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Memorandum on the Depression |
Lauchlin B. Currie, P.T. Ellsworth
and Harry Dexter White |
| [Harvard University,
January, 1932] |
The depression has been in progress more than two years. During this
period the index of business activity has declined over a third;
unemployment has assumed very grave proportions; partial employment has
seriously reduced the weekly earnings of a large proportion of those
listed as gainfully employed. In terms of real income the depression has
already cost the American people more than the Great War. Nor can the
loss be measured in terms of real income alone. The widespread and long
drawn out period of unemployment and greatly reduced incomes has been
accompanied by increasing physical suffering and anxiety. It has,
further, engendered a loss of confidence in American leadership and
American institutions which is becoming more marked as the depression
lengthens.
The end is not yet in sight, nor can any precedent be used as a
forecast of duration; the significant factors of the present crisis have
no parallel in modern economic history. The situation has passed the
bounds of a business depression and has assumed the aspect of an
international calamity. With the reparations problem involved, economic
distress throughout Europe on the increase, with the progressive
maldistribution of gold reserves, the growing loss of confidence in
banks, the mounting trade barriers, disorders in Spain, India, and
China, the outlook for recovery in the near future is not encouraging.
In view of the manifest uncertainty as to the duration of the
depression, the likelihood of its continuance for another year or longer
and the failure on the part of the government to adopt other than
palliative measures, there devolves upon the economist the
responsibility of recommending a course of action which will hasten the
approach of recovery. There are some economists who believe that the
course of the depression cannot be checked, that political and economic
changes are beyond human control, that to attempt to influence their
direction is an attempt to interfere with the "natural"
operation of economic principles; there are others who believe that the
factors involved are so complex that economists can safely recommend no
way out, and that the only policy to follow is one of patient submission
to the as yet little understood operations of economic maladjustments;
there are even a few who believe that the depression should be permitted
to run its course because they regard it as a vehicle for the wholesome
purging of inefficiency from our industrial system. A great number of
economists, however, are not in sympathy with such views; they believe
with Dr. Persons that "the depression will not cure itself and
requires prompt, intelligent, and vigorous action"; they believe
that recovery can and should be hastened thru the adoption of proper
measures.
The recommendations recently made by Dr. Persons and signed by a number
of eminent economists are a first step towards a vigorous grappling with
the situation. We feel, however, that the proposals are stated in terms
too vague, and the program offered is not sufficiently comprehensive to
insure the desired goal of business recovery. We therefore venture to
submit the following specific program together with a brief discussion
of the economic principles involved.
BANKING POLICY
Production and prices have been and are falling, not because of a
decline in the need for goods, but because of a decrease in monetary
demand. This decrease, in turn, is due both to decreased monetary
incomes and to the decreased spending of those incomes. Monetary
incomes, broadly speaking, are determined by the volume and the rate of
spending of the community's means of payment, which consist of money and
demand deposits. The banking system can influence the rate of spending
only indirectly. It can, however, thru its control of demand deposits,
control within wide limits the volume of the means of payment, and it
can offset, to a large degree, changing rates of spending by changing
the volume of the means of payment.
Our banking policy has not exerted any effective influence to check the
decline in the means of payment. Instead of offsetting the decline in
the demand for goods caused by the decreased rate of spending, our
policy has intensified it by permitting a contraction of the volume of
the means of payment. The contraction has resulted chiefly from the
extremely high level of indebtedness of member banks to the reserve
banks. This indebtedness arose from the necessity placed upon the member
banks of meeting customers' demands for notes and gold, and it has been
maintained at that high level by the action of the reserve banks, which,
from October to the end of January, decreased their holdings of
acceptances by some $600,000,000. A decrease in the holdings of
acceptances reduces correspondingly the reserve accounts of member banks
and so forces them to increase their borrowings from the Federal Reserve
Banks. To reduce this indebtedness, the member banks resort to a policy
of credit contraction.
Why, it may be asked should banks wish to reduce their indebtedness to
the reserve banks? There are various reasons. In the first place, there
is the understanding -- virtually an unwritten law -- that recourse to
the reserve banks should be for temporary and emergency purposes only.
Continuous indebtedness to the reserve banks has, in the past, been
frowned upon by the authorities. In addition there is the urgent desire
of conservative bankers to be in a liquid condition, and it is
considered that borrowings impair liquidity. For these and other
reasons, member banks have been selling bonds in unprecedented amounts
and have not been renewing old loans nor making new ones. As a
consequence we have been experiencing an enormous contraction of demand
deposits.
The results of this contraction have been uniformly unfortunate. It has
unquestionably contributed to the demoralization of the bond market, and
so to bank failures and the postponement of bond issues for construction
purposes. In addition it has deepened the depression in less obvious
ways. When an individual having a deposit buys a bond from or pays off a
loan to the banking system and the system cancels the deposit, precisely
the same effect is brought about as if the government were to issue
bonds for banknotes and then destroy the banknotes. Individuals acquire
means of payment from current production; they save, that is refrain
from exercising a demand for the goods they have contributed in
producing, and with their savings pay off a loan or buy a bond. If the
bond is issued by a borrower who uses the proceeds to finance
construction, no net decrease in spending or demand for goods has taken
place. If, on the other hand, it is bought from a bank, as has recently
been the case, the deposit is wiped out and a net decrease in the demand
for goods is the result. In other words, a deposit which is not spent by
the original owner on goods cannot, since it has been wiped out, be
spent by anybody.
Obviously, continued liquidation of this nature will hinder any plan to
overcome the depression. It is of the utmost importance, therefore, that
liquidation be terminated as soon as possible. We do not believe that it
will be terminated as long as member banks are so heavily in debt, and
we believe, therefore, that it is absolutely essential for the
indebtedness to be reduced. How can this be done?
Broadly speaking, indebtedness to the reserve banks can be reduced in
four ways: (1) by an inflow of gold; (2) by an inflow of money from
circulation; (3) by purchases of bills and securities by reserve banks;
(4) by a contraction of member bank loans and investments and hence of
deposits. A contraction of deposits sets free a proportion of the member
banks' reserves which can be used to pay off rediscounts with the
reserve banks. It is, however, important to note that a reduction of a
billion dollars in deposits reduces reserve requirements, and hence
rediscounts with the reserve banks, by only one hundred millions
(assuming a 10 per cent reserve ratio). In default of the first three
ways member banks have been forced to have recourse to this last method
of reducing rediscounts. After four months of contraction, however, they
found themselves more heavily indebted than ever, owing to the
diminution in the holdings of acceptances by the reserve banks.
Since we dare not wait for an inflow of gold or of cash, and it is
obviously undesirable that banks should continue to reduce indebtedness
by contracting deposits, the only alternative is for the reserve banks
to enter upon a vigorous open market purchasing policy. At the moment of
writing the indebtedness amounts to over $800,000,000. We strongly
recommend, therefore, that the reserve banks purchase upwards of a
billion dollars of bills and securities. This action would satisfy
member banks= desire for liquidity and in addition give them large
surplus reserves. Member banks, out of debt and in possession of surplus
reserves, could be relied upon to increase their holdings of short term
government bonds and in this way bring about an expansion of deposits in
place of the present contraction.
The reserve and member banks' purchases of bonds would aid in the
recovery of the bond market and this, in turn, would enhance the
solvency of bond holding institutions and would enable borrowers to
secure loans at better rates. Further, this policy would unquestionably
result in an increase in consumers' incomes, demand for goods, and
production. What is needed at the present time is a net increase in the
effective demand for goods. If the government borrows from the reserve
banks and other banks, it receives deposits which have been newly
created and which have not been taken from individuals. In this way a
net increase in spending can be achieved. If, however, as is pointed out
elsewhere in this plan, the government attempts to finance its deficit
solely by taxation, or even by bonds sold to individuals, there is a
probability that most of the increased government spending will be
offset by the decreased spending of taxpayers and bond buyers.
An objection to our proposal that the reserve banks buy bonds, which
probably carries some weight with the reserve administration, is that it
would decrease the "free gold" of the system. There is a
provision in the Federal Reserve Act that federal reserve notes must be
backed 40 per cent by gold plus 60 per cent by eligible paper or gold.
Member bank rediscounts secured by government securities bought in the
open market are not. If, therefore, a policy were adopted which would
result in the displacement of bills discounted by government bonds in
the reserve banks' earning assets, the amount of gold that would have to
be held against notes would be increased. We believe that this provision
in the act has no valid justification and recommend, therefore, that
government bonds be declared eligible as collateral against federal
reserve notes. The reserve banks need not, however, wait for a change in
the law. Their reserves are ample, and in any case they could purchase
at least $600,000,000 of acceptances if they raised their buying price
sufficiently. Acceptances are eligible paper.
Some people feel that an increase in means of payment would have no
perceptible effect since, they say, there is plenty of money now; the
real difficulty is in getting it spent. We can dispose of this objection
very briefly by pointing out that we have provided for the spending of
the increased means of payment by linking the plan for deposit expansion
to one providing for public works with no immediate rise in taxes. If
there is one point on which everyone is agreed, it is that any money
borrowed by public bodies will be spent.
A criticism of an entirely different character is that our proposal is "inflationary".
It should be noted that the people who make this criticism concede fully
the efficacy of a policy of expansion on the part of the central bank.
Their fear is, apparently, than an upturn started in this way would get
out of control and eventually involve us in a situation similar to that
of war time. We do not believe that there is the slightest justification
for this fear. We concede and, indeed, think it desirable that some
recovery in prices should take place. In this connection, it is
important to distinguish between an increase in monetary incomes when
the factors of production are fully utilized and when they are only
partially utilized. In the former case the output of goods can rise but
slowly. In the latter, which corresponds to the present situation, an
increase in monetary demand for goods could very shortly be met by
increased output. It is only after much of the present enormous slack in
our economic system has been taken up that the danger of inflation
becomes real. Before that point is reached, the production of goods and
services will have greatly increased. This additional production in
answer to an increased demand is just what is wanted; it is the very
goal of our economic system. As Keynes has so aptly said, "To bring
up the bogy of Inflation as an objection to capital expenditures at the
present is like warning a patient who is wasting away from emaciation of
the dangers of excessive corpulation." It is true that an approach
to prosperity -- i.e., the upswing in the movement of business activity
-- brings with it danger of inflation; the very nature of expanding
business activity contains the impetus to expanding bank deposits and
rising prices. But the danger can be avoided, as it has been in the
past. The reserve banks will be in an excellent position to apply brakes
on the upswing by virtue of their very large holdings of bills and
securities which they can sell and so place member banks heavily in
debt. We find it difficult to understand why the spending of newly
created means of payment should be any more inflationary than an
increased rate of spending of the existing means of payment, which is
universally advocated today.
It may be objected that a banking policy designed to check deflation
would result in such an outflow of gold as to endanger the maintenance
of the gold standard here. Our present gold stock is, however,
approximately four and a half billions. French balances in this country
were variously estimated in January to amount to between $400,000,000
and $450,000,000 and were being steadily reduced. Other foreign balances
are much smaller. We could, therefore, well stand, if need be, the loss
in gold of all foreign balances. It has been intimated that foreigners
would also sell their holdings of our securities for gold. This is, of
course, a matter of opinion and is, by its nature, incapable of definite
refutation. We can only state it as our belief that such a reaction is
unlikely. It seems more probable that a continued fall in our stock and
bond prices would cause more foreign selling than would arise in those
brought about by the anticipation of business recovery.
It must be remembered that only a few countries remain on the gold
standard, and that they have received enormous quantities of gold in the
past two years. It appears doubtful that they could absorb the upwards
of two billions that we could spare, without any effect on their
internal price structures. As long as the United States continues, by
its policy, to raise the value of gold, central banks in countries off
the gold standard feel constrained to adopt restrictive measures in
order to prevent continued depreciation of their exchanges. Should we
succeed in starting a business recovery independently, it is probable
that foreign exchanges would move initially against us. This would
enable central banks in countries off the gold standard to relax their
present drastic restrictive policies and pave the way for a world
upturn. It need hardly be pointed out that a policy which leads to an
increase in our aggregate money income to be spent on both home and
foreign goods would do much to lighten the pressure on Germany and other
debtor countries without causing any diminution in demand for home
goods.
In conclusion, we believe that the most serious danger to the
maintenance of the gold standard would be an internal drain of money
into "circulation", which would result from a policy of
continued liquidation. Such a policy, involving a steady decline in all
values, would result in increased bank failures, which, in turn, would
lead to increased hoarding. Suspensions of specie payments in the past
have occurred as a consequence of internal rather than external runs on
our banking system.
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
While it is true both that an easing of credit conditions will tend to
encourage private investment, and that any increase in credit, resulting
in greater expenditure, will create additional employment, it is
doubtful - in the present situation - whether the desired increase in
private borrowing will take place. With confidence as badly shaken as it
is at present, and with prices continuing to fall, there is little in
the current outlook to make it attractive to business men to borrow in
amounts sufficient to stimulate recovery. And while presumably the fall
in prices will some day stop and confidence revive, the policy of
waiting for this day to come involves us in a continuation of the
present unemployment and business losses for an indeterminate period.
Such measures as the National Credit Corporation and the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation are in the main designed to prevent the liquidation
from becoming more serious, not to give business an impetus which would
start it on the upward path.
Since the initiation of a voluntary program of expansion by
independent, scattered producers must wait upon the appearance of the
prospect of profits, and since the Federal Government is the sole agency
in a central position and strong enough to undertake drastic remedial
action, it is strongly recommended that the Government immediately
commence a program of public construction on a nationwide scale. Such a
program would stimulate directly the building and construction industry
and those industries engaged in the production of raw materials and
tools, and indirectly a large number of other lines of enterprise, thru
the expenditure of the earnings of the re-employed. The revival of these
industries would involve a further, secondary increase in employment,
which in turn would stimulate recovery in other lines in ever widening
circles. As employment in industry at large increased, a gradual
reduction in government expenditure on construction would be called for,
and would permit the return of men engaged on such work to their
ordinary occupations.
This program should be financed, not by taxation, which serves
principally merely to divert expenditure from one channel to another,
but by an issue of bonds, under conditions specified below. It is
recommended that United States bonds be issued in amounts sufficient to
the purpose. The bonds should be sold, not in one block, but after an
initial issue of $500,000,000, at such a rate as the progress of
construction makes necessary. It is expected that it will not be
necessary to issue more than one to two billions to achieve the desired
results. These bonds should be made eligible for rediscount at the
Federal Reserve Banks, and also as collateral for the issue of Federal
Reserve notes. Partial retirement should be provided out of a surtax on
incomes, the remainder out of generally higher taxation to be imposed as
soon as recovery has been attained, the retirement to take place as
rapidly as is consistent with the state of business activity, preferably
at a rate of 15 per cent a year. Public utterance of prominent
individuals to the contrary notwithstanding, it is deemed obvious that a
period of national poverty is the worst time to increase federal taxes,
and a period of prosperity the worst time to reduce them.
Increased taxes result normally in a transfer of purchasing power from
the individual to the government; it is only when taxes come from
hoarded or idle funds that an increase rather than a transfer of
purchasing power results. If the government employs this purchasing
power (i.e., collected taxes) instead of borrowing "created"
or idle funds, the result is a drop in the effective demand for bonds at
a time when the government should be doing everything in its power to
build up the effective demand. When at the same time the government
adopts a policy of retrenchment, of ruthless cutting of expenditures,
the effect is doubly bad. In times of intense depression a paring down
of productive expenditures that can be financed thru the borrowing of "created"
or idle funds is inexcusable. A course of action which may be proper for
a private corporation, for a municipality, for a state, or for some
other country is no criterion of the proper policy for the United States
Government. The City of New York may find it expedient to reduce its
deficit, notwithstanding the resulting intensification of the
depression, because it may not be able to borrow unless it reduces its
budgetary deficit. If the important bankers refuse to support a
municipal loan, New York has no alternative; it must reduce its deficit
by increased taxes and decreased expenditures. But the United States
Government is never in such a predicament; it always has a choice: it
can make possible such credit conditions as will facilitate the
flotation of its bonds, and can, if necessary, even supply the funds
with which its own bonds may be purchased.
It cannot be emphasized too strongly that financing public works
through domestic bond flotations by the federal government does not
saddle future generations with a burden. Even the 25 billion dollar loan
raised to finance the war did not pass on to later years any portion of
the burden of conducting the war. It doubtless caused in later years
some redistribution of the national income (to what extent and in what
direction involves an analysis of the incidence of the taxes raised to
liquidate the loan and of the factors connected with the rapidity of
liquidation, changed rates of interest, effect of loan and redemptions
on prices, etc -- matters extremely complex for the economist and wholly
beyond the layman -- but it did not decrease the aggregate real income.
The economic burden of the war on future generations consisted of the
loss of benefits that would have been derived from the use of such
capital, actual and potential, as was destroyed. The loss of future
generations would have been neither more nor less had the war been
financed wholly out of current taxes. Those who reiterate that domestic
borrowing by the Federal Government saddles future generations with a
burden should familiarize themselves with the A B C of economics. It is
the failure of the Federal Government to increase its outstanding
indebtedness during a period of depression that in a sense saddles the
future with a burden; the capital goods that could be and are not
produced deprive the future of the continuous stream of utilities that
would have been derived from those capital goods. Every month's delay in
setting idle equipment and idle men to work not only denies to us
currently an enormous amount of consumer's goods and service, but also
deprives future generations of the utility to be derived from the
additional factories, schools, parks, roads, machinery, and so forth
that could be produced if the Government now embarked on the program
here outlined.
It is claimed that any large issue of bonds would destroy confidence in
the United States Government and cause the value of its outstanding
bonds to decline seriously. Such objection is wholly unwarranted. From
1921 to 1929 the Government reduced its indebtedness from 26 to 16
billions. Had the Government deemed it expedient, it could without
difficulty have maintained the higher tax rates and by 1929 wiped off
another ten billions of the debt. But it chose rather to lower taxes and
to reduce the debt less rapidly. In 1930 the debt was 16.8 billion
dollars, or about $134 per capita, a sum less than one-third the per
capita indebtedness of France and less than one-fifth that of Great
Britain. The tax burden in the United States, on the other hand, is
considerably less than in either of these two countries. The United
States, in short, has (in per capita terms) a much greater income, a
smaller debt, and considerably lower taxes than any of the great
nations. In the light of these facts there are those who continue to
affirm that if in this emergency -- an emergency certainly as great as
the war if privation and national loss be the measure -- the outstanding
domestic debt is to be increased by a few billion dollars, confidence in
the United States Government will be destroyed. Those who make the claim
point to the decline in the price of United States Government bonds
during the fall of 1931 as evidence of a loss of confidence, but there
is no sound basis for such a view. A loss of confidence in the financial
stability of a government is quite different from a loss of confidence
in the financial stability of a corporation or municipality. In the case
of the federal government it does not and cannot mean that the
government is in any danger of suspending payment on its domestic debt.
It can mean only that the government may cease to pay its debt in money
redeemable in gold; in other words, that the government is in danger of
being forced off the gold standard. If such fears were entertained in
the fall of 1931, the first sign would have been a hoarding of gold, and
we know that this did not occur. Hoarding took place, but it was the
hoarding of paper money, not gold, and indicated a loss of confidence in
the banks, not in the Government. The decline in government bond values
was caused definitely not by loss of confidence, but by the suddenly
increased supply of bonds coming from those banks which were liquidating
their investments in order to reduce their indebtedness to the reserve
banks.
It is to be expected that a great increase in the demand for funds
would probably depress the bond market unless the Federal Reserve Banks
or member banks come to its support, as they did during the war, by
purchasing a large portion of the government issues. Indeed, such action
by the Federal Reserve Banks will be essential to the success of the
plan herein outlined; otherwise a large bond flotation will heighten the
long term borrowing rate and discourage new undertakings on the part of
private corporations and municipalities. A result to be sedulously
avoided. The Federal Reserve Banks need support the market with large
purchases only at the start of the program. Once the upturn in business
activity begins, there will be a return of business optimism, confidence
in the banks will be revived, and the 1.3 billions of hoarded funds,
which the Government is trying to "coax" and "reason"
back, will flow of its own accord (either by direct deposits or by the
purchase of securities) into the banks. The demand for securities
brought about by the inflow of hoarded funds will alone prevent the
interest on long term borrowing from rising.
It has also been claimed that such a large government loan would merely
have the effect of causing an equal decline in private investment. In
view of the fact that new corporate issues of securities during the last
six months of 1931 averaged well under $100,000,000 per month, the
lowest figure since 1918, this is hardly a serious objection at the
present. The proposed rate of issue of new government securities would
far offset even a complete abandonment of private investment.
Furthermore, as the effects of the increased expenditure on employment,
prices, and profits began to be felt, the prices of industrial
securities could scarcely fail to rise, and as business revived, new
industrial issues would be needed and would appear. Better security
prices would be the inevitable result of rising monetary incomes of
corporations. Again, more profitable business would mean both higher
taxable capacity and higher tax returns, and this, together with the
diminished burden of unemployment, would raise the value of the
securities of states and municipalities, many of which have recently
been forced to abandon their own public works programs because of low
revenue and high cost of borrowing.
The program should begin with the letting of contracts to private
contractors to an initial sum of $1,000,000,000, the work to be pushed
as rapidly as possible; where feasible, by the employment of two or
three separate shifts a day. In the awarding of the first group of
contracts, preference should be given to those works that can be
completed within the shortest possible time. It is essential that enough
contracts be completed each month to make possible a decrease in total
expenditures as business conditions improve. The emergency nature of the
expenditure should be kept uppermost in planning the details. A high
rate of expenditure at the outset should be aimed at, and bonds sold as
rapidly as need be to meet the payments coming due. In view of the large
number of public projects that have been postponed thruout the country
by states and municipalities, it should be possible in a short time to
achieve a rate of expenditure of $300,000,000 per month. As the stimulus
of this expenditure spreads to other lines of activity, the rate of
expenditure should be reduced. The value of contracts let after the
first billion is spent should be scaled down as the index of production
of the Federal Reserve Board rises. When the index reaches 90 (in
1928-29 it averaged 114), only those projects as yet incomplete should
be finished and no new contracts should be let in.
The expenditure of the emergency funds should be governed by the
following considerations: (1) facility with which projects may be
initiated at the earliest possible date and completed within a short
time; (2) amount of labor that will be employed, directly or indirectly;
(3) number and diversity of the industries which will be affected,
directly or indirectly, by the projects; (4) value of the projects to
the economic and social welfare of the country; (5) economical
administration of the work. While waste and duplication should be
avoided so far as is humanly possible, the object of the expenditure is
to put men to work at useful tasks immediately instead of waiting until
we are forced to relieve them in idleness -- hence the emphasis on speed
and on the numbers employed.
As to the objects upon which the funds should be spent it is clear that
there is a wide variety of useful public works which need to be
undertaken, and which, if done, will leave the country definitely ahead
in a tangible way. Specifically, it is recommended that the proceeds of
the loan be used in the construction of roads, the elimination of grade
crossings, the erection of bridges and public buildings for which there
is a clear need and for which plans are ready, the elimination of
unsightly areas in municipalities, and in carrying out a program of
flood prevention and reforestation, both directly by the Federal
Government and thru loans to states and thru them to municipalities. In
order to ensure a coordinated policy in the execution of the program of
construction, it is recommended that there be created an Administration
of Public Works, along the lines laid down in the bill (S. 2419),
presented to the Senate by Senator La Follette.
It will doubtless be argued that such public work will be costly, that
some things will be done which do not seriously need doing, and, in
general, that such vast expenditure by the Government is unwise.
Admittedly the work done will probably involve a larger outlay than
ordinary public works, but it is the object of the program to meet a
specific emergency B men are to be given employment because they are
unemployed. The alternative is direct unemployment relief, which, to be
adequate, would require a large outlay, would leave nothing behind to
show for the expenditure, and would prove demoralizing to the
recipients.
Innumerable difficulties lie in the path of a rapid and successful
execution of so large a program. Yet those difficulties are not
insurmountable. In 1917 the United States demonstrated its ability to
execute a far more difficult program. The seriousness of the present
emergency warrants the straining of every effort to achieve quickly an
adequate rate of public expenditure which will do so much to bring about
business recovery.
TARIFF POLICY
One of the factors that has in no small way contributed to the present
world wide depression and is an additional obstacle in the way of
recovery is the determination on the part of the nations to keep out
goods of other countries. Since 1925 the tariff schedule of every
important country has been revised upward at least once. Not content
with mere increases in duty, many countries have set up import quotas,
licensing restrictions, and embargoes. Germany in a desperate attempt to
prevent an outflow of gold has instituted a system of licensed imports
and control over foreign exchanges, designed effectively to cut her
imports to the bone. Austria, Czechoslovakia, Turkey, Greece,
Jugoslavia, and Roumania exercise close control over exchange, and
Spain, incensed by the restrictions imposed on her exports, has recently
retaliated with import quotas. Even France, whose gold reserves are in
no way threatened, is adding import quotas to her already high tariff
schedule. This concerted rush to place more and more obstacles in the
path of international trade has operated to increase not only the real
costs of production of innumerable international commodities, but also
the maladjustments which are now playing economic havoc. The
relationship between the world supply and demand of many important world
commodities has been seriously disturbed: the present ruinous prices of
wheat, sugar, textiles, and a host of other manufactured articles are in
part traceable to the policy of expanding home industries and domestic
crops by means of subsidies provided by protective duties, regardless of
the fact that in the exporting countries crop areas and plant capacities
are not reduced until long after prices have become ruinous.
Heightened tariff barriers, by rendering more difficult the adjustments
of international accounts, have magnified the problem of debt
settlements, both private and public, and have contributed materially to
the maldistribution of gold reserves. The higher the import duties in
the creditor countries, the harder the task of developing export
surpluses in the debtor countries. Forced to adopt extreme measures to
develop the export surplus necessary to meet payments abroad, the debtor
countries have cut imports to a minimum, and have maintained high
discount rates. The difficulty of developing a sufficient export surplus
has in some cases led to virtual abandonment of the gold standard. The
concentration of gold in the United States and France, where it is not
needed, at the expense of gold reserves in countries where its loss
proved disastrous, has been encouraged by their high tariff policies. In
an attempt to stem the outward flow of gold or encourage an inflow,
tariff barriers in other countries have been increased, and have in turn
incited retaliatory increases. And so the mad march toward declining
trade, increasing costs, and economic maladjustment goes on.
The United States has been in the forefront in the building up of
tariff walls; it is only fitting that she take the lead in the downward
revision so necessary to a return to economic sanity. A step by her in
that direction may well initiate a general reduction in the tariff
schedules of all important countries, but whether or not other countries
follow America's lead, the reduction of import duties in the United
States would be an important step towards economic recovery and a means
of increasing the real aggregate national income. We therefore recommend
a reduction in all duties protective in design or in effect. We indorse
also that portion of the tariff bill (now before Congress) calling for
the creation of a commission to confer with European governments with
the express intent of securing the scaling down of tariff schedules.
International conferences, however, are certain to be long drawn out,
and the present situation calls for immediate action. Let the United
States by a reduction in her import duties demonstrate to the world that
she no longer will contribute to the dangerous spirit of unenlightened
nationalism and international bitterness which high protective policies
foster.
It is important to recognize, however, that a sharp reduction of duties
would involve injustice to vested interests in the protected industries,
and would result in additional short-time maladjustments. The diversion
of capital and of workers from protected industries to others should be
so gradual as to cause minimum losses to the owners of protected
industries and a minimum of additional temporary unemployment. It is
therefore recommended that all import duties in excess of twenty per
cent ad valorem be reduced by one fifth of the existing duty. Such a
reduction would avoid serious maladjustments and losses: many of the
duties in the present schedule, being much in excess of the differences
in the domestic and the foreign costs of production, would continue to
keep out the foreign commodities; others, being completely ineffective,
would merely continue so; while commodities taxed twenty per cent ad
valorem or less (the ad valorem equivalent of specific duties to be
based on the average import price of 1930) would not be touched by the
revision. The employment of a flat rate of reduction applying to all
commodities (except those taxed twenty per cent or under) would have a
double advantage: it would obviate the delay and the uncertainty of
lengthy consideration of the separate items, and it would immediately
make clear to the world that an important downward revision of the
tariff schedule had been made. The proposed reduction would have, we
believe, a beneficial economic effect out of all proportion to the
actual changes involved.
REPARATIONS AND INTERALLIED DEBTS
We feel confident that the adoption of the foregoing recommendations in
regard to banking policies, public works, and the tariff will bring
about business recovery in the United States; but we cannot overlook the
fact that extreme distress in Europe must tend to retard our progress.
Europe consumes normally one-fourth of our exports, and the sharp
decline in her demand for our products will continue to be a depressing
factor in many of the export industries, particularly in agriculture.
Americans have invested, moreover, five billion dollars in European
countries, and the income from these investments has been curtailed by
the depression abroad. We believe, therefore, that business recovery in
the United States will be more easily attained, and will reach a higher
level, if accompanied by recovery in Europe.
Reparations are the chief obstacle to European prosperity. They hang
like a storm cloud over Europe, presaging possible chaos, shutting out
the influences essential to a resumption of normal international
relations, and inducing a state of mind wholly inimical to business
recovery. In Germany -- the crucial country, whose situation so largely
affects conditions in the rest of Europe -- the very high interest
rates, the budgetary difficulties, the interference with the normal
course of trade, the precarious banking situation, are all in a large
measure a consequence of the reparations tangle. Unemployment is now
approaching six millions, and political strife is assuming more and more
a threatening aspect, while the growing determination among all parties
in Germany that reparations be cancelled, or at least greatly reduced,
is keeping France in a state of great uneasiness that is reflected in
increased hoarding, a cautious banking policy, and a growing pessimism.
The Young Plan has not provided a solution to the reparations problem;
payments are not being made, and there is little likelihood that they
ever will be made on the scale fixed by the plan. Germany balks at the
prospect of saddling the next two generations with burdens she holds
them to have in no way merited, and is becoming less and less inclined
to submit to terms she believes to be unreasonable. Any attempt to force
from Germany larger payments than she is willing to make can result, as
France discovered in 1923, only in disaster to all concerned. It is
evident, therefore, that German reparations must be revised, and in a
manner that will receive the co-operation of the German people.
Interallied debts are, as every economist recognizes, inextricably
bound up with reparations. It may be political wisdom for United States
government officials to continue to deny that such is the case, but the
fact remains that France will not make her annual payments to the United
States and England if she does not receive annuities from Germany, and
that England will not pay the United States if Germany and France
default in their payments to her. An extension of the moratorium will
not be a settlement of the tangle; it will serve merely to perpetuate
the uncertainty. If, on the other hand, a definite and permanent
arrangement be made on a basis satisfactory to the principal nations
concerned, Europe will be rid of the great impediment that bars the road
toward her economic recovery. With intergovernmental debts permanently
out of the way, the next decade may well see a great stride towards a
higher standard of living and better international relations.
We believe that the quickest, most equitable, and most effective way to
settle the problem of reparations is thru a complete cancellation of
interallied debts and reparations. The principal justification for
cancellation rests upon other than economic grounds, but our economic
interests alone, we believe, warrant the step. The greatest monetary
loss of such a settlement would fall upon the United States, yet if by a
cancellation of all intergovernmental debts we can achieve a ten per
cent higher level of business activity, even for a single year, the
United States will have lost nothing, while Europe will have gained
much. Those who oppose cancellation on the ground that the American
people would lose $300,000,000 a year, base their attitude on the
questionable assumptions that the Allies are going to meet their
obligations, and that intergovernmental debts in no way retard economic
recovery or prevent a higher level of prosperity. As we have pointed
out, whether or not the United States receives $300,000,000 a year
depends upon whether or not Germany pays her reparations in accordance
with the Young Plan. Germany, we repeat, will not make those payments,
and cancellation, therefore, does not mean a loss of $300,000,000, for
in no case would the United States receive this sum. Cancellation would
mean an end to the bickerings, moratoriums, uncertainties, political and
economic disturbances, and international frictions which are
contributing so much to the downward movement of business activity in
Europe, and which cannot but affect the situation in the United States.
But public sentiment, however unjustified, remains strongly opposed to
cancellation. We recommend, therefore, as an alternative the following
plan, which while gaining the support of those who resent cancellation,
will achieve a measure of its benefits.
The United States loaned the Allied Governments about ten billion
dollars. This sum, compounded at 4 ¼ per cent annually would amount
to 15 billions. Of this sum 2.5 billions have already been paid, leaving
the current indebtedness, on the foregoing basis, at 12.5 billions. (For
purposes of brevity only approximate figures are used.) At the time
these funds were loaned the purchasing power of the dollar was about
one-half what it is today. Since it is palpably unfair to expect our
allies to pay back double the amount of goods and services they borrowed
for the conduct of a joint war, the sum owing to the United States
ought to be adjusted to its present purchasing power. In terms of 1932
dollars the debt to the United States would be only 6.25 billions. This
sum of 6.25 billions, it must be emphasized, represents no real
reduction from the amount borrowed by the Allies plus the interest which
would have accrued from the date the loan was made until the present
time. However, in its arrangements with the various debtor countries,
the United States has already demonstrated its willingness to scale down
the real burden of the debt. In its agreement with Italy the effective
reduction, in view of the low interest rate and dates of payment,
amounted to 74 per cent; with Belgium, 46 per cent; with France, 50 per
cent; with England, 18 per cent. If these reductions were applied to the
deflated value of the loan (namely, 6.25 billions), the remainder due
the United States would be 3.75 billions. The reduction of 2.5 billions,
or 40 per cent of the debt, would then be the contribution of the United
States toward a permanent settlement of the debt problem, the reduction
being contingent upon a similar treatment of German reparations. The
annual loss of revenue to the United States from the 2.5 billion dollar
reduction would be a negligible portion of our annual income, and would
be much more than offset by the good results of a permanent solution of
the inter-allied debts and reparations problem.
We recommend that this 3.75 billion dollar debt be paid in the
following manner:
Each country will give to the United States, in place of bonds already
given, its bonds, bearing an interest rate of 7 per cent per annum,
payable in gold, to an amount equal to the sum due the United States
after correction is made for the changes in the purchasing power of
gold, and after the reductions listed above for each country are made.
The bonds will be equally divided into three classes -- A, B, and C, --
the only difference in the classes being the date and the callable
price. Class A bonds will be dated August 1, 1932, and will be callable
(by lot) for the first two years at 103, and thereafter at par; Class B
bonds will be dated August 1, 1933, and will be callable for the first
three years at 110, during the second three years at 105, and thereafter
at par; Class C bonds will be dated August 1, 1934, and will be callable
during the first three years at 115, during the next three years at 110,
during the following three years at 105, and thereafter at par. All
bonds will be payable in 20 years, with redemption required at the rate
of 2 per cent, beginning in the seventh year and increasing at the rate
of 2 per cent every second year. This splitting of the bonds into
different classes would delay maximum interest payment until 1935.
The United States Government will offer these bonds to the public at
not less than par. Because of the attractive rate of interest, the bonds
will be rapidly absorbed by individuals and banks in the United States.
The sale of these bonds will not depress the bond market, because the
proceeds will be used to liquidate its own bonds; in fact, it might be
easily arranged to permit the holders of United States government bonds
to exchange them for the 7 per cent foreign government bonds. The debts
to the United States Government would thus be liquidated and removed
from the field of governmental consideration. To prevent exchange
difficulties arising in the issuing countries from a possible extensive
purchase of these bonds by the residents of the issuing countries, a tax
could, if necessary, be imposed by those countries on their purchase or
interest payment.
Improvement in the credit of the debtor governments is certain to
follow a satisfactory solution of the reparations problem and the return
of prosperity. The issuing governments could then refund one-third of
the loans at a lower rate of interest, followed by another third three
years later, and so forth. Before ten years had passed, the interest
payments would in all probability have been reduced one-fourth by virtue
of the lower rates, made possible by improved credit conditions. A
portion of these bonds would doubtless replace some of the foreign
securities now held in the issuing countries, and the transfer problem
would thereby be further reduced.
A settlement of the debts in this manner is conditional, of course,
upon a similar settlement to be made by the Allied Governments with
regard to reparations. The Young Plan fixed the remainder of reparations
due from Germany at 9 billions. Since the payments already made under
this plan have amounted to no more than the interest on that amount, the
reparations due remain at 9 billions. In terms of 1932 dollars this sum
would equal about 6 billions. From this sum is to be deducted an amount
equal to the reduction made by the United States to the Allies B namely,
40 per cent. This will leave about 3.6 billions due from Germany to the
Allies. In settlement of this debt Germany will give to each of the
Allies, in such proportion as shall be agreed upon among themselves,
German Government 7 per cent bonds, payable in gold. The service on
those bonds shall have priority over any other government loan except
the $300,000,000 loan of 1925. The bonds, like those given to the United
States by the Allies, are to be divided into three classes with the same
provisions. The first payment to be made by Germany would be $84,000,000
in 1934, followed by $168,000,000 in 1935, and by $252,000,000 in 1936.
Under the Young Plan the annuities were to [be] $450,000,000 in 1934,
$465,000,000 in 1935 and $475,000,000 in 1936. The new plan thus
considerably reduces the transfer problem. As soon as Germany's credit
improves, she can refund the 7 per cent bonds for others bearing a lower
rate of interest, and, if advisable, reduce the rate of redemption. The
transfer problem may thus be reduced still further.
Under the favorable conditions following the virtual elimination of the
transfer problem and the reduction of Germany's debt, the 7 per cent
bonds will pass into the hands of private holders. Once this occurs, the
reparations problem will lose all political importance and will cease to
be a disturbing factor in international affairs. Long before this final
absorption of the bonds takes place, however, Europe will have been
relieved of the demoralizing burden of uncertainty and fear, and will
have taken forward steps toward prosperity.
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TO INTRODUCTION BY ROGER SANDILANDS AND DAVID LAIDLER
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