless billions to launch a new aircraft type, and both large OEM's have taken part in naturally taking advantage of whatever finances are on offer. What we end up with as passengers and enthusiasts are wonderful machines like the A350, A380, B787 and B777 to marvel at and fly us around the world; I personally am in awe at the engineering achievements of both Airbus and Boeing, and long may they both continue pushing the envelope of civil aviation.
Both OEM's have been guilty of accepting aid-packages that are being judged now as maybe 'unacceptable' and we can only guess at how new aircraft projects in China and Russia are being funded.
All of these A v B arguments 'mercure1' IMO are just one huge pi$$ing contest......
That last line is garbage. While I don’t think much will come of it do you think it’s an Internet pissing contest to the MD line worker who lost his job when the whole company went under? There are actual real people involved in these things.
It’s not just about pretty airplanes for people here to slobber over.
....only 'garbage' it seems when US workers are involved.
What about those folks up in Montreal and in Belfast, who Boeing recently wanted to 'lay-off' with their 'Bombardier' action over the C-Series.......
SelseyBill wrote:bigjku wrote:SelseyBill wrote:
......thanks for clearing that up for us 'mercure1' ...... we had no idea......
Other summaries of this investigation are of course available.
Looking forward to hearing what the WTO thinks of all the state aid packages, political leveraging, costing deferrals, below cost pricing and military cross-subsidies Boeing adopts, when the WTO reports on their activities next year.
Look; at the end of the day; we all know it takes countless billions to launch a new aircraft type, and both large OEM's have taken part in naturally taking advantage of whatever finances are on offer. What we end up with as passengers and enthusiasts are wonderful machines like the A350, A380, B787 and B777 to marvel at and fly us around the world; I personally am in awe at the engineering achievements of both Airbus and Boeing, and long may they both continue pushing the envelope of civil aviation.
Both OEM's have been guilty of accepting aid-packages that are being judged now as maybe 'unacceptable' and we can only guess at how new aircraft projects in China and Russia are being funded.
All of these A v B arguments 'mercure1' IMO are just one huge pi$$ing contest......
That last line is garbage. While I don’t think much will come of it do you think it’s an Internet pissing contest to the MD line worker who lost his job when the whole company went under? There are actual real people involved in these things.
It’s not just about pretty airplanes for people here to slobber over.
....only 'garbage' it seems when US workers are involved.
What about those folks up in Montreal and in Belfast, who Boeing recently wanted to 'lay-off' with their 'Bombardier' action over the C-Series.......
SelseyBill wrote:bigjku wrote:......... launch NMA and make it clear that state funding of further products will trigger action. Airbus will either need a lot of financing or bank loans as I believe they have a lot of major projects coming up........
......and presumably whilst Boeing themselves are launching NMA/797, they also need to demonstrate to everybody in a clear way that they are not receiving any (Washington State or South Carolina) state-aid.
I'd imagine there will be plenty of folks up in Canada and in Europe watching 797 financing very closely......
seahawk wrote:aaexecplat wrote:seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
You seriously want that?
Would it resonate well with his voters, so I would not rule that out.
bigjku wrote:In the meantime launch NMA and make it clear that state funding of further products will trigger action.
Aviano789 wrote:LAX772LR wrote:Doubt anything's going to come of it.
Trump will likely bluster and talk sanctions/tariffs against Airbus and Europe (anything to distract)... but there's too many interested parties on both sides of the aisle that would lose money over any real punitive action. Doubt he'd be able to do it.
There is plenty of orders/revenue to go around for both Airbus and Boeing, this is a MOOT fight!
SelseyBill wrote:seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
......you might want to think that one through a bit more carefully.......
fsabo wrote:seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
I really hope trump does that. Both in airbus and steel + aluminum.
Revelation wrote:Aviano789 wrote:LAX772LR wrote:Doubt anything's going to come of it.
Trump will likely bluster and talk sanctions/tariffs against Airbus and Europe (anything to distract)... but there's too many interested parties on both sides of the aisle that would lose money over any real punitive action. Doubt he'd be able to do it.
There is plenty of orders/revenue to go around for both Airbus and Boeing, this is a MOOT fight!
It seems ideology is driving things more than greed.
seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
Polot wrote:SelseyBill wrote:bigjku wrote:
That last line is garbage. While I don’t think much will come of it do you think it’s an Internet pissing contest to the MD line worker who lost his job when the whole company went under? There are actual real people involved in these things.
It’s not just about pretty airplanes for people here to slobber over.
....only 'garbage' it seems when US workers are involved.
What about those folks up in Montreal and in Belfast, who Boeing recently wanted to 'lay-off' with their 'Bombardier' action over the C-Series.......
BBD’s subsidies actually predate Boeing’s actions. But no worries I’m pretty sure Brazil has already filed a complaint against Canada with the WTO over the issue.
BHXLOVER wrote:fsabo wrote:seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
I really hope trump does that. Both in airbus and steel + aluminum.
Do you not think the EU would retaliate?
SelseyBill wrote:Polot wrote:SelseyBill wrote:
....only 'garbage' it seems when US workers are involved.
What about those folks up in Montreal and in Belfast, who Boeing recently wanted to 'lay-off' with their 'Bombardier' action over the C-Series.......
BBD’s subsidies actually predate Boeing’s actions. But no worries I’m pretty sure Brazil has already filed a complaint against Canada with the WTO over the issue.
I'm not believing for one minute Embraer doesn't get subsidies in one form or another from its own government; good for them; but be careful what you wish for Brazil. Of course BBD's subsidies pre-date Boeings' action; it would be a practical impossibility for even Boeing to complain about something that was yet to happen.
Lets not forget that Boeing complained about BBD bidding for contracts with US airlines by pricing below cost of production; something that Boeing had evidently done many times, including the United 737-700 contest........ its fine for Boeing to do that for internal USA business; but if it tries the same trick bidding overseas; (lets say for 797 contracts); then its a different matter altogether, and plenty of other nations will be watching closely given Boeings stance over BBD.
BHXLOVER wrote:fsabo wrote:seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
I really hope trump does that. Both in airbus and steel + aluminum.
Do you not think the EU would retaliate?
Super80Fan wrote:Boeing needs to just shutdown and liquidate all their assets at this point, they have become a political machine instead of an aerospace manufacturer.
Super80Fan wrote:Boeing needs to just shutdown and liquidate all their assets at this point, they have become a political machine instead of an aerospace manufacturer.
Nean1 wrote:Much of the commentary shows a complete ignorance of the subject or just intellectual dishonesty.
leghorn wrote:Are there any airframes from Boeing or Airbus which can escape these proposed tariffs?
For Airbus will A32XNeo and A330NEO be likely free from tariff?
For Boeing will 777 and 737Maxes be likely free from tariff when WTO are through with them.
If so it will completely change the profile of Customers' fleets as nobody wants to pay a tariff if they can avoid it.
Jayafe wrote:Super80Fan wrote:Boeing needs to just shutdown and liquidate all their assets at this point, they have become a political machine instead of an aerospace manufacturer.
100%![]()
Nean1 wrote:Much of the commentary shows a complete ignorance of the subject or just intellectual dishonesty.
Aka "whoever is not on my side is stupid or not telling the truth". Wow, I'm convinced now
seahawk wrote:Nice chance to impose import tariffs on Airbus now. Trump should not let it pass.
seahawk wrote:This could open the way for UA, DL and AA to get rid of their Airbus contracts without having to pay a penalty.
seahawk wrote:This could open the way for UA, DL and AA to get rid of their Airbus contracts without having to pay a penalty.
BoeingVista wrote:Wow, are we still on this? This is generational litigation, lawyers have put their children through college on this case who are now training to become lawyers in order to carry on this litigation when their parents retire and to fund putting their own children through college...
the same appellate body that ruled on Tuesday must still decide the other half of the dueling claims: allegations that the United States improperly subsidised Boeing.
seahawk wrote:This could open the way for UA, DL and AA to get rid of their Airbus contracts without having to pay a penalty.
seahawk wrote:This could open the way for UA, DL and AA to get rid of their Airbus contracts without having to pay a penalty.
Flyglobal wrote:Prediction: we will see a world where products are developed that are completely 'US Content and License free', ‘EU Contents and license free’, ‘Chinese Content and license free’, ‘Russian Content and license free', not necessary as a mandatory, but rather to be prepared for any case of future dispute. World changed and as just Chinese ZTE learned that they had to shut down production because they couldn’t import UD designed chips anymore the worlds needs to be prepared to be independent from certain countries. This will not happen without government support in one or the other case, but when things get unreliable others will react.
Flyglobal
LAX772LR wrote:Revelation wrote:Aviano789 wrote:There is plenty of orders/revenue to go around for both Airbus and Boeing, this is a MOOT fight!
It seems ideology is driving things more than greed.
Huh??
Since when have politicos ever truly given a damn about ideology?
...they just use it as a smokescreen to mask their object(ives) of their greed.
E.g.:
Legalizing open/flagrant bribery = "campaign contributions"
Invading a sovereign country for its oil = "liberating from a dictator"
Building for-profit prisons while enacting 3strike rules for minor offenses = "cracking down on crime"
Exempting 16yr-olds from child labor protections so they work for pennies = "teaching responsibility"
Nothing's changed.