B. Marc Allen

B. Marc Allen

Chief Strategy Officer, Sr. VP, Strategy and Corporate Development at Boeing
Company Tenure: 16 years
Education:
Princeton University (B.S.)
Biography:

B. Marc Allen became Chief Strategy Officer and Senior Vice President of Strategy and Corporate Development of Boeing in September 2020. Prior to that, he was the President of Embraer Partnership and Group Operations from 2019 to 2020, the Senior Vice President and President of Boeing International from 2015 to 2019. Mr. Allen has also served as the President of Boeing Capital Corporation, President of Boeing China, Boeing Vice President for Global Law Affairs and Boeing International General Counsel. Previously, he practiced law in Washington D.C., notably serving as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy’s law clerk. Mr. Allen also serves on the Board of Directors for The Proctor & Gamble Company. He also serves several nonprofits; Mr. Allen is the Chairman of the International Justice Mission, Inc., the governor of The Trilateral Commission, and on the board of directors for the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, the U.S. – China Business Council, The Atlantic Council of the United States, and the U.S. India Strategic Partnership Forum. 

Profile Details

Total Political Contributions More information

Republican Support
Democratic Support
$9,050 $4,300

Affiliated Companies

Key Statements

"I want to make sure that we're continuing that global story with our Chinese friends and business partners. There's so much talent in China. It would be an absolute loss for the world and for world growth and opportunity. If the talent in China isn't connecting and working with the talent in the United States, if we just kind of sit in our own tents and do our own work, that will be disaster for everyone."

"I think, when Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State and she really strongly supported the stand up of the 100,000 strong effort, which was moving 100,000 American students in high school and beyond to go study in China for a time that was reflective of the same kind of understanding that we see embedded in the Confucius Institute from the Chinese side."