Caterpillar Urges Congress to Establish Permanent Trade Relations with Russia

June 22, 2012
Caterpillar Inc. chairman and CEO Doug Oberhelman last week urged Congress to act with a sense of urgency by passing legislation establishing Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) with Russia.

Caterpillar Inc. chairman and CEO Doug Oberhelman last week urged Congress to act with a sense of urgency by passing legislation establishing Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) with Russia.

“If Congress fails to take action, I am concerned American companies that export to Russia — and the jobs supported by those exports — could be put at risk and we will be placed at a competitive disadvantage when Russia enters the World Trade Organization later this year,” Oberhelman said. “In the last five years, Caterpillar’s exports to Russia from its U.S. factories totaled nearly $2 billion, but Russia’s entry into the WTO, combined with PNTR, could open the door for greater exports and the American jobs that go along with those exports. If Congress fails to approve PNTR, it could give Caterpillar’s competitors based in Europe and Asia an advantage in the Russian market.”

In testimony before the House Ways and Means Committee, Oberhelman also outlined the benefits to the United States economy based on Russia entering the WTO and Congress taking action to normalize trade with Russia.

“When the United States negotiates trade and investment agreements like Russia’s accession to the WTO, foreign barriers fall and new markets open for U.S. manufacturers, service providers, farmers and workers,” Oberhelman said. “Russia imported nearly $300 billion in goods in 2011, yet the United States accounted for only five percent of those imports. An economy of this size should not be just our 31st largest goods export market. Clearly there is a lot of opportunity to increase U.S. exports to Russia.”

Since 1992, the U.S. has maintained Normal Trade Relations with Russia on a temporary, year-to-year basis. The WTO, however, requires its members to give each other PNTR. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — and a long list of former U.S. diplomats — has endorsed Russia PNTR.

Caterpillar is the world’s leading manufacturer of construction and mining equipment, diesel and natural gas engines, industrial gas turbines and diesel-electric locomotives.