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Trade Offices Were A Joke, But Politicians Now Want New Ones

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  • Trade Offices Were A Joke, But Politicians Now Want New Ones

    TRADE OFFICES WERE A JOKE, BUT POLITICIANS NOW WANT NEW ONES
    By Dan Walters -- Bee Columnist

    Sacramento Bee, CA
    April 19 2006

    Creating overseas offices supposedly devoted to improving California's
    international trade was a popular political exercise in the 1980s
    and 1990s.

    There was no objective rationale for the program, nor any rhyme nor
    reason to where the offices were located. Governors and legislators
    acted on political whim, driven more by local factors or Capitol
    politics than a hard-nosed investment-vs.-return equation.

    Finally, the entire program collapsed of its own absurd weight.

    Journalistic investigations and official audits established that
    the trade offices were less than useless, with their directors -
    political appointees all - spending most of their time dreaming up
    phantom accomplishments.

    At one point, the Legislature's budget analyst reported that the
    state's Trade and Commerce Agency was claiming credit for any export
    or investment that included a contact with a trade office, but could
    not document a single specific transaction that could be tied to any
    trade office activity. The Orange County Register, in an extensive
    examination of the program, declared that the reports submitted by
    the trade offices were "often false or distorted." In many cases,
    the newspaper contacted business executives that the offices claimed
    to have helped and found that most shunned any benefits.

    With the state budget oozing red ink in 2003, the Legislature voted
    to shut down the Trade and Commerce Agency and the overseas trade
    offices - almost. While financing was eliminated for a dozen offices
    in London, Tokyo and other major foreign cities, a paragraph buried
    in one of the budget "trailer bills" required the state to maintain
    an office in tiny, landlocked Armenia.

    Why Armenia? Democratic politicians had been cultivating political
    support in Southern California's large and growing Armenian American
    community and wanted to butter up voters by paying official homage
    to their homeland. For the past three years, therefore, Armenia is
    the only nation with which California has maintained official trade
    relations. But that would change if an array of bills now pending in
    the Legislature - one with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's blessing -
    is enacted. The state would open a new set of trade offices in Asia,
    Latin America, Europe and Africa on the questionable assertion that
    they would benefit the state's international dealings.

    At least those involved can't say they weren't warned. Jock O'Connell,
    an authentic authority on California's international trade, bluntly
    told the Assembly's economic development committee Tuesday that
    the state's former trade offices were useless and, given changes in
    communications technology, are unnecessary today.

    "Trade offices are something out of the 1980s," O'Connell said. "The
    world has changed ... and yet the Legislature still talks about
    trade offices."

    "There's no desperate need for these trade offices," O'Connell
    continued. "There may be a political need."

    The latter comment hit the political nail on the head. Sponsoring
    trade offices has nothing to do with improving international commerce
    but - as the example of Armenia indicates - everything to do with
    politicians' desires to stroke significant blocs of voters and
    special interest groups in California by giving their homelands
    special recognition.

    The bills pending in the Senate and the Assembly would open new
    trade offices in Mexico, South Korea and South Africa specifically,
    or regional offices in unspecified locations in some instances.

    Schwarzenegger is backing a bill to create an office in Mexico "and
    two international trade and investment offices in Asia."

    The chairman of the Assembly committee, Fresno Democrat Juan Arambula,
    seems reluctant to approve a new flock of trade offices and is carrying
    his own measure that would require the California Economic Strategy
    Panel to conduct a study of the entire issue and report back to the
    Legislature in two years.

    If the Legislature and the governor were serious about enhancing
    California's international trade, and not just lubricating relations
    with California interest groups, they would improve the infrastructure
    of the state's crowded ports and deep-six several other measures that
    would drive trade elsewhere by imposing stiff new fees on cargo for
    unrelated programs.

    http://www.sacbee.com/content/politics/ story/14244933p-15063290c.html
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