Export Promotion: Issues for Assessing the Governmentwide Strategy,

Abstract

In enacting legislation in 1992 calling for a coordinated national strategy for promoting and financing U.S. exports, the Congress was aware of the vital and ever-increasing role that exports play in creating the new jobs driving the economic growth of the United States. The legislation established in statute the Trade Promotion Coordinating Committee (TPcc), comprised of more than a dozen federal departments and agencies, to bring coherence and direction to the federal government's efforts to help U.S. companies export more goods and services. Export promotion efforts include diverse programs, such as providing U.S. businesses with market research and trade leads, business counseling, high-level government advocacy through the use of trade missions, and export finance. Our comments today will address two points: (1) the evolution of the government strategy designed to reshape federal export promotion activities and (2) the results and issues related to our past work on U.S. government efforts to improve U.S. export promotion programs. Our remarks are based largely on past GAO reports and testimonIes, a list of which is attached.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 26, 1998
Accession Number
ADA339095

Entities

People

  • Jayetta Z. Hecker

Organizations

  • United States Government Accountability Office

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Accounting
  • Agreements
  • Commerce
  • Corporations
  • European Union
  • Finance
  • Government (Foreign)
  • Governments
  • International Relations
  • International Trade
  • Investments
  • Law
  • Money
  • Small Business
  • Task Forces
  • United Kingdom
  • United States

Readers

  • Defense Acquisition Program Management
  • Economics
  • Military Leadership and Professional Education.