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    WORLD BUSINESS EXCHANGE NETWORK OFFERS VIABLE SOLUTION TO BUSH'S CALL FOR MORE TRADE TO CURE HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT


    LOS ANGELES, CA, January 16, 2002 - On Tuesday, President Bush's speech in New Orleans expressed new worries about unemployment and prescribed a regimen of aggressive foreign trade to expand job opportunities and lift the nation's sagging economy. "I'm worried about the loss of jobs," Bush said, "if you trade more, there are more jobs available for hard-working Americans."

    The World Business Exchange Network (www.WBE.net), an international trade organization on the Internet, is primed and ready to assist in curing the high unemployment figures. For people who are caught in the unemployment line, the WBE.net can turn them into import/export agents, locating American products and services for foreign buyers.

    Since 1987, the WBE.net has been instrumental in training and coaching entrepreneurs in how to set-up home businesses as successful export agents. "Now that we have officially welcomed China into a global, rules-based trading system opening up their once forbidden market to American goods, and with President Bush urging support for expanded trade, there has never been a better time to enter the business of international trade," said Roosevelt Roby, CEO and President of The World Business Exchange Network.

    In courting public support for a bill pending in the Senate that would grant the President added leeway to negotiate trade pacts, Bush is reminding workers in the industrial and agricultural heartlands that millions of jobs rely on open trade. It is an issue of growing concern as the administration pushes for the expanded authority to negotiate trade agreements at a time when unemployment in the United States is at a six-year high.

    "One of the reasons I'm traveling down the spine of America and on the mighty Mississippi is because I want to remind our fellow citizens how important trade is," Bush said. "It's important to these workers that we trade. The people who are loading these ships load them because we're trading around the world. The farmers who are selling products can sell more if we trade. And if the farmers sell more of their products, we can sell more of the machines made in Moline, Ill."

    The trade-promotion trip is part of a travel schedule Bush has undertaken in anticipation of themes and issues he will touch upon in his Jan. 29 State of the Union address. Pressing the Senate to act--and underscoring his focus on the economy--Bush said: "Trade is a jobs issue."

    WBE.net leverages international trade to its subscribers via access to its massive database of buyers and sellers of products from thousands of international businesses in hundreds of countries around the world. In addition the WBE.net offers complete instruction on exporting, including a Training Manual & User Guide, detailed video and 24/7 training. The training is design for ease of use, so anyone who desires to own their own business and work from home, can become an export agent with the WBE.net.

    Subscribers are also taught about export strategy, how to identify a money-making deal, market analysis, regulation, customs benefits, tax incentives, cultural differences, letters of credit, methods of payment, pricing and how to benefit from government resources that will enhance business. Since developing the program, thousands of individual entrepreneurs and small businesses have gone on to earn thousands to millions of dollars utilizing invaluable trade leads and resources provided by WBE.net.

    The World Business Exchange Network, which was established in 1993 as the first and only on-line tool to revolutionize the import/export trade industry, is bolstered by partnership agreements with the United State Department of Commerce, the United Nations and countries all over the world. To learn more about starting a business in international trade, contact the World Business Exchange Network at 1-800-537-7347 or visit the Web site at www.wbe.net.

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