Trump's 'America First' policies are catapulting Boeing into dangerous territory
Boeing 787-10
Boeing 787-10

(A Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner.Boeing)

For a company like Boeing, President Donald Trump’s "America First" policies, which represent a sharp departure for the US, threaten the way the corporation does business.

Take its 787 Dreamliner.

It’s a flying symbol of an interconnected world economy, one with a network of global suppliers that would be hard to unravel with government policies, and a global group of customers waiting to buy the plans.

The Dreamliner is like the United Nations of planes:

  • Its wings and batteries come from Japan.

  • Its wing tips come from South Korea.

  • India is the source of its floor beams.

  • The front fuselage is made in the USA and Japan.

  • The center fuselage and horizontal stabilizers are from Italy.

  • Landing gear and doors? France.

  • Cargo access doors are built in Sweden.

  • The wing/body fairings, which cover gaps on the body, are from Canada.

  • The movable trailing edge of the wings are from Canada, except when they’re from the US or Australia.

  • Thrust reversers come from Mexico.

  • Its engines come from either General Electric in the US or Rolls-Royce in the UK.

Global Origins of Boeing 787 Blue
Global Origins of Boeing 787 Blue

(What's made where.Skye Gould/BI Graphics)

After all that, the components travel around the world before arriving at one of Boeing's factories in Washington or South Carolina, where they’re assembled into finished planes. Then, they’re delivered to more than 60 airlines worldwide.

The Trump administration’s foreign policy and stances on trade and defense could have significant effects on how multinational companies do business. While a company such as Boeing supports a massive manufacturing presence in the US, it has cultivated a broad network of international partners that have invested decades and billions of dollars into relationships with Boeing. These partners have deep ties to their local governments and business communities, but the new administration’s hardline stance on globalization threatens those bonds. And for Boeing, it could give its main rival, Airbus, a serious leg up.

NAFTA and the war on trade

As the Trump White House dials up the tough talk on trade, there are few companies as potentially affected by policies and changes as Boeing. This is especially true for the nondefense half of its business, Boeing Commercial Airplanes, which makes the Dreamliner.

First, take the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), that pact between the US, Canada, and Mexico that for more than two decades has created a free market in the region. While controversial leading up to its inception, the furor over NAFTA died down in recent years — until being reignited by Trump, who has vowed to renegotiate or even scrap the agreement.