Images (2)
Document
| id |
id
28276106
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 155
December 6 - December 12, 1938
Regraded Unclassified
- A -
Book Page
Agriculture
Babcock (E.A.) memorandum on future program -
12/6/38
155
1
Alsop, Joseph
Oliphant memorandum on "Morgenthau the Innovator"
material given Alsop - 12/7/38
67
Anglo-California National Bank (San Francisco)
Reduction in stock from $10 million to 85 million:
Opinions of individual members of Treasury banking
group - 12/10/38
300
- B -
Babcock, E. A.
See Agriculture
Bank of America
HMJr tells Hanes of call from FDR asking that he see
"young Giannini"; HMJr tells FDR Comptroller of
Currency is handling matter very well and that he
(HMJr) is being kept "as an ace in the hole" -
12/8/38
145
Folger (Comptroller of Currency) tells Giannini people
he has followed bank for ten years and knows as much
about it as the Gianninis themselves - 12/10/38
224
Crowley feels Delano and Jones "left him on a limb"
before conference - 12/10/38
224
Defamatory remarks of HMJr, et cetera, discussed at
9:30 meeting - 12/12/38
289
Banking Legislation
Gaston memorandum on Eccles' plan as presented to FDR -
12/8/38
81
Bowman, Isaiah
See Refugees
Budget
See Business Conditions
Budget, Bureau of
Businessman's budget: Bell memorandum OK'd by HMJr
and FDR - 12/12/38
343
Administrative expenses of corporations: to be approved
by Budget Bureau: Bell memorandum OK'd by HMJr and
FDR - 12/12/38
343
Business Conditions
Conference at HMJr's home on recovery and Federal budget;
present: Hanes, Taylor, Bell, White, Stewart, Williams,
Viner, and Currie - 12/9/38, 5:15 P.M
150
Second conference - 12/10/38
238
Haas memorandum on situation for week ending 12/10/38
351
Regraded Unclassified
- C -
Book
Page
China
Tung 011:
Oliphant memorandum on conference between Treasury
and State Department - 12/6/38
155
47
Welles tells HMJr he will proceed since FDR has
given word to Chiang Kai-shek in face of Hull's
disapproval - 12/7/38
68
Oliphant memorendum on conference with State
Department representatives - 12/7/38
76,116
a) Really feels that in order to overcome
their objection, it may be necessary to
remove Chinese Government entirely from
picture
Oliphant memorandum of changes providing that title
pass to buyer in United States, et cetera;
agreement satisfactory to State Department -
12/12/38
387
Buck memoranda: Central Aircraft Company, income tax,
ot cetera - 12/8/38
122
Navy Department reports on completed arrangements for
inspection of road from Chungking to Burma -
12/7/38 and 12/9/38
189,191
Wood 011: Oliphant memorandum attaching copy of
letter to Welles - 12/9/38
202
a) Various memoranda attached
Civil Service
Governmental corporation employees to be placed under
Civil Service: Bell memorendum OK'd by HMJr and FDR -
12/12/38
343
Coast Guard
Waesche memorandum: "United States Maritime Service -
training" - 12/6/38
22
Waesche memorandum on cost of additional facilities -
12/12/38
365
a) Talk with Waesche after return from White House
362
Countervailing Duties
See Germany
- D -
Diggs, Marshall
Provides HMJr with plan for consolidating bank
supervisory agencies - 12/8/38
224
Regraded Unclassified
- P -
Book Page
Financing, Government
Wilkinson (J. Harvie), Vice President, State-Planters
Bank and Trust Company, commends Treasury on
financing - 12/6/38
165
2
Burgess also commends HMJr - 12/9/38
193
12/15/38:
Closing of subscription books - 12/6/38
4-A
a) Subscription figures and bases of allotment -
12/9/38
149-A
"Free Riding"
Harrison and HMJr distrust oversubscription of
$1000 bonds as a result of "rake-off" publicity
in Scribner's - 12/6/38
30
(For number see Book 156, page 295)
a) Scribner's article
32-A
Fiscal and Monetary Advisory Board
Meeting - 12/12/38
305
a) Currie-White memorandum showing agreement on
340
various points in plan
"Free Riding" of Government Securities
See Financing, Government
- G -
Germany Welles tells HMJr of intergovernmental meeting (secret)
with Germans at Brussels; hopes action on countervailing
duties can be delayed until after meeting - - 12/7/38
68
Memorandum from American Embassy, Berlin, regarding
growing concern of Reich Government over export and
foreign exchange situation - - 12/8/38
135
Government Corporations
See Budget, Bureau of
# Civil Service
Great Britain
See Stabilization
" Taxation
- J -
Japan
Welles sends to HMJr unofficial British Aide Memoire
concerning joint action with United States in face
of discrimination by Japanese Government - 12/8/38
77
- M -
Morgenthau, Henry, Junior
"Broken toe" conversation with FDR - 12/7/38
64
Regraded Unclassified
- H -
Book Page
National Income
Haas estimate for 1939 - 12/7/38
155
69
- P -
Post Office - Stamford, Connecticut
Oliphant memorandum on land for addition - - 12/6/38
35
- R -
Refugees
HMJr tells Bowman he (HMJr) will have to pay out of
his own pocket for expert brought from West Coast
and not an American citizen - - 12/6/38
27
FDR and HMJr discuss entire problem - 12/6/38
41
Welles tells HWr of intergovernmental meeting (secret)
with Germans at Brussels; hopes action on countervailing
duties can be delayed until after meeting - - 12/7/38
68
Bowman sends to FDR memorandum (copy to HMJr) concerning
possibilities of white settlement in Africa -
12/10/38
225
Revenue Revision
Hanes' memorandum on recommendation of White House that
Congress be asked for a $1 billion increase in taxes -
12/12/38
342
Robbins, William Welles
Oliphant discusses qualifications with Bullitt -
12/7/38
74
Roosevelt, James
HMJr overhears FDR discuss with James his duties in
motion picture field - 12/6/38
44
- S -
Silver
Oliphant memorandum: Newly mined domestic silver proclemation
due to expire on 12/31/38 - 12/7/38
63
Stabilization
Great Britsin: Taylor memorandum on talk with Bewley and
request that Sir John Simon provide Treasury with his
opinion of developments of past week - - 12/9/38
218
Regraded Unclassified
- T -
Book Page
Taxation
Correspondence between State and Treasury, and
Treasury and Internal Revenue, concerning British
Embassy's note inviting United States to participate
in an international conference in London, looking
to the adoption of a convention for the exemption
from taxation of liquid fuel and lubricants used
in international air traffic
155
12,14
Tyler, Royall
HMJr requests trip through Italy in near future -
12/6/38
49
- U -
Unemployment Relief
Lonigan memorandum: Report on Works Progress Administration
workers as of 12/3/38 - 12/10/38
228
United States Maritime Service
See Coast Guard
- W -
Works Progress Administration
See Unemployment Relief
Regraded Unclassified
Es Babocks memo 12-6-38
1
1. Establish cooperative relationships with Land Grant Colleges and
Extension Service - free from suspicion of domination.
2. Use government financing and handling of agricultural commodities
so as to strengthen our permanent system of cooperative service
for agriculture (rather than supplant or weaken it.)
3. Continue agricultural conservation program, redrafted to simplify,
to reduce irritations and to provide for sound farm manage-
ment and permanent agriculture. (Permit adaptation to local
conditions.)
4. Continue machinery for establishing and operating marketing agreements.
5. Continue services of F.S.C.C. but on an emergency basis and with
minimum of publicity.
6, Expand purchase of submarginal land and studies of land classi-
fication to provide basic information for sound land use programs.
7. Provide government leadership for research and education and ex-
tension program through agricultural colleges designed to
promote rural health and better standards of living on farms.
Reemphasize farming as a safe and desirable way of living
through home-raised food and feed, roads, electrification,
refrigeration, etc.
8. Stimulate program of research for development of new uses for
agricultural commodities - utilizing existing facilities of
agricultural colleges.
9. A statement on prices to be formulated carefully.
1. Do not permit pressure groups to formulate national policies -
listen to them.
2. Stop premature publicity on poorly developed plans.
3. Eliminate C.C.C. loans, liquidate present stocks as rapidly as
possible and take losses.
Regraded Unclassified
2
/
STATE-PLANTERS
BANK (o.
-
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
December 5, 1938
A
Hon. Henry G. Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury
Treasury Department
Weshington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Morgenthau:
I want to take this occasion to commend the sound-
ness of the Tressury's December financing, the complete terms of which
have just been announced. It seems to me to give adequate considere-
tion to the various absorptive chennels in the market and likewise to
give the necessary weight to the Government's desire to borrow on the
cheapest terms possible.
The great problem facing banks 1s, of course, to
avoid the shock of gyrations in the government bond market. To a very
substantial degree I believe this aim can be attained by the banks
having their maturities carefully speced, with the weight in the scale
being assigned in accordance with the condition of each institution's
capital account, deposits and assets.
In view of the above, the offering of B 2% nine-year
bond was, I think, from the standpoint of the banking system, a master
stroke. I would like to urge that in any future government financing
you give some consideration to this fact and allow the banking system to
acquire at the market level intermediate maturities 8.5 well as long term
maturities. It will not be necessary to offer this intermediate maturity
for new money and the procedure adonted this time can be carried out in
the future, varying the maturity date of this intermediate issue more on
less in accordance with your own wishes.
If the banking system continues to be afforded the
opportunity which you have given in this December financing, it should
be able to protect itself against anything other than 8. catastrophe and
it should be able to develop the necessary elesticities to meet varying
conditions. & constant ding-donging by the supervisory authorities
against too active trading of bonds is sound If the benking system is
fed bonds which It can, with justification, hold. This, I feel, you
have shown en ewareness of for the first time and I want to again commend
the policy.
Regraded Unclassified
STATE-PLANTERS BANK AND TRUST Co.
3
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
-2-
Will you kindly show this to the under-secretary
or whichever of the assistant secretaries handles the government
financing.
& J. Very Vice Harvie Hancie truly President Wilkinson, yours, Wilkins Jr.,
JHW/ke
VII area
W
CELICE
ABEVEN
use DEC
Regraded Unclassified
s
December 10, 1938.
Mr. J. Harvie Wilkinson, Jr.,
Vice President, State-Planters Bank and Trust Co.,
Richmond, Virginia.
Dear Mr. Wilkinson:
Secretary Morgenthau has read with great interest your
letter of December 5th on the subject of Treasury financing,
having particular reference to the present offering. The is
also circulating it to others in the Treasury who participate
in the financing studies.
Be wishes me to tell you that be appreciates very greatly
getting your views and he wishes that others would write to him
as frankly and as helpfully. Es would be glad to hear from you
at any time when you have comments or suggestions to nake.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) Hishert F. Geston
Herbert E. Gaston
Assistant to the Secretary.
HEG/mah
approved
Regraded Unclassified
4A
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Washington
FOR RELEASE, MORNING NEWSPAPERS,
Press Service
Tuesday, December 6, 1938.
No. 15-56
12/5/38.
Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau announced last night that the
subscription books for the current offoring of 2-3/4 percent Treasury Bonds
of 1960-65 and of 1-1/6 percent Treasury Notos of sorics 5-1943 closod at
the close of business l'onday. Docomber 5, for the receipt of cash subscrip-
tions.
Cash subscriptions for cither issuo addressed to a Federal Roserve
bank or branch, or to the Treasury Department, and placed in the mail before
12 o'clock midnight, Monday. December 5, will be considered as having been
entered bofore the close of the subscription books.
The subscription books for both issues, and also for the issue of 2
percent Treasury Bonds of 1947, will closo at the close of business Wednesday,
Decomber 7, for the receipt of subscriptions in payment of which Treasury
Notes of Scrios C-1939, maturing March 15, 1939, are tendered.
Exchange subscriptions for any of the three issues addressed to a
Federal Reserve bank or branch, or to the Treasury Department, end placed
in the mail before 12 o'clock midnight. Wednesday, December 7, will be con-
sidered as having been entered bofore the close of the subscription books.
Announcement of the amount of cash subscriptions and the bases of
allotmont will probably be made on Friday, December 9.
oOo
Regraded Unclassified
5
9:30 GROUP MEETING
December 6, 1938.
Present: Mrs. Klotz
Mr. Duffield
Mr. McReynolds
Mr. Haas
Mr. Bell
Mr. Lochhead
Dr. White
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Gibbons
Mr. Hanes
Mr. Oliphant
Mr. Taylor
H.M.Jr:
The funniest thing - I looked at Duffield and
saw him talking and I was wondering how they
let a reporter get in here.
Group:
(Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
I have nothing except you (McReynolds) might
have someone look at the pump in the garage.
It has everything in it except gasoline -
sand, gravel and water.
McReynolds:
They put in a new pump last week.
H.M.Jr:
What happens to the Judge?
Gibbons:
It goes to the Grand Jury now. We have noth-
ing further to do with it.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
Gibbons:
I feel sorry for him. I think he is just a
H.M.Jr:
Maybe.
Gibbons:
I have no information.
H.M.Jr:
You have nothing, Mac, I take it.
McReynolds:
No.
You have your friend Griffith back on
hand here.
H.M.Jr:
Griffith?
Regraded Unclassified
S
- 2 -
McReynolds:
Yes, the Touhey case in Seattle - - the one that
complained about the Receiver here.
H.M.Jr:
What do I do about it?
McReynolds:
I don't know. He is reviving the bank now
on Giannini.
H.M.Jr:
Well I have a Banking Committee.
McReynolds:
I know - I turned it over to them.
H.M.Jr:
Incidentally, Preston Delano asked to see me
this afternoon. Is there anything - do you
know why?
Duffield:
He is working on something to talk to Giannini
about.
H.M.Jr:
Do you think I ought to wait till I see you
gentlemen or what?
Taylor:
I think he has been talking to everybody on
the Committee and so on as to the main points
that should be discussed with Giannini. That's
what it is about. I gather he has an agreement
on it.
H.M.Jr:
(To Mrs. Klotz) Tell him 3 o'clock.
(Note: Mrs. Klotz told the Operator the Secretary
would see Preston Delano at 3 o'clock. She also
wrote it on the Secretary's calandar.)
Hanes:
He had dinner last night with Marriner (Eccles).
Maybe he wants to tell you about that.
H.M.Jr:
He had dinner with Marriner?
Hanes:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Should I worry?
Hanes:
No, I don't think so at all. I suggested that
he might want to tell you of his conversation
with Marriner. I don't think there is anything
in the banking group.
Regraded Unclassified
7
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
Well I will see him - see what he has to say.
H.M.Jr:
You know my funny story about the man that
returned on the steamer. He saw his son on
the dock and he yells out, "Hello Jake. How
is business? Should I worry?"
Group:
(Hearty laughter)
H.M.Jr:
I should say, "Hello Preston. Should I worry?"
H.M.Jr:
That's one way of announcing that my financing
is a success.
Gibbons:
On the front page of the Star - the sour note -
Marriner playing the
H.M.Jr:
No.
Gibbons:
You were playing the two billion horn and
Marriner
H.M.Jr:
No, we don't take that.
Duffield:
The Evening Star - Sunday.
Gibbons:
Merrily we must spend, we must spend.
McReynolds:
The boss is playing this big bass horn back
there and coming out of that (the horn) is,
"the deficit is getting bigger - bigger".
Group:
(Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
I didn't see that.
Taylor:
There was a good one in there the day before
on Tydings and Glass in giving their announce-
ment on Chicago - Ickes ran for Mayor.
H.M.Jr:
O.K., Taylor, got anything else?
Taylor:
No, I have nothing.
H.M.Jr:
Stay behind a minute, I would like to talk
to you.
Gibbons:
Nothing.
Regraded Unclassified
- 4 -
8
Lochhead:
Sterling is being supported around 4.69.
H.M.Jr:
O.K. Wonderful.
Taylor:
If agreeable to you, Mr. Gibbons and Mr. Hanes,
I would like to appoint Mr. Waite, on the other
side, to be one of two negotiators for this
international aviation thing, instead of sending
somebody over from here.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know what it is about.
Taylor:
This is an international convention having to
do with aviation.
H.M.Jr:
Why aren't we in on it?
Taylor:
Because it has to do with Customs and so on.
(Note: Mr. Taylor then read the last paragraph
on Page 2, of the letter from the Special
Deputy Commissioner. A photostat is attached.)
(Exhibit 1)
Taylor:
Rather than sending someone from over here I
took it, knowing about it, and I think they can
do it on the ground there.
H.M.Jr:
Fix it up - it is all right with me.
Gibbons:
It is a matter of this international aviation.
Under the Customs Laws
H.M.Jr:
Waite is a good man. All right, anything else?
Taylor:
Ran into Aubrey Williams last night in a railroad
station and he expressed thanks and practically
everything else possible about the action of your
committee without a name. He said that the
President was overjoyed to receive it and so on
and thought it would be interesting.
H.M.Jr:
I am very much interested in seeing him. From
that day to this I haven't heard a peep out of
anybody.
H.M.Jr:
The President was pleased?
Regraded Unclassified
9
- 5 -
Taylor:
Not only pleased but thinks, in the memo
about its effect on economy and so on, it will
open up a new field of thought, etc., etc
H.M.Jr:
Well I am glad to get the message. It 1s very
interesting.
Bell:
I didn't think that was new.
Taylor:
Well I am just being an honest reporter.
H.M.Jr:
I mean the thing that amazed me was that, once
it came through, Hopkins didn't get on the phone
at once and say something. I certainly would
have if I was in his position.
McReynolds:
He certainly tried to get the President to do
it for him and he wouldn't.
H.M.Jr:
Aubrey Williams did too.
Taylor:
It was quite a conversation in view of the
meeting yesterday. That was the type of thing
that had impressed the President so much.
(At this point the White House telephone rang.
The Secretary asked Mrs. Klotz to take the
message.)
H.M.Jr:
What have you got?
Duffield:
The request to the RFC for the preferred stock
in the Anglo-California is ready for your
signature.
H.M.Jr:
Now?
Duffield:
Yep.
H.M.Jr:
Well aren't you fellows going to prepare me?
Hanes:
Anytime you are ready.
H.M.Jr:
How about a quarter to twelve?
Hanes:
Fine.
Regraded Unclassified
10
- 6 -
H.M.Jr:
Anybody who is in on the Banking Committee,
will you please be here? Now I think Preston
Delano should be here.
Duffield:
I will tell him.
H.M.Jr:
Right.
Gaston:
I suppose you noticed this item in the papers
this morning that Martinez Fraga announced in
Cuba that the Export-Import Bank had granted
a fifty million dollar credit to Cuba.
White:
We have no information about that here, except
that they were considering a loan to Cuba.
Gaston:
They called me up late last night.
Taylor:
I can give you some highlights on 1t, which is
that Pierson and Welles have been working on it
for three or four weeks.
H.M.Jr:
Will you get it for me? Maybe you could tell
me at a quarter to twelve.
Taylor:
It is supposedly a public works loan.
H.M.Jr:
Fifty million is a lot of money.
Oliphant:
When is it to be disbursed?
H.M.Jr:
George? (Haas)
Haas:
I have nothing.
Gaston:
Nothing.
Oliphant:
I have here a three page memorandum on the
Post Office site, giving you what the defenses
are. (Hands memorandum to Secretary Morgenthau.)
(Note: A copy of this memorandum is attached -
marked "Exhibit No. 2".).
Oliphant:
I am giving you a copy Mac (McReynolds) along
with the file.
Regraded Unclassified
11
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
I will read it. Anything else?
White:
I don't propose to use it until before noon.
After you see it, I shall change some of the
appendix as written.
H.M.Jr:
Well, it is up at the house.
Regraded
Unclassifie
Lecenter 1, 1998,
MEMOR/DUM FOR:
Hr. Tcylor, Ascistent Sucretary of the Treasury.
Supplementing our conversation of yesterday evening, I dis-
cussed this morning with Mr. Thom M. Durke, Chief of Division
of International Communications of the etate Den rtmont, the tra-
posed multilateral convention suggested by the british Government.
In our letter to the State De resent of November 1, 1938, copy
of which is attached, we messea our willingmeer to rticicate
in this convention.
I found that Mr. Burke WHB perticularly interested Ln knowing
whether the Treasury Department intended to send representative
to London. I asid that we had discussed the sere point lest ovening
and, in view of the limited scope of the convention, had thought
that if his division were sending 5 representative the representative
could, after conferences in the dureeu of Customs on the customs joint
and the Burgan of Internal Revenue on the excise Doint, handle the
matter in conjunction with our European custome representative, Mr.
Write. I found, honever, that Mr. Burke her also reached the con-
clusion that the convention we not of sufficient scope to justify
sending 8 representative from his division :nd that he WEE hoping
to work out & team whereby he could have a member of the Embasey in
London who was familiar with international negotiations join the
Treasury representative. Upon learning the we had customs recro-
sentetives abroad Mr. Burke thought that 1- good term could be worked
out,
Since there seemed to be agreement in this respect, Mr. Burke
asked if the Treasury Department would inform the State Department
by letter within the next few days of the party whom the Treasury
Department desired to demignate. I told him that I would take the
matter up with you immediately. Since customs 1£ involved I essume
that you will also went to discuss the metter with Secretary Cibbons
and probably Under Secretary Hunes. This morning I discussed the
negotistions with Commissioner Helvering und Mr. Blise, Heed of the
Regraded Unclassified
-2-
Miscellaneous Tax Unit, and we are agreed that both the internal
revenue point and the customs point, which are practically the same
in principle, can be handled by our customs representative. I might
add that I met Mr. Waite abored on several occasions and consider
him well qualified to represent the Treasury in this particular
negotiation.
If it is desired to designate Mr. Waite to represent the Treasury
I assume that the letter now requested by Mr. Burke of the State Depart-
ment will be prepared in the Customs Buresu but, if you prefer, and
will so advise me or Mr. Bliss, it can be prepared in Mr. Bliss'
division and routed through Customs. Also, if Mr. Waite is designated
I think it 18 advisable that Mr. Blies' division prepare B letter to
Mr. Waite on the technical aspects of the excise tax point and its
relation to the customs point. This letter can also be routed through
the Customs Buresu on the way to Mr. Waite. If you desire, I shall
be glad to take up with .Bliss the preperation of such B. letter.
Special
Eldon Deputy Commissioner. P. they
Nov 1. 1978
GC:14
My dest
Receipt 18 ©cknowledged of your letter of september 28, 1938
(symbols IN 579.6 A E 1/9) in further reference to latter from your Deport-
ment O/ ted August 29, 1938, with which VOE enclosed copy of note from the
British Embassy inviting this Government to rticipate in PD international
conference in London looking to the edoption of I convention for the exemption
from texation of liquid fuel End lubriconts used in interentional Fir traffic,
to which WELE attached e tentative droft of such convention HS B. besie of die-
cussion between the powers participating in the convenslated conference. You
request to be advised whether 1t 16 the view or this Department that this
Government should perticipate in such proposed conference.
In reply you are advised that, BE indicated in letter from this Depart-
ment dated September 15, 1938, there are found in our existing revenue lews
provisions for reciprocel exemption from excise taxes and import duties on
liquid fuel end lubricents used in international aviation, which provisions
parellel in principle those found in the tentative dreft submitted with the
note of the British Ambessador. It is, therefore, the opinion of this Depart-
ment that there exists a basie upon which this Government may agree to e con-
vention such BR is envisioned in the note of the critish Ambessedor, and hence
that from the standpoint of this Department this Government may participate
in the proposed conference.
It is also the view of this Dep rtment that if this Government signifies
its intention to participate in such conference it should be made cleer that
it reserves the right to suggest the emendment or modification of the tentative
draft in any manner which appears to its representatives necessary or edvis-
able. It is assumed in this connection that, in the event this Government
decides to participate in the forthcoming conference, this Department will be
consulted with respect to the scope and terms of the contemplated convention.
In the event further correspondence relative to this matter is necessary,
plasse refer to IR:GC:A-320098
Very truly yours,
(Signed) John W. Hanes
(Acting) Secretary of the Treasury.
The Honorable,
The Secretary of Stote,
Washington, D.C.
Regraded Unclassified
Exhibit no.2
15
DEC 6 1938
&
Secretary Margenthau
Berman 011 hant
There has been submitted to us for approval a proposed Accept-
once of AD offer made by Homer S. Cummings to sell to the United States,
for the sus of $50,000, A tract of land to be used all an addition to the
Stanford, Connecticut, Post Office site.
Without making any investigation of the circumstances in the
matter, outside of -bat appeare in the file, the following would seem to
be the factor
Mr. Cummings has owned the property at least since 1929. The
H.O.L.C. has appraised the property st $50,000. The property has an
approximate frontage of 132 feet. The property between the present site
and Mr. Cuanings' property is also being purchased. The price proposed
to be paid to Mr. Cummings par front foot is less than that proposed to
be gold to the owner of the intervening parcel. The assessed value of
Mr. Cummings' property is $24,200.
The present Post Office site is in the middle of the block and
the only other property available for the extension is the property on
the other side of the Post Office upon which is Located A Y.N.C.A. build-
ing, and the purchase of this property would entail a much larger expend-
iture than the property owned by Mr. Cussings and the adjoining property
owner.
There does not 1005 to be any statutory prohibition against
this transaction. Section 41 of the Criminal Code (act of March 4, 1909,
35 Stat. 1088, 1097) (U.S.C. title 18, sec. 93), which 1s the only stat-
ute applicable to sales to the Government by officials extends only to
employees who are officers or agents of the seller and not to principals.
The Comptroller General, in general language, has indiented that this
act applies also to principals. Ho ever, such language my be disregarded
in view of the express terms of the statute, which is panal, and has to
be strictly construed. The Attorney General has hold that such stotute
applies only to agents and not to principals.
Acide from any statutory prohibition, however, there is reason
to believe that the Comptroller General, following decisions heretofore
made, =111 hold that the transaction is void on the grounds of public
Regraded Unclassified
16
- 2 -
policy. Before the site can be sequired and the check drawn for the
purchase price, the varrant bas to be countersigned by the Comptroller.
Because of this the matter will be before the Comptreller prior to the
closing of the trans ction.
The Comptroller has held that the following transactions are
void on the grounds of public policy:
1. Contracts by Government employees to rent automobiles to
the Government, even though the employee is not the negotisting or
contructing officer.
2. Contracts bet-sen A Public Henlth surgeon, who 1= the con-
tracting officer, and himself, all proprietor of & private hospital, even
though the hospital was the only one available in the vicinity.
3. Sales of tractors by sn employee of the Virgin Island
Government, after public advertisement, even though the employee was not
the contracting officer and had nothing to do with the transaction in
an official capacity.
A study has been mde of the general law of public policy in
so for as it 10 applicable to this type of transaction. Most of the au-
thorities deal with the situation there the Government employee secretly,
or otherwise, note an skent for the contractor and while they do not
cover our situation, they do contain general Language as to the suspicion
-1th which the law Looks upon transections between employees in their of-
ficial capacity and seting in their own personal interest.
The nearest case to our situation in found in Mayor and Council
of City of Macon Vs Burf, 60 Ga. 221. In that CADO the City Council
leased 2 piece of property to the then Mayor for 26 certain term of years
and the Mayor as part of the consideration for the lease agreed to do
certain things such as cutting wood and distributing it to the poor. After
the execution of the lease there -as A. change in personnel in the City
Council although the Meyor was reclected. An action was brought by the
City against the Mayor to void the Lease. The Court held that, even
though the Mayor 414 not have the duty of negotisting and executing leases,
he 314 have the general duty AB Mayor of the City to are that agreements
on behalf of the City were faithfully executed by the other parties to the
agreement and that as part of his general duty he TM required to DOB that
the lease WAB properly performed. Because of this relationship, the Court
hold the lesse void on the grounds of public policy.
In our case Mr. Cummings has nothing to do officially with the
negotiation or execution of the contract. He has the duty, however, of
certifying to the title under Section 355 of the Revised Statutes, nd
asended (U.S.C. title 40, soc. 255), and no money can be expended upon
any site until the written opinion of the Attorney General shall be had
Regraded Unclassified
17
Regraded Unclassified
- 3 -
in favor of the validity of the title. In the closing of title it has
been the practice of the Procurement Division that the vender, after
acceptance of the offer, furnish evidence of title to the United States
Attorney or Special Attorney designated by the Department of Justice
who examines the title and forwards his report to the Attorney General.
The Department of Justice then furnishes 4. preliminary opinion signed by,
or for, the Attorney General as to the state of the title, If the title
is marketable the Procurement Division for-ards the preliminary opinion
of the Attorney General, the abstract, and supporting papers, to the
General Accounting Office with the request that a check be issued for the
purchase price and forwarded to Justice. The Department of Justice,
upon receipt of the check, transmits it to the United States Attorney for
the closing of the title.
If any suit 1a brought in the Court of Claims concerning the
contract, it will be the duty of the Attorney General to defend the
action and to assert any counter-claim available to the Covernment. This
might involve a breach of warranty on the part of the grantor. The De-
partment of Justice generally, under the supervision of the Attorney
General, also will represent the United States in any other litigation in
connection with the contract.
It is quite possible that a Court, following the decision in the
Georgia case, eited above, might hold that the Attorney General had such
an official interest in the contract as to render it void.
It 1s my judgment that the matter should be formally submitted
to the Comptroller with a statement of all the facts in the matter, 62-
pecially because it must be cleared with him prior to closing. The
courts have permitted trustees of estates to deal with themselves in-
dividually upon a submission of all the facts to the Court for advance
approval. It my be that this analogy may be used in submitting the
matter to the Comptroller General.
(Initialed) E O
TAMILE - 12/5/38
18
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
DEC 6- 1938
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Herman Oliphant
For your information
Judge Townsend in the opinion section of the Department of
Justice called Cairns today and said he was preparing an opinion on
the German matter and was inclined to agree with the Treasury's position.
He wanted to see the press release of December 23, 1936 and our letter
to the State Department of December 5, 1936, of which the press release
was a condensation.
Cairns will take these documents to him in the morning and
answer any questions he may ask. He will try to learn about when the
opinion can be expected.
All
Regraded Unclassified
19
EDA
HANKOW VIA N.R.
Dated December 6, 1938
RECEIVED 7 a.m. 7th
Secretary of State
Washington
December 6, 9 a.m.
Hong Kong's DECEMBER 3, noon, asking for comments on
United States Government report that Yangtze River open
to commerce and wood oil now on the way from Hankow.
Similar inquiries have been received from the United
States by two leading American wood oil exporters here.
The source of the report is attributed to the Department
of Commerce by one of them.
The Yangtze River is not (repeat not) open to
COMMERCE. Inquiries among wood oil firms reveal that the
Japanese have not acquired any stocks of wood oil at
Hankow either by purchase or by confiscation. No forsign
commercial VESSELS and no lighters with wood oil have
left Hankow for down river since the Japanese occupied
this center. While it is conceivable that a fEW tons of
wood oil may have been found and confiscated by the
Japanese military forces as they advanced along the Canton-
Hankow Railway it is doubtful whether total could bE more
than
20
EDA - 2 - DECEMBER 6, 9 a. m. from Hankow
than 50 or 60 tons, if that much. No positive information
on this last is available yet.
REPEATED to Hong Kong, Shanghai.
JOSSELYN
DDM :WWC
Regraded Unclassified
21
Confidential
PARAPHRASE
A confidential telegram (No. 579) of December 6,
1938, from the American Ambassador at Chungking reads
substantially as follows:
On December 4 6. member of the Embassy staff was in-
formed by the Acting Director General of the Foreign
Trade Commission that the exportation of bristles is pro-
ceeding normally by truck to Yunnanfu. With reference to
the wool trade in the northwest, he stated that more than
five thousand tons of wool had been carried to Soviet
Russia by camel during the past year and that steps had
been taken also to prevent shipments of wool from going
into territories controlled by the Japanese. This offi-
cial stated also that an average of twenty tons of tung
oil is being carried each day by means of mule and coolie
transport to Yunnanfu via Suifu. He declared that, al-
though, of course, freight rates will be considerably
higher, this means of transportation is being so enlarged
as to preclude 8 shortage of tung oil in the consuming
markets of the world.
The above-mentioned Foreign Trade Commission is an
official organization which controls now almost all of
the export trade of that part of China controlled by the
National Government.
6001939/261
Regraded Unclassified
22
Secretary THE
All
COMMANDANT OF THE UNITED STATES COAST GUARD
799
WASHINGTON
6 December 1938.
MEMORANDUM FOR - The Secretary of the Treasury,
12/9/38
(via Assistant Secretary Gibbons).
Subject:
U.S. Maritime Service . training.
On Mondey afternoon, 5 December 1938, Assistant
Secretary Gibbons called a conference in his office, at which
were present, in addition to the Assistant Secretary: Assistant
to the Secretary Herbert E. Gaston (who remained only during the
early part of the conference); Mr. Gardner Jackson, an Advisor
to the National Maritime Union; Rear Admiral R. R. Waesche,
U.S.C.G; Lieutenant Commender G. B. McCabe, Commanding Officer,
Maritime Service Training Station at Hoffman Island, New York;
Lieutenant Commander G. B. Gelly, U.S.C.G; Mr. Jerome King,
Secretary of the National Maritime Union; and Mr. Ralph Emerson,
Legislative Representative of the National Maritims Union.
The conference was called to discuss certain changes
in the regulations for the training of maritime personnel, pro-
posed by representatives of the National Maritime Union. No
difficulty whatever was encountered in coming to an agreement
on the proposed changes.
Upon completion of this conference, Mr. King and
Mr. Emerson of the National Maritime Union, and the representatives
of the Coast Guard, met in conference at Coast Guard Headquarters,
and remained together until detailed amendments to the regulations
were written, satisfactory to both the Coast Guard and the
National Maritime Union. These amendments, signed by the Com-
mandant of the Coast Guard, were transmitted via registered mail
today, to Mr. Jerome King, Secretary of the National Maritime
Union at New York, and it 1a confidently expected that this will
result very shortly in the officers of the National Maritime
Union giving their approval to the training system of Merchant
Marine personnel now being conducted by the Coast Guard.
Asfar as is now known, every objection made by the
National Maritime Union to the training system has been satis-
factorily met, and full cooperation between the union end the
Coast Guard is expected in the future.
Regraded Unclassified
23
- #2 -
The Commandant 18 having lunch on Thursday, 8
December 1938, with Mr. Gardner Jackson, and will, thereafter,
confer with Mr. Jackson from time to time, as may be deemed
necessary, to insure full confidence and understanding in
the training of Merchant Marine personnel.
annauche
R. R. WAESCHE
Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard,
Commandent.
1821
MINE DE
Miss DEC 0
CENAED
Regraded Unclassifie
24
December 6, 1938,
10:10 a.m.
Williams: Hello.
HMJr:
Proffesor Williams.
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
Morgenthau.
W:
Oh, yes, Mr. Morgenthau.
HMJr:
How are you?
W:
Fine. How are you?
HMJr:
Well, I feel pretty good after yesterdays financing.
W:
Yes, I should think you would.
and
HMJr:
Mr. Williams, this so-called Fiscal/ Monetary Committee.
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
They put up something to me yesterday which was prepared
by the economists of the National Resources Board.
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
They set up this budget in a new way. It shows the
inflation and deflation are the effects of -- on collec-
tion of taxes and on our spending.
W:
Yes,
HMJr;
Now, on the surface it looks awful good.
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
But it may be ga-ga, see? Now what I'm doing and what
I'm trying to get -- it's a very complicated thing and
they've got a lot of things -- these multiples which
they use, and I'm trying to get you and Stewart and
Viner
to come down here Friday and Saturday, and
to see whether this thing will stand up; because I don't
want to show it to the President unless what I call my
senior economists have looked at it, you see?
W:
Well, I know something about it in a general way. I
mean I know of those who have been interested in that
point of view and some of their ideas, and I would like
very much to 80 over it.
25
2 -
HMJr:
Well, I'm really interested and bothered, and I've
gotten ahold of Viner , he's coming.
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
It's really a two day's job, I think, and if you could
spend Friday and Saturday here I'd appreciate it
tremendously.
W:
I think I could, I have to change my program around
because we have B. Seminar and we have a clase on Friday,
but I think I can arrange that,
HMJr:
Well I'm going to try to get Hanson to.
W:
Well, he's in the same fix as me. He's running a Seminar,
We run it together.
HMJr:
Would you ask him whether he could come also?
W:
Well, if we are both away from that Seminar I don't know
quite what we'll do.
HMJr:
Gosh!
W:
Suppose I talk it over with him and see what the possi-
bilities are? He'd be free on Saturday, I think. The
question 18 about Friday.
HMJr:
What I was thinking was that you people could get these
men. I told them -- I told White and Curry who are
going to present this that they are going to be put on
the spot and they say "Fine". What I thought is that
if you fellows could Just try to rip this apart, look
at it and then I'd like to sit down with you Saturday,
but I can't go into all the technical details behind it.
W:
No.
HMJr:
You see?
W:
It wouldn't be possible for us to have E copy of It in
edvance?
HMJr:
Well, no.
W:
There is just one copy?
HMJr:
There 1s Just one copy and I'd send it up in a minute,
but talk it over, and maybe one of you could come
Friday and both of you be here Saturday.
W1
I think that 1s possible.
Regraded Unclassified
26
- 3 -
HMJr:
Will you call me back later on?
W:
Yes, I'll call you back later in the day.
HMJr:
Call me collect.
W:
Alright.
HMJr:
Will you?
W:
Alright, I will.
HMJr:
And then, will you speak to Hanson?
W:
I'll talk to him right now.
HMJr:
Thank you.
W:
Alright.
HMJr:
I make great importance on it because if it's alright
then I want the President to use that philosophy and
mention it in his budget message, but I don't want to
present it to him until you fellows have used a can-
opener.
W:
Well, I'm awfully glad to be called on, because, as I
say, I've been aware of some of the ideas and plans
and I think it is awfully important.
HMJr:
Well, I do too.
W:
That we go into it thoroughly.
HMJr:
Right!
W:
Yes.
HMJr:
Thank you.
W:
Alright, good bye.
HMJr:
Good bye.
Regraded Unclassified
27
December 6, 1938.
10:26 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello,
Operator: Dr. Bowman. Go shead.
HMJr:
Hello.
Bowman:
Good morning, Mr. Morgenthau.
HMJr:
How are you?
B:
First rate.
HMJr:
Dr. Bowman, I got your letter and the statement for the
money, and there is Just this thing which has cropped
up -- the first statement of a hundred odd dollars for
work done by the National Geographic.
B:
American.
HMJr:
American -- yes, I haven't got the letter right before
me. Well now that -- I don't -- there won't be any
trouble about the Treasury paying for that. If my man
may want to get in touch directly with them to have them
break it down in the way the Treasury's red tape calls
for, you see?
B:
Yes.
HMJr:
Another thing I find -- this man that you brought on at
my request of the west coast -- he's not an American
citizen, is he?
B:
That's right.
HMJr:
Well, then I'll have to -- I find I can't pay him on the
Treasury 80 I'll have to pay him out of my own pocket.
B:
Oh, you don't want to do that. Isn't it possible to
shift that to some of the rest of the organizations?
HMJr:
Well, I don't like to do that. 80 what I thought would
be this -- if you could have him make out a bill, and I
hate to bother you with this stuff.
B:
Well, I'll be seeing him day after tomorrow anyway.
HMJr:
What his railroad fare was, and oh, we'll pay him for 8.
couple of weeks or something like that, you Bee?
B:
Yes.
Regraded Unclassified
28
- 2 -
HMJr:
And then I'll make out a check to the University and the
University can pay him.
B:
Yes.
HMJr:
Then you might give me a little estimate as to how long
it will last.
B:
That to I'll be able to learn from him day after tomorrow.
HWr:
Because I had forgotten all about thie rule which was
passed that you could only hire American citizens, and
80 -- I'd like to pay him his railroad fare and his work
for oh, say, through -- up to maybe the fifteenth -- so -
I mean that he will be paid. Then let's figure how much
longer after that he'd have to stay, you see?
B:
Yes, yes, first rate.
HMJr:
Pardon? And I've got McRaynolde here, my administrative
assistant. Do you -- he is just raising a thumb -- what
do you say Mac? (Talks aside to McRaynolds) -- Well,
McReyholds says he thinks we can pay his railroad fare.
B:
Yes.
HMJr:
The Treasury Can,
B:
I see -- yes.
HMJr:
So that may help, but if the check could be made out,
but I hate to bother you.
B:
That's alright.
HMJr:
Up to the fifteenth.
B:
Yes.
HMJr:
And then, let's find out how much longer it will take.
B:
Yes.
HMJr:
That would be helpful.
B:
That will be fine. If you want to send that bill back
I'll send it up to the Society and have them break it
down any way --
HMJr:
Well, I won't bother you. I'll have McReynolds -- I'll
turn the bill over to him, and Just let him deal directly
with the Society, if that's agreeable to you. Is that
alright?
Regraded Unclassified
29
- 3 -
B:
Yes, that will be fine.
HMJr:
Did you get anything out of Rosen?
B:
Well, he wrote me about British Guiana -- that was after
he called. He asked a number of questions. I found he
was in possession of a copy of my letter to the President
and the McBryant Telegraph.
HMJr:
Yes, well, I want to explain that and that's one of the
reasons I
Regraded Unclassified
30
December 6, 1938.
11:04 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Harrison:
Good morning, Henry.
HMJr:
Hello, George.
H:
Henry, this thing 1s boiling down here still.
HMJr:
Yes?
H:
And it's going over tremendously. One thing 18 worrying
us quite a bit -- it 1e the number of these thousand
dollar subscriptions.
HMJr:
Yes?
H:
Which are being dreadfully abused in every way -- I mean,
families, and clerks, and servants, all put in -- the bose
putting in one check, his own check, and then individual
subscriptions for all of his family, relatives and
friends.
HMJr:
That's the way they are doing it, eh?
H:
Yes, and -- of course, there are a number who are legimate
subscribers for a. thousand dollar bond, but I think that
in view of the publicity in Scribners and elsewhere, about
telling people how they can make a rake-off on this thing
:
HMJr:
In Scribners?
H:
What?
HMJr:
In Scribners?
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
oh, I didn't see it.
H:
OH -- it pointed out the whole way whereby you could by
subscribing for five thousand dollars, how you could make
seventy-five dollars in one day.
HMJr:
I didn't know that. In Scribners?
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
I see.
H:
And there has been a lot in the papers to so that we have
already here about ten times as many one thousand dollar
subscriptions as we ever get, and you will find probably
Regraded Unclassified
31
- 2 -
that it 18 more true in other districts where they have
more thousand-dollar subscriptions than we do anyway,
and what I was thinking was that you might get the Board,
or you yourself, to ask the other Reserve Banks to compile
for you the number of thousand-dollar subscriptions you
are getting and keep you posted 80 that when you come to
make your allotment you can determine what to do about
that.
HMJr:
Yes.
H:
I feel -- frankly, as I see it now, I think the only way
you are going to lick this thing is perhaps not to make
any exemption at all, but to give these fellows their
ten percent -- give them the hundred minimum for their
hundred dollars.
HMJr:
Well, not this time though.
H:
Well, I think I did this time.
HMJr:
Have we the authority?
H:
What?
HMJr:
Have we the authority?
H:
Well, they tell me downstairs you have. You haven't
committed yourself to allot up to a thousand.
HMJr:
Yes.
to you
H:
Alright, now -- ah, I'm mentioning that/to think about,
but that's the way we all feel at the moment here, and
if you talk to your men about it there and see whether
you are sure about this, authority- andI'm sure you have
got it. It 16 on this theory that while you were cut
out, some legitimate investor for a thousand -- you could
at the same time announce that those fellows that want to
legitimately invest a thousand dollars can do better on a
Baby Bond.
HMJr:
That's right.
H:
Because they get a better yield on & Baby Bond.
HMJr:
That's right.
***
And the whole thing 1e that it 1s just a racket to try to
make a rake-off, and you will find all these fellows
spending their bonds again to take the premiums.
HMJr:
You think we ought to have the other Fede figure up how
many one-thousand dollar ones?
Regraded Unclassified
32
- 3 -
H:
Yes, Just make a special report to you --interimreport --
on the volume of thousand-dollar subscriptions as compared
with previous issues.
HMJr:
I'll do that right away.
H:
I think it would be worth while and I think it would be
interesting to you, because here, as I say, we are getting
about ten times as many and it 18 due to all this fool
publicity about how a fellow can make ten, or fifteen, or
twenty dollars profit over-night.
HMJr:
O.K.
H:
O.K.
HMJr:
Thank you very much.
Regraded Unclassified
SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE
32.A
December 1938
Vol. 104, No. 6
Gambling in Governments
S. F. PORTER
w INQUIRY into free riding in Government bonds
$80,000,000 profits in half a
decade
15% in a week
the world's simplest, safest way to double money
E
(LAY so often the financial pages
nated Treasury bonds of 1950-52. The
proceed. He went to the New York
make casual reference to a practice
amount of the offering is $400,000,000
Federal Reserve Bank and obtained the
called "free riding." To the uninittated,
or thereabouts.
blank for cash subscriptions to the
his might mean anything from hitch-
Also in the announcement are details
United States Treasury 2½ per cent
liking to matching the brass ring on
on the methods of subscribing; on the
bonds due in 1952. On the blank, he
herry go-round. To those in the know,
right of the Treasury to reject subscrip-
filled in the date, the space reading
stands (or a simple, quick, and amar-
tions; on the fact that banking institu-
"Please enter my subscription for $
Ingly safe way to make money.
tions generally may submit for account
with the figure $1,000,000, and signed
A free rider is a person or institution
of customers cash subscriptions without
his name and address. He then turned in
that subscribes for a block of new Gov.
deposit. And there is one sentence which
the blank with his check for $100,000-
proment bonds and sells them at a profit
paves the way for the free rider: "Cash
10 per cent of his total subscription-got
before the date when full payment for
subscriptions from all others must be
a receipt for his money and went back
the bonds is duc. In the past six years
accompanied by payment of TO per cent
to his business.
there have been opportunities for thirty-
of the amount of bonds applied for.
The first part of the free-riding tran-
Cour free rides its the Government mar-
When the Treasury offers new bonds
saction was finished.
krt, reflecting the sale of nearly $15,000,-
it always allows a week to ten days to
Broadstreet had the entire day of
000,000 in new Treasury securities. The
elapse between the date of offering and
September 8 to place this order. He
profits? Impossible to calculate accu-
the date when purchasers of the obliga-
might have waited until late evening
rately, but somewhere around $80,000,-
tions must pay up and take their bonds
and mailed his subscription directly to
bod, The risks? Infinitesimal, for each
home. It is during this period that the
the Treasury Department. If he had
of these thirty-four Rotations was man-
free rider operates-a week during
lived in another city, he could have gone
aged by the Government in such a way
which, for all intents and purposes, he
to the Federal Reserve Bank in his dis-
as to assure profits for the free rider.
owns the obligations on a 10 per cent
trict, or, wherever he lived, he could
This is how it works. The Treasury
margin and during which they are being
have asked his bank or broker to place
unity begins its preparations for a
traded in the market just as though they
the subscription for him. And, of course,
bond boue five or six weeks before it
had been outstanding for many years.
he might have ordered fewer bonds, de-
announces the terms of the new offering.
Before that period is ended, the free
pending upon the amount of cash he
Actually, it is preparing to borrow
rider sells his Government bonds to buy-
could raise.
money. A man approaching his bank for
ers who had wanted them all along.
At midnight, the Treasury closed the
loan puts up A good front; he straight-
books on subscriptions to the new bonds,
II
DD cost los financial records, talks big
reflecting the fact that orders had been
and confidently. The United States
Нкик
was the routine followed by a
NO overwhelming that it was unnecessary
Technicy does the same thing on a
free rider-call him John Broadstreet-
to solicit further orders. Two days later
Larger sale. It releases some cheering
during the past September flotation.
the Treasury revealed that it had re-
news to stimulate the prices of prime-
Immediately after the disclosure of
ceived subscriptions of more than $4.-
reade bonds. Both the Treasury and the
the terms of financing, Broadstreet (with
$87,000,000 for its $400,000,000 offering
Fedenti Reserve Banks are likely to bor-
funds and securities on which he could
of bonds and that, therefore, subscribers
FOW di Tew million dollars' worth of
raise $100,000 in cash for seven days)
would be allotted only 10 per cent of
Covernment bonds to lift prices and give
telephoned a dealer in United States
the total they had ordered. (Secretary
Uni market color and zip. Secretary Mor-
Government securities and asked wheth-
Morgenthau added, however, that all
Kenthaw confers with leading bankers
or the bonds were worth more than the
subscriptions for $1000 would be allorted
and fugul dealers to discover what inter-
formal offering price of 100. He was told
in full and that the mallest allotment on
tates and maturities would be best.
that the Treasury had been as generous
any subscription would be one $1000
In short. the market is "dressed" and
as usual and that, according to the prices
bond. This, naturally, was a break for
then, presto! comes the announcement.
at which comparable outstanding Gov-
the smaller investors.)
September H, 1938) "The Secretary of
emment obligations were selling. the
Now comes the second part of the free
to Treasury
invites subscriptions,
=½ per cent bonds were worth at least
ride. At soon as Broadstreet was notified
21 par and Accrued interest, from the
1011/21 or $1015, thus making the im-
by the Federal Reserve Bank that he had
people of the United States for 01/2 per
mediate profit to any buyer $15 it bond.
been awarded 100 bonds-10 per cent
sent bonds of the United States, desig-
Broadstreet, therefore, was ready to
of a $1,000,000 order-he prepared to
Regraded Unclassified
328
will them at the market price. He tele,
ulators who were so charmed by the trick
to borrow, It went to the banks-via its
phoned lis dealer again, learned that
that they went into free riding as a busi-
own market.
the 2½ per cent bonds were selling
ness. They put out a shingle announcing
The success of the Administration's
prints over his purchase price and
themselves as foreign-exchange dealers,
program during the past six years has de-
dom. not the telephone, sold them. He
although they hadn't the remotest idea
pended considerably upon the good con.
mid the dealer that the New York Re-
of how to translate pounds into francs or
dition of the market. The Treasury has
Bank would deliver the bonds to
marks into pesos. They simply losew how
it completely in hand. With the billions
have September 15. and he asked the
to catch a ride on new security issues
of dollars at its disposal and with the
Bank m deliver his bonds to the dealer
and they used every dollar they could get
help of the Federal Reserve System, it
specified.
for this one purpose, Later. when they
buys when prices weaken, sells when
The September 15, the dealer got
decided they had used the foreign-ex-
prices advance In March, 1937. for in.
bonds from the Bank and
change blind long enough, they moved
stance, when the business slump was
will fam di check for his $100,000 plus a
to a new office, printed new stationery,
getting off to a fine start, the Treasury
profit of 16 per cent on each bond-or
and continued their operations. As far JAN
threw its support behind the Govern.
mtal profit of $1500. Although Broad-
I know they are still going strong.
ment market and picked up $119,553c
deposit was tied up for seven
It's also possible to be overenthusiastic,
000 of its own bonds. In nne week dur.
days, he actually made his profit in less
For some time before the December,
ing August, 1934. when all world mar-
than an hour. Hr never had any inten-
1936, bond issue was announced a cer-
kets were suffering from the shock of
tion of holding his bonds, He had bet on
tain broker had been busy collecting the
Austrian Chancellor Dollfuss' assassing-
4 sur thing.
names of friends and relatives that be
tion, the Treasury bought $45,000,000
just to bring matters down from the
could use to mask the extent of his op-
of its own securities for the "investment
$100,000 class, I can cite my own ex-
crations, On subscription day he mailed
accounts" under its supervision. That's
pervice. With only $500, I took a free
to the Federal Reserve Bank order forms
control on a scale stock manipulators
ride on the September offering. Know-
in the names of twenty-nine persons. In
don't dream of.
me that the Treasury would not allot
his haste and excitement, however, he
Free riders recognize this factor of
low than one bond nn a subscription, I
made a sad error; he sent all the forms
Government support of the markets as
phared my order for one bond on a
in envelopes bearing his firm's name,
fundamental. They know that successful
deposit of $100 and used my remaining
And an alert secretary of the Bank no-
financing deals are essential to the Ad-
$400 to place subscriptions for one bond
liced the phenomenal duplication. The
ministration and that, therefore, the
rode in the names of my aunt, my uncle,
broker was called to the Bank, ques-
Treasury will do its best to put the mar-
my cousin, and my brother. I went
tioned, and sent away smarting under
ket in attractive shape just before securi-
through the same procedure Broadstreet
official reprimand. Even so, he was per-
by offerings. And. what is just as import.
did. checked the profit possibilities with
mitted to enter subscriptions for him-
tant, they know that since the Treasury
" bond dealer; went with my "proxies"
self and his wife. During the next Treas-
"insures" the sureen of its offerings,
to the Federal Reserve Bank and placed
ury issue. he used blank envelopes.
there will always be hundreds of bona
the orders; then sold my five $roon
bonds at a profit of $15 each. Altogether
III
fide investors-banks, insurance compa-
my from ride took about a half-hour.
THE question of risks involved in free
nin. trust funds-that will want Home
securities than they are able to obtain
My profit was $75 on an investment of
riding is tied up with recent develop-
from the Treasury in their own names
&yon for seven days.
ments in the history of the United States
These bond-hungry investors create the
There are no class distinctions in the
Government bond market.
free rider's market, for they are willing
line riders' fraternity. Speculators, big
In 1836, the gross public debt of the
to give him his profit in order to get hold
instructional investors, and just people
United States amounted to only $38,000.
of his bonds.
with cash rub elbows at the Federal Re-
Today it is more than $ 18,000,000,000,
Not once in the past sis years have
VIVI Banks on sulscription day. 1 know
an increase of one hundred million per
free riden failed to win. Every Govern-
of man who figures that he has
cent. From 1836 to 1918, there Was no
ment security sold has jumped above in
desided his money by free riding. Early
appreciable Government bond market. It
original four price immediately after the
in 1031 to inherited $50,000 and quit
really came into being with the World
formal offering. Some of the issues have
working % that he could manage his new
War, when the United States become a
returned relatively large profits-817 and
Instructions fittory about the normal risks
major nation. and I borrower with a
$20 a bond-and some, tendered during
in stink speculation. be spent most of
$26,000,000,000 deht. The prosperous
unsettled periods, have allowed only di
Tour worrying. Finally someone told
period between 1918 and 1930, however,
few dollars per bond. But each issue has
has Irvo riding, He has taken a
jacked up the Treasury's surplus and
been a success. for the Government un-
cash issue of Government
enabled it to pay off all but $16,000,-
derstands full well the importance of
Tranties lince 1934 und today is worth
000,000, And then, in 1933. a new con-
keeping that market alluring.
ann 3100,000.
cept of government was born-one which
Of couns, it Is possible to conceive of
Mother arguaintance boasts a 265
held that the Government had If right
things which might spoil the pretty pic-
2-1 not capital appreciation through
and an obligation to feed and clothe its
ture. A world war; a wholesale flight of
Der interver. A third says he has in-
needy. to stimulate its industries. That
capital from the country: the associna-
mary his capital 480 per cent by free
me int borrowing again on a tremendous
tion of the President; a new wave of
Since 1933 And a well-known
scale, and subsequent growth in the
currency devaluations: an overnight
W di Street house has met an expensive
Government bond market which has
versal in Government financial policy
operating overhead from profits realized
made other exchanges look insignificant
designed to lift the cost of money-hor-
during frer-riding periods.
To meet the vast deficits incurred in its
rowing-developments of this sort might
Tax anvone any the Government stilles
spending program. the Romevelt Ad-
foree Government-security holders to
instiative, consider the two young spec-
ministration had to have a special place
dump their bonds on the market And if
11
SCRIBNER'S
Regraded Unclassified
32c
the market collapsed, trading might be
few months. In 1935, for instance, close
is virtually assured during the remainder
suspended altogether, and the free rider
to 5° per cent of the outstanding debt
of this decade and most of the next.
caught short. But if such things happen-
was in the form of securities due within
Today. thousands of speculators are
ed, he'd probably be caught in one way
five years. In the fall of 1938, nearly 39
preparing to free-ride the Treasury's last
or another anyway, and a free-riding loss
per cent of the debt represented obliga-
financing of 1938, slated for mid-Decem-
would be the least of his headaches. To
tions maturing before 1944. The Treas-
ber. Another borrowing is anticipated for
cite such catastrophes as the only prob-
ury Departments of this and future ad-
March, 1939, another for June, Septem-
able causes for risk in free riding is no
ministrations, therefore, are faced with
ber, and a year from now. This short.
esaggeration. Even during a situation as
a serious problem of debt refunding.
term debt the Government has created is
hot as the March, 1933, crisis, when the
Borrowing at regular intervals by the
burdensome, even if not so dangerous as
nation's banks closed, the Treasury will,
country's fiscal authorities to meet the
Administration critics insist. And for the
able to sell an issue of notes that rose to
stebt coming due and to raise new cash
free riders, that is a perfect setup.
a premium. The same thing was true
in the September, 1938, financing, made
at the time of the Central European
crisis. The free riders could have sold
their securities profitably at any moment
during those periods.
If a free rider did get caught by a
major catastrophe, he would have three
alternatives: he could try to cancel his
subscription, throwing himself on the
mercy of the Federal Reserve Bank of-
ficials; he could ask his bank to carry
him on a 10 per cent margin: or be
could offer his bonds for whatever price
they would bring, hoping to get out with
only a minor loss.
The Government's attitude toward
free riding is clear, but not frightening.
It considers it disturbing to the market,
harmful to the price level. In December,
1936, after a year in which free riders
had run wild, Secretary Morgenthau ex-
ploded to reporters: "Free riders are
chiselers who are trying to cheat their
own government." He cited an instance
of a bank which used its entire clerical
staff to aid in its free-riding operations,
and told of a man who had used the
names of twenty-one members of his
family to disguise his activities. The
Treasury has taken some steps to get rid
of free riders. It has raised the deposit
requirements for subscriptions from 5 to
10 per cent, but that has not been pro-
hibitive. Banks have been ordered to
check on the credit standing of individ-
ual buyers, but that is too big a job. It
is doubtful that the authorities could
ever climinate a practice so easy to un-
derstand and operate without doing the
market more harm than good. Indeed,
the activities of the free riders give the
Government market a stimulation and
excitement it could obtain from no other
conservative source.
So much for the risks. They would
not loom large to anyone who has the
courage to ride in an airplane or cross
Fifth Avenue at noon.
The future of free riding looks good.
Since millions of dollars of the securities
sold by the Treasury in recent years
have carried short-term maturities, large
blocks of the public debt mature every
46
Regraded Unclassified
23
December 6, 1938.
11:40 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator: Mr. Sproul.
HMJr:
Hello.
S:
Hello, Mr. Secretary.
HMJr:
The President 1e very angry at me because I didn't get
him any bonds.
S:
Who 187
HMJr:
The President of the United States. He says he thinks
there 1s something the matter with a setup where you
can't buy five thousand for your church.
S:
Well, maybe there 1s.
HMJr:
Well, how did she go?
S:
Well, we've had -- after the first hour this morning
when there was some selling of subscriptions to the long
bonds of the whole long market was off, why, the market
has gone very well.
HMJr:
I 888,
S:
I'm selling tied up until eleven o'clock and since then
the market has been strong all through, but particularly
in the long bonds, and the gap which had developed be-
tween the rights, the new twos and the new two and three
quarters has been pretty well closed up now.
HMJr:
Good!
S:
In the trading after the close this afternoon at four
o'clock, the rights were quoted at one hundred and one
twenty-four twenty-six.
HMJr:
I Bee.
8:
The new twos at one hundred and one twenty-four twenty-
six, and the new two and three quarters at one hundred
and one twenty-three twenty-five.
HMJr:
Well, that's close enough, isn't it?
S:
So they are pretty close together now and it looke 88 if
either one might go ahead tomorrow, and I think it 18 in
8.8 good shape, or better shape, than it has been at any
Regraded Unclassified
34
- 2 -
time, and it has always been in pretty good shape.
HMJr:
Well, it sounds very good. Now, has the system made
up their mind what they are going to do?
S:
No, they haven't. They are going to have a meeting
tomorrow morning and decide.
HMJr:
Yes, well, alright. I suppose -- I don't know when I
make the allotments.
S:
Well, I suppose in the ordinary course you would probably
make them about Friday night.
HMJr:
Oh, my heavens ! As far off 8.8 that?
S:
What?
HMJr:
You fellows won't be ready until then?
S:
No, to do even a half-way policing job I think we need
until Friday night -- until Friday noon, say.
HMJr:
Well, we ought to have it definitely by Friday night.
S:
Yes, I should say BO -- so that it would be out in the
hands of the subscribers on Saturday, and they could
begin -- they would get back in here on -- we could
begin on Monday on the actual operations with the bonds.
HMJr:
O.K.
S:
Good bye.
HMJr:
I am very much pleased.
S:
Well, it looks good.
HMJr:
Yes.
S:
Alright.
Regraded Unclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
35
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE DEC 6 1938
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
Herman Ollohant
FROM
There has been submitted to us for approval a proposed accept-
unce of an offer made by Homer S. Cummings to sell to the United States,
for the sum of $50,000, a tract of land to be used as an addition to the
Stamford, Connecticut, Post Office site,
Without making any investigation of the circumstances in the
matter, outside of what appears in the file, the following would seem to
be the facts:
Mr. Cummings has owned the property at least since 1929. The
H.O.L.C. has appraised the property at $50,000. The property has an
approximate frontage of 132 feet. The property between the present site
and Mr. Cummings' property is also being purchased. The price proposed
to be paid to Mr. Cummings per front foot is less than that proposed to
be paid to the owner of the intervening parcel. The assessed value of
Mr. Cummings' property is $24,200.
The present Post Office site is in the middle of the block and
the only other property available for the extension is the property on
the other side of the Post Office upon which is located 8. Y.M.C.A. build-
ing, and the purchase of this property would entail a much larger expend-
iture than the property owned by Mr. Cummings and the adjoining property
owner.
There does not seem to be any statutory prohibition against
this transaction. Section 41 of the Criminal Code (act of March 4, 1909,
35 Stat. 1088, 1097) (U.S.C. title 18, sec. 93), which is the only stat-
ute applicable to sales to the Government by officials extends only to
employees who are officers or agents of the seller and not to principals.
The Comptroller General, in general language, has indicated that this
act applies also to principals. However, such language may be disregarded
in view of the express terms of the statute, which is penal, and has to
be strictly construed. The Attorney General has held that such statute
applies only to agents and not to principals.
Aside from any statutory prohibition, however, there is reason
to believe that the Comptroller General, following decisions heretofore
nade, will hold that the transaction is void on the grounds of public
Regraded Unclassified
36
- 2 -
policy. Before the site can be acquired and the check drawn for the
purchase price, the warrant has to be countersigned by the Comptroller.
Because of this the matter will be before the Comptroller prior to the
closing of the transaction.
The Comptroller has held that the following transactions are
void on the grounds of public policy:
1. Contracts by Government employees to rent automobiles to
the Government, even though the employee is not the negotiating or
contracting officer.
2. Contracts between EL Public Health surgeon, who is the con-
tracting officer, and himself, as proprietor of a private hospital, even
though the hospital was the only one available in the vicinity.
3. Sales of tractors by an employee of the Virgin Island
Government, after public advertisement, even though the employee was not
the contracting officer and had nothing to do with the transaction in
an official capacity.
A study has been made of the general law of public policy in
so far as it is applicable to this type of transaction. Most of the au-
thorities deal with the situation where the Government employee secretly,
or otherwise, acts as agent for the contractor and while they do not
cover our situation, they do contain general language as to the suspicion
with which the law looks upon transactions between employees in their of-
ficial capacity and acting in their own personal interest.
The nearest case to our situation is found in Mayor and Council
of City of Macon V. Huff, 60 Ga. 221. In that case the City Council
leased a piece of property to the then Mayor for a certain term of years
and the Mayor as part of the consideration for the lease agreed to do
certain things such as cutting wood and distributing it to the poor. After
the execution of the lease there was B. change in personnel in the City
Council although the Mayor was reelected. An action was brought by the
City against the Mayor to void the lease. The Court held that, even
though the Mayor did not have the duty of negotiating and executing leases,
he did have the general duty as Mayor of the City to see that agreements
on behalf of the City were faithfully executed by the other parties to the
agreement and that as part of his general duty he was required to see that
the lease was properly performed. Because of this relationship, the Court
held the lease void on the grounds of public policy.
In our case Mr. Cummings has nothing to do officially with the
negotiation or execution of the contract. He hee the duty, however, of
certifying to the title under Section 355 of the Revised Statutes, as
amended (U.S.C. title 40, sec. 255), and no money can be expended upon
any site until the written opinion of the Attorney General shall be had
Regraded Unclassified
27
- 3 -
in [svor of the validity of the title. In the closing of title it has
bean the practice of the Procurement Division that the vendor, after
Acceptance of the offer, furnish evidence of title to the United States
Attarney or Special Attorney designated by the Department of Justice
who examines the title and forwards his report to the Attorney General.
The Department of Justice then furnishes a preliminary opinion signed by,
or for, the Attorney General as to the state of the title. If the title
is marketable the Procurement Division forwards the preliminary opinion
of the Attorney General, the abstract, and supporting papers, to the
Coneral Accounting Office with the request that a check be issued for the
purchase price and forwarded to Justice. The Department of Justice,
4709 receipt of the check, transmits it to the United States Attorney for
the closing of the title.
If any suit is brought in the Court of Claims concerning the
contract, it will be the duty of the Attorney General to defend the
action and to essert any counter-claim available to the Government. This
=1ght involve 2 breach of warranty on the part of the grantor. The De-
partment of Justice generally, under the supervision of the Attorney
Coneral, also will represent the United States in any other litigation in
comection with the contract.
It is quite possible that 2 Court, following the decision in the
Georgia case, cited above, might hold that the Attorney General had such
in official interest in the contract as to render it void.
It. is my judgment that the matter should be formally submitted
to the Comptroller with a statement of all the facts in the matter, es-
intially because it must be cleared with him prior to closing. The
courts have permitted trustees of estates to deal with themselves in-
lividually upon A submission of all the facts to the Court for advance
Approval. It. may be that this analogy may be used in submitting the
metter to the Comptroller General.
MI
Regraded Inclassified
23
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
PROCUREMENT DIVISION
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
WASHINGTON
December 6, 1938
MEMO. TO MR. MC REYNOLDS:
Subject: Public Hearing Temporary National
Economic Committee
The fifth public hearing of the National Economic Committee was
held in the Senate Office Building today at 10:30 A.M. and adjourned
at 4:30 P.M.
Mr. Milton Tibbitts, Vice President and Patent Counsel of the
Packard Motor Car Company of Detroit, Michigan was on the stand with
respect to various phases of the use of patents by that company.
Mr. W. S. Knudsen, President of the General Motors Corporation,
and Mr. James McAvoy, Director of the Patent Section of the same
corporation were on the stand with respect to various subjects such
as competitive use of patents; patents and progress; infringement
suits; patent research; cross licensing; royalty fees; exchange of
patents; patents in field of newer industries; basic and non-basic
practices, and possible effects of revolutionary patents.
Next followed Mr. Charles F. Kettering, Head of the Research
Department of the General Motors Corporation who was heard on various
phases such as rewards for inventions; collective research; invention
paychology; compensation patents; types of patents; patent licensing;
technological problem; the patent system, etc.
Next followed Mr. James McAvoy, Patent Counsel of the same cor-
poration on the general subjects of General Motor royalties; patent
applications; and the patent office.
Director of Procurement
Regraded Unclassified
39
CONFIDENTIAL
CABLE
From: Bankers Trust Co. of N. Y.
London Office
Date: December 6, 1938
Tuesday
#418. BRITISH CONTROL MADE FIRM STAND AS BUYERS OF DOLLARS
AT 4.70. THIS FACTOR COUPLED WITH NEWS SMALL ANTI FRENCH DEMONSTRATION
IN ITALY TURNED MARKET WANTED 'TILL RATE OF 4.69 REACHED AT WHICH RATE
CONTROL WAS SELLING DOLLARS. FORWARDS AFTER OPENING OFFERED TURNED
SLIGHTLY WANTED. REPATRIATION FRENCH FUNDS SMALLER AND FRENCH
CONTROL OPERATING BOTH WAYS. FORWARDS STEADY.
DeCASTELLANE REPORTS CONTROL CONTINUED RECEIVE EXCHANGE THIS
MORNING ESTIMATED 1,000,000 POUNDS. FOREIGN BANK NOTES ALSO BEING
SOLD BUT LITTLE EVIDENCE SALE FOREIGN SECURITIES BY INDIVIDUALS.
BOURSE STRONG INCLUDING GOVERNMENT BONDS. RATE TREASURY BILLS AGAIN
LOWERED TALK FURTHER REDUCTION BANK RATE SOON. CALL MONEY EASY
THOUGH MARKET LARGELY ARTIFICIAL. BANK DE L'INDO CHINE BELIEVES
STERLING RATE WILL GO TO 175 BUT DeCASTELLANE DOES NOT AGREE THOUGH
GENERALLY BELIEVED FRANC UNDERVALUED IN TERMS OF STERLING, NOW
ANTICIPATED DALADIER WILL HAVE 60 VOTES MAJORITY POSSIBILITY
MINISTERIAL RESHULTED AFTER VOTE.
Regraded Unclassified
10
December 6, 1938.
TEMORANDUM
At 12:40 this noon I again spoke with M. Cariguel of the Bank of
France by long distance telephone in order that Secretary Morgenthau
might have the latest information from Paris before lunching with the
President. Cariguel told me that so far during the day he had
acquired well over three million pounds. At around one-thirty P.M.
he had been obliged to sell back a little sterling to the market,
there having been a alight reaction, presumably due to the anti-Freach
demonstrations in Rome. This movement had lasted only B. little while;
during the remainder of the afternoon the French Stabilisation Fund
had again acquired foreign exchange. Cariguel reminded me that the
rate on French Treasury bills had again been lowered, this time to
1 and 3/4 per cent. He said French rentes and shares were strong, but
that Paris was selling international securities, particularly gold
mining shares. He said there was entire confidence that Daladier would
obtain & majority in the session of Parliament which begine December 8.
The spirit on the Paris market was quite good,
In answer to B7 inquiry as to whether the naming of Jansson as
the new Minister of Finance in Belgium had caused any repercussions.
Cariguel said he was not aware of any marked comment on this appoint-
sent. The belga had been weak the past few days, with Brussels losing
gold to London, a little to Paris, and presumably some to the
United States, but Cariguel could not in any manner confirm the present
report which 1 mentioned as emanating from London to the effect that
Belgium might cut the belga loose from gold and follow sterling.
Regraded Unclassified
41
December 6, 1938
Lunoh with the President.
I told the President I was having Dr. Bowman
do some work on exploring South Africa as a possible
colony. He said that it was a waste of time to ex-
plore any country other than a British colony; that
that territory was controlled from London and any
country belonging to the Union of South Africa was
out of the picture.
He then sketched his plan to me, which 1a as
follows:
He first asked me how many people did I think
there were to be taken care of. I said, I am not
an expert, but, I said, Germany, 500,000; Roumania
and Poland another 250,000. He sald, Well, that
just checks with the information he has. He said
he had figured that it would take $1,000 a person
and I said I agreed with that, or $500,000,000. He
kept saying, always, "Do you think?" "Did I think if
we could find a way to take care of 100,000 people
for five years that that would be sufficient?" Would
that answer the problem?
Well, I said, it 18 80 much better than anybody
has suggested that, I said, yes. He said, Well, what
I am willing to propose is that, first, that of the
$500,000,000, $300,000,000 be outright grants; the
other $200,000,000 to be subscribed to through selling
of bonds as two-thirds ought to be recoverable. He
said that he was ready to recommend that the United
States Government contribute $20,000,000 B. year for
five years, provided that all the other countries of
the world would subscribe $20,000,000 and that the
$20,000,000 was raised through private contribution.
I told him $60,000,000 and that $40,000,000 should
be raised through the sale of bonds.
He then outlined to me (and I thought he was
going to give me the memorandum, but he didn't) where
he thought people could be placed. He said he is
willing to recommend that the United States take
20,000 Jews & year. I said, Well, that 1sn't the
quota? He said, No, but the quota isn't exclusively
Regraded Unclassified
42
-2-
for Jews. (Which, of course, 18 right.) He then
put down Palestine for 15,000. He said, What do
you think of that? I said, I thought that was low.
And then he mentioned certain of the British colonies
in South Africa and what he said was extra, extra
secret: he hopes to get a few into the back country
of Ethiopa, which he said is very good country. A1-
together he had worked out that outside of the United
States there would be room for 80,000 a year.
So I said, Well, what are you going to do with
the plan? He said, That's what the meeting 18 for
that follows you. There was Sumner Wellea, Bullitt,
B111 Phillips and Ambassador Wilson.
The President seemed very determined to do
this and seemed to think, moreover, that it W8.8 pos-
sible.
I told him about my plan: that in my letter
to Jones, from now on that the management of any bank
to which we subscribe for preferred stock must be
approved not only by Jones, but FDIC plus the Comp-
troller of the Currency and told him that for all
the good banking reasons, the extra reason was I
thought it was a mistake to let Jones have the ex-
clusive right of going to the heads of these 1m-
portant banks during the next two years. He agreed.
The President said, Write that letter to Jones.
He said, He will go up through the ceiling and then,
he said, he will come and see me and I will Bay we
won't do it the way Henry suggested, but you write
me a letter, Jesse, but before you talk to the head
of any bank at all it will first have to be 0. K'd
by the President of the United States and the Secre-
tary of the Treasury and the Comptroller and the head
of F. D. I. C., and, he said, if you write me such a
letter than I will get Henry to withdraw his. But,
said the President, I would much prefer to do it the
way I suggest. I said, 0. K.
I then had a minute to talk to him about Basil
Harris, but only a minute, and he said yes; we needed
a man like that. He said, "A man who would be good
enough to sell bed warming pans to the Indiana. (That's
a hot country, you know.)
Regraded Unclassified
43
He had & long telephone conversation while
I was there with Jimmie Roosevelt and I asked three
times whether I should not go out, but he didn't
want me to. Needless to say, I was terribly em-
barrassed because it had to do with the position
which he has just taken. (See note at end of dictation.)
I showed him the story of the low rental
house at Fort Wayne left me by Stwart MacDonald
and he was tremendously interested in it.
The President said, How is Hanos getting
along with these taxes? I said, There 18 nothing
to get along on because we are all waiting on you.
So I said, Mr. President, your new Fiscal and Mone-
tary Advisory Committee have worked out something
which looks very important. I am having this
group of economists come down Friday or Saturday
to go over it to make sure it is sound. I named
the economists. (Magill, Hansen, Williams and
Walter Stewart.)
The President said, "Can't you let me have
it before then?" I said, No, Mr. President, it's
too importand and I want to make sure it's all
right. "When can I have 1t?" Monday afternoon.
He said, Well, be thinking over how we should handle
it publicly. He said, Can you guarantee that there
will be no leaks on it? I said, Yes, I can. He
said, Well, I will begin to see Jack Garner and the
other leaders by the 17th of December and once I
talk to them of course there will be leaks. He
said, Think it over whether I should spring it be-
fore then or whether I should say nothing to them
and keep it for my message. He said, From what
you tell me, this sounds 80 important I may not put
it in my budget message, but put it in my message I
to Congress and make it the principal thing.
said, Well, Mr. President, there 18 nothing that
has come into my office that looks potentially as
important as this. He asked me two or three times,
Do you think you can guarantee secrecy? I said,
Yes. (I hope I am right.)
I gave the President the report on Japanese
discrimination against American commeros, which WBS
prepared Jointly by Harry White and the General
Regraded
44
-4-
Counsel's Office. The President said it was very
interesting and that he will use it if necessary.
The President said, "What will Hornbeck do if I use
this?" and my answer was, "He will probably blow up
and explode."
(I overheard the President say that Jimmie's new
duties are to dig up historical scenarios and to
keep his ears close to the ground to find out why
certain stars are unpopular. He also overheard
him say to his son, "How can you do this thing with
a suit pending? What is the difference between a
civil and a criminal suit? All I know is that you
are working for a man who is fighting the United
States Government.")
Regraded Unclassified
10:30 A.M. 10:30
45
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE: December 6, 1938
To
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM M. A. Harris
Mr. Kilby tells me that there will be no report on cash sub-
scriptions before this afternoon but would be glad to get a special
report if you so desire.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York has received 80 far in
the over-night mail subscriptions amounting to $514 million for the
2-3/14 bonds and $300 million for the 1-1/8% notes. These figures
are in addition to those given you by Mr. Kilby late yesterday.
Regraded Unclassified
NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE - December 6, 1938.
ventory-taking period, In certain
Wall Street Comment
steel quarters there is - bill of sp-
prehension that, because of assur-
ance of low prices for products in
January, February and March, con-
Reporting Banks
Frée Riding
sumer commitments may be NO large
The contrasessonal increase of Extenitive precautions were takmduring that period as to "borrow"
$16,000,000 in the reporting New,yestorday by the Treasury and Chefrom activity In succeeding months
York bank loans to commerce, Federal Reserve banks against free when, 11 is hoped, more prontable
dustry and agriculture in the week riding on the new Treasury may be established. The gen-
ended last Wednesday was not large but this feature nevertheless seems view, however. is that profits
enough to offset the $19,000,000 re- to become ever more prominent from are secondary to putting any ob-
suction ID the other reporting cities. quarter-date to quarter-date Appli- stacies in the way of the still strug-
with the result that total commer- (ations from financial nems werogling industrial recovery.
cial loans for the 101 clites declined scrutinized carefully and pruned
€3,000.000. In other times than vigorously in many instances. The International Nickel
these, when term loans are begin- request was made that when-lasued One important consideration to
sing lo get 4. good play with the trading be avoided on the new notes stockholders of International Nickel
banks. the advance that formed the and long bonds, but such trading Co. is the possibility Chat the com-
nulk of the increase in commercial was permitted on the new 2 per cent. pany will remove its stock from TWO-
Joans here would probably have bonds, since the March notes afford Ing on the New York Stock Ex-
shown up under the heading of in- the only access to that tasue. Larger change If the Securities and It.
vestnients. Holdings of direct gav- dealers were niked not to trade in change Commission demands that
crnment securities of the reporting allotments, and this request was ob- 11. disclose salaries and sales flaures
bantri in 101 cities decreased $23,- served where made. Some of the just as domestic corporations are
000.000, but the smallness of the rise smaller outfits enjoyed good business required to do. However, despite Lills
in loans Le brokers and dealers man allotments however, and the ID- quite obvious fact, the company an-
securities left it doubtful whether eldent caused much discontent Houzined yesterday after a meeting
desiers DI government were elocking among larger houses New York in- of the board of directors that the
un heavily in the March notes in tapents were mollified. on the other maiter of the company's position
preparation for the quarter financ- hand. by wire Indications that the under
the
United
States
securities
the Hate n la provible that loans to restrictions on the local market this
exchange act was not dealt with at
brokers and dealers' loans will be time were applied with equal rigidity
the meeting of the board today."
up this week. for the = per cent in all other districts.
Perhaps some purist diclated the
bond which the Treasury IN offer-
statement who interpreted "deatt"
log. obtainable only through N- French Gold
in mean "disposed of because theye
change of the March voice, has à The foreign exchange market is no doubt that the major eub-
special appeal to the banks, and prides Hself on Ha power of sensing lest of was what aution
desters will be anxious to get the disturbing events & long way off to take with regard the company't
Targent possible allotments De- One recent example of Its prog- registration with the 8. & C.
mand deposita adjusted of the nostle claims is to be found in the
weekly reporting panks increased/fact that the foreign eschanges,
$07,000,000, and ED crossed the $16.- prior to the September office in Ell-
000,000.000 level for the first time on rope. were showing anxiety over the
record.
crouse of events on the Continent
for é. long while before lac securities
Treasury Finance
markets became disturbed. The Bn:
combining the Invest-
havior of the foreign exchanges in
ment and speculative features mi- lits present unplessantnes between
Invoice by Federal Issues of seguri- Italy and France is, therefore, all
ties, Secretary Morgenthou yester- the more Interesting. Sterling end
day was while to chelk up another French france have been strong
outstanding success in deficit finan- throughout the demonstrations in
cing and refunding. With crosse Italy for bringing Tunista, Corsico
reserves at record levels 11. was no Savoy and Nice under Italian domi-
great trink to flost the new usues. nation. The Franch fund has active
The requirement was only that the ally gained . fairly aubstantist
terms be 10 adjusted M to attract amount of gold in the last week Il
bank. Insurance company and other will lake a tew weeks of strong
institutional applications in volume franch, however. before is can be
Mr. Morgenthau attended to this said definitely that the Toteign AX-
with his usual splamb, and the mar- change market regards Italy's Dolo-
set did the rest. With & premium of plai ambitions " containing no Im-
1% to 1% points indicated on the minent threat of military sollon
new 2% per cont bonds, that portion
of the dotation WIM in estraordinary Steel Production
demand The new 116 par cent notes The slight drop in the steelmak-
afford a premium of only one point. Ing rate for the third
which means that applications will week merely confirms the opinion
de more limited. The new 2 per cent held by informed observers for some
bonds. available along with either time-that if current prices were at-
ofthe offier new Issues in holders of firmed for the first quarter of 1939
March notes were quoted on & there would be no inducement for
when-issued basin at even figures consumera to buy In advance. re-
with the outstanding notes, or from sulting in A leveling-off of produe-
101 25-32 early in the day to Non molientites through the in-
101 20-32 at the close
Regraded Unclassified
47
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Herman Oliphant
For your information
Mr. Foley held a conference this afternoon in his office to discuss
the Chinese tung oil proposal with representatives of the State Department.
The conference was attended by Messrs. White, Foley, Johnson and
Tietjens for the Treasury and by Messrs. Raymond C. Mackay and Frank X.
Ward for the State Department.
The background of the proposal and some of its details were outlined
for the benefit of the State Department representatives. No objections
were developed at this conference which we had not considered when the
objections of these officials of the State Department were first called to
ARE NOT
our attention. They were well taken. Nevertheless, Mr. Ward was of the
opinion that the proposal could reasonably be objected to, under Article IV
of the Treaty of 1844 between China and the United States, by powers
entitled to most favored nation treatment by China, inasmuch as, in the
absence of contrary evidence, it appears that the proposal would result
in an exclusive agency being established by the Chinese Government which
would have a virtual monopoly of the tung oil exports from China.
Methods of obviating this objection were discussed. It was aug-
gested that the difficulty might be overcome if the contract to be
entered into between the Chinese Government and the trading corporation
Regraded Unclassified.
48
-2-
would provide for the purchase of, say, 70 per cent of the tung oil
produced in China rather than for the preferential sale of a stipulated
amount of oil which might result in a corner on the available supply.
It was also suggested that none of the powers who might object to the
arrangement would be in a position to object if the Chinese first offer
to sell tung oil to such powers upon the same terms as are being offered
to the United States.
At the conclusion of the conference, Messrs. Mackay and Ward stated
that they were not yet in a position to make any definite suggestions,
but that the information they now had would afford a basis for further
discussion of the proposal in the State Department.
MO
Regraded Unclassified
49
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM SENT
TO: American Legation, Bern, Switzerland
DATE: December 6, 1938, 1 p.m.
NO.: 62
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL.
Reference is made to No. 41 of August 30, 6 p.m.,
from the Department.
You are requested to see Mr. Royal Tyler, and
say that Secretary Morgenthau would appreciate it if he
would in the near future undertake a trip around Italy
similar to the one he made around Germany early in
September. On his return the Secretary of the Treasury
requests that he submit a cipher telegram through the
Bern Legation outlining his appraisal of economic and
financial conditions in Italy. Mr. Tyler would receive
from the Treasury compensation on the same basis 8.8
previously. Authorization is of course given to Mr.
Tyler to inform Loveday in strict confidence of the
purpose of his visit.
WELLES
Acting.
Note: See reply filed under date of 1/24/39
EA:LWW
Regraded Unclassified
50
OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONE TO
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON, D.C.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
January 25, 1939.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
I enclose herewith one copy of paraphrase of
a telegram sent at your request on December 6 to
the American Legation at Bern asking Mr. Royal Tyler
to take a trip around Italy, and a copy of paraphrase
of telegram of January 24 from Bern transmitting
Mr. Tyler's report.
Sincerely yours,
Rerbert Fas
Herbert Feis,
Adviser on International
Economic Affairs.
Enclosures:
No. 62 of December 6
to Bern.
No. 7 of January 24
from Bern.
The Honorable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Regraded Unclassified
51
CORRECTION
JR
DECEMBER 6, 1938
In telegram #1395, DECEMBER 5, 6 p.m., from
London "For Treasury", last figure in first line should
read "4.68-1/8". DELETE "(*)" there and also at
End of message.
DIVISION OF COMMUNICATIONS AND RECORDS
Regraded Unclassified
52
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Paris, France
DATE: December 6, 1938, 5 p.m.
M
NO.: 2060
FOR THE TREASURY.
Today the exchange and security markets were encouraged
by good reports from most part of France on the labor sit-
uation, as well as by the conciliatory tone of the resolu-
tion which the general Confederation of Labor adopted
yesterday to the effect that the Confederation was prepared
to take part in any discussion which was likely to put an
end to present difficulties.
Financial circles on the other hand are awaiting with
interest but with no apparent misgiving the outcome of
decisions which will probably be reached tomorrow on the
question of what part of the agenda is to be taken up first
when the Chamber meets on December 8. Parties of the
Extreme Left insist that the 1939 budget be taken up first;
they apparently hope that in this way they can place the
Government in a difficult position on the decree laws,
which would necessarily be linked with any discussion of
the 1939 budget. If the elotoral reform law is taken up
first, and is voted before the decree laws are discussed,
deputies who may otherwise be willing to risk unpopularity
with their electors might be willing to give the Government
their support regarding these laws.
The demand for the franc continued on an important
scale in a quiet market, although it is our understanding
Regraded Unclassified
53
- 2 -
that a slight nervousness was apparent on the market re-
garding the possible effect of the Italian incident on
the international political situation.
It was again possible for the fund to obtain a large
amount of sterling; at the opening it offered france at
177.56 and gradually reduced the peg to .40, which is the
rate at present. No premium was asked for one month
sterling today. 45 centimes is the rate for three month
sterling. Today the dollar was a. little stronger than it
was yesterday. There was pressure on the belga again today
due, it seems, to an opinion that sooner or later the
Belgian authorities will be obliged to link the belga with
sterling.
On the security market there was a firm undertone
and an improvement in rentes and French variable revenue
securities.
There has been another reduction in the rate of in-
terest on 75 to 105 day ordinary treasury bonds, the present
rate being 1.75 percent (in yesterday's telegram I reported
a rate of a percent).
END MESSAGE.
WILSON.
EA:LWW
54
PARTIAL PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embasey, London, England
DATE: December 6, 1938, 6 p.m.
NO.: 1400
M
FOR TREASURY.
One. Dollars opened offered at 4.70 the British fund
buying dollars heavily until fixing when such rate was
4.69 7/8. 175 bare were sold at 148 shillings 1 penny
giving a two pence premium. The British fund bought 75
of the bare sold and when this became known the rate went
to 4.69 and later 4.68 3/4 with the British authorities
selling some dollars at those levels. This afternoon the
dollar has remained offered around 4.69 1/4, on a narrow
market.
It is the belief of an exchange market source that
after the fixing further small amounts of gold were bought
by the British fund.
The one month forward dollar was steady around 13/16
premium and the three months which opened at 1 7/8 later
went to 2-3/16.
The Bank of France bought sterling heavily starting
at 177.82 and moving to .56 at fixing time. Later the
French authorities sold some sterling but the franc was
again bid and the Bank of France has continued sterling
purchases closing at 177.42. The one month forward frano
went to a premium of 1/32 frano but the three months
remains
Regraded Unclassified
55
- 2 -
remains around 3-1/4 discount.
Two. Sales by French holders of gilt edged and Kaffir
stocks further depressed prices, war loan 3-1/2 per cent
being down 1/4 to 98-7/16.
Three. The Chancellor of the Exchequer announced in
Parliament today a temporary increase in the fiduciary note
issue of 30,000,000 pounds to 230,000,000 pounds.
END MESSAGE.
KENNEDY.
EA:LWW
Regraded Unclassified
14(s)
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW vons
16
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE December 7, 1938.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
L. B. Knoke
BANK OF ENGLAND.
I called Mr. Bolton at 11:15 s.m. They were having a
rather uncomfortable time, he said, sterling being under some pressure
in two wayst (1) the continued repatriation of French money from the
London market, and (2) a renewed French bullishness on the dollar and
resulting transfers from London to New York. Generally speaking re-
patriation of capital to France continued end there was noticeable a
considerable increase in confidence on the part of Paris. Daladier
would most probably have a considerable favorable vote tomorrow when
the Chamber meets. At the moment there was & mild reaction from this
morning's firmness of the franc so that Cariguel just now had to support
the franc but on balance he hed gained about £2,000,000 for the day.
The bulk of the London exchange operations, Bolton continued, came from
Peris rather than anywhere else.
With reference to the gold coins and gold chips recently
shipped to us, of which he had advised me 8 few days ago, Bolton re-
quested that we melt them down on arrivel and set the gold eside for
him. He would let us know in due course in which account.
I asked a number of questions:
(1) The premium on forward gold?
This, Bolton said, was unchanged, that is,
about 1 5/4d per month.
(2) What was the arrangement under which gold
purchased in London could now be surmarked in South Africa?
There was no particular arrangement, he
Regraded Unclassified
S7
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE December 7, 1988.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT:
TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
R
FROM L. ", Knoke
BANK OF ENGLAND.
2
replied. South Africa would take gold in London and
give the same amount in South Africa at a flat price
but make a charge of 1 per mil for earnarking. No
adjustment would be made in the price, that is, no
allowance for the cost of shipping the gold between
South Africa and London.
(8) Was it correct, as stated to me here in
the market this morning, that the dollar bull position
in London was by now mostly liquidated?
"Not anywhere near right," Bolton replied.
LWK:KW
Regraded Unclassified
58
RED
GRAY
London
Dated December 7, 1938
Rec'd 2:35 P. m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
AA
1406, December 7, 6 P. m.
FOR TREASURY.
The dollar opened at 4.68-13/16 offered and the
British authorities sold dollars holding this position
until the fixing when 264 bars were sold, 60 being
supplied by the British fund. The price at 148 shillings
5 pence gave a premium of 2 pence. Since the fixing the
dollar has remained around 4.68-5/8 on a narrow market
with the British authorities apparently not operating.
The Bank of France bought a large amount of sterling
this morning at 177.41 and .37 but this afternoon the
franc was offered and the Bank of France sold a small
amount of sterling at 177.42 the rate going in the late
afternoon to 177.50.
The balga was heavily bid until the late afternoon
with the three months forward discount moving from 35 to
13 but on rumors of the possible resignation of the Belgian
cabinet the forward discount rose to 20 and the spot rate
also moved from 27.77 to 27.85.
KENNEDY
DDM
RGC
Regraded Unclassified
S9
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Paris, France
DATE: December 7, 1938, 4 p.m.
HA
NO.: 2069
FOR THE TREASURY.
This morning the upward franc movement continued
with further important capital repatriation. However, this
afternoon the tendency changed due it seems to short
covering, to some hesitation and caution just before the
day Parliament reassembles, and to continued nervousness
regarding the claims against France on the part of Italy.
This morning at opening the fund entered the market
offering france at 177.41. It gradually permitted the
rate to drop to 177.35, when the buying movement ceased.
Our market contact tells us that after obtaining about
two million pounds the fund, in order to maintain around
.42, had to turn buyer of francs and our contact estimated
that the fund had probably paid out Bo far about one-half
of the sterling which was acquired today. The spot rate
for sterling strengthened, but the forward rate is about
the same as it was yesterday.
In today's trading the belga showed slight improvement.
END SECTION ONE.
WILSON.
Regraded Unclassified
CO
SECTION TWO.
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM NO. 2069, DECEMBER 7, 1938, FROM PARIS
At opening the security market showed a good undertone.
However, moderate gaine in early trading have been practically
wiped out since then.
The rate of interest on six months ordinary treasury
bonds has been reduced to 2.50 percent; it was 2.75 formerly.
For the first ten months of 1938 the monthly adverse trade
balance averaged 1,360,000,000 francs. For November the
deficit is 812,000,000 francs, as compared with
1,552,000,000 for November of 1937. An increase in exports
is responsible for the most part for the improvement.
A report in AGENCE ECONOMIQUE declares that in official
quarters yesterday it was stated that Von Ribbentrop and
Bonnet discussed at some length yesterday afternoon the
subject of trade development between France and Germany.
It was said that the German Foreign Minister had let it be
understood that Germany would be glad to "soften" its autarchic
system to some extent and that under appropriate conditions,
and notably in the Balkans and Eastern Europe, the Reich would
be prepared to collaborate with France.
END MESSAGE.
WILSON.
EA:LWW
Regraded Unclassified
61
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Berlin, Germany
DATE: December 7, 1938, 11 a.m.
NO.: 699
M
No. 36. FOR TREASURY FROM HEATH.
Yesterday I learned that Schaoht had gone to London
to talk with Montagu Norman; this is being kept secret
here in Berlin, and I could not get any explanation of
its purpose. Schacht said a few days ago that he hoped
he would have an early opportunity to talk with Norman,
since he had not seen him for several months.
GILBERT.
EA:LWW
Regraded
62
REB
GRAY
London
Dated December 8, 1938
Rec'd 2:35 P. m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
1413, December 8, 6 p. m.
FOR TREASURY.
The dollar opened bid at 4.77-3/B and after touching
66-7/8 was 67-1/8 at the fixing when 178 bars WETE sold,
93 being married and 85 supplied by the British fund.
The price was 148 shillings 11 pence and the premium 1-1/2
penny, so that all purchases were for hoarding. The British
fund sold small amounts of dollars from time to time but
the market was relatively quist.
The Bank of France operated both ways, gaining on
balance a fair amount of starling.
KENNEDY
CSB
Regraded Unclassified
C3
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE DEC 7 - 1938
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Oliphant
As you know, the newly-mined domestic silver Proclamation of December
21, 1933, as modified, is due to expire on December 31, 1938. Unless
such proclamation is extended, beginning January 1, 1939 only silver
mined prior thereto will be acquired by the Treasury under such proclama-
tion.
The principal authority relied upon for such proclamation, as modi-
fied, is to be found in the provision authorizing the unlimited coinage
of silver, contained in a paragraph of the "Thomas Amendment" of May 12,
1933, as amended, which paragraph also contains provisions giving the
President power to fix the gold content of the dollar. These powers
expire on June 30, 1939. Accordingly, if the proclamation is to be ex-
tended under this statute, the terminal date should be fixed not lator
than June 30, 1939. Moreover, it would appear that any such extension
should make June 30, 1939 the final date for any deliveries under much
proclamation, even if the silver be mined prior to that date.
Section 3 of the Silver Purchase Act of 1934 provides as follows:
"Sec. 3. Whenever and so long as the proportion of oil-
ver in the stocks of gold and silver of the United States is
less then one-fourth of the monetary value of such stocks, the
Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and directed to pur-
chase silver, at home or abroad, for present or future delivery
with any direct obligations, coin, or currency of the United
States, authorized by law, or with any funds in the Treasury
not otherwise appropriated, at such rates, at such times, and
upon such terms and conditions as he may deem reasonable and
most advantageous to the public interest: Provided, That no
purchase of silver shall be made hereunder at & price in ex-
cass of the monetary value thereof: And provided further,
That no purchases of silver situated in the continental United
States on May 1, 1934, shall be made hereunder at & price in
excess of 50 cents a fine ounce."
The Secretary of the Treasury would have the legal authority under
this section of the Silver Purchase Act to acquire newly-zined domestic
silver at a. price in excess of the market price for foreign silver if
he deemed the same reasonable and most advantageous to the public interest.
Herman Olipharly
Regraded Unclassified
01
December 7, 1938
This morning the Secretary called Mise Le Hand
and told her that he had broken his toe and asked her
whether the President had an extra cane which he might
borrow for a couple of weeks.
At twelve o'clock the President called HM,Jr
and the following is a record of their conversation:
The President: What are you kicking about?
HM,Jr: I am kicking the furniture about.
The President: Did you really lose your temper?
Whom did you miss?
HM,Jr: I was Just walking bare-footed across
the room and ran into a piece of furniture.
The President: Is it your big toe?
HM,Jr: No, it's my little toe. I borrowed
one of your big canes.
The President: Yes, I know you did. I picked
it out myself for you and made sure it would be B. com-
fortable one.
HM,Jr: oh, thank you very much!
The President: How long before you will be
all right?
HM,Jr: Oh, it will take three weeks.
The President: Well, can't you have 8. special
shoe made or one with the toe out out?
HM,Jr: Well, I am wearing a moccasin now.
The President: You can't come to the Diplo-
matic dinner and reception in a moccasin!
HM,Jr: Well, I promise to have it all healed
by the time the King arrives.
The President: Mac says you had better have
Regraded Unclassified
C5
-2-
it
amputated. It will only take a week to heal.
HM,Jr: Oh, tell him to go to hell! oh, is
it Admiral MoIntire or Colonel MacIntyre?
The President: It's Colonel MacIntyre. If
it were the Admiral he would probably come over and
amputate it himself!
HM,Jr: Oh! Thank you very much for calling
me.
The President: I Just cleaned up Danny Bell.
HM,Jr: Is there anything left of him?
I will be ready for you Monday afternoon with
all the charts in the world. (The Ruml plan.)
The President: The Army budget without extras
for the new National defense is only $5,000,000 more
than last year. We cut them $25,000,000.
000-000
(The Secretary's comment to HSK: You know,
I am just & baby about it. Part of the reason I
sent for the cane was because I wanted the President
to know that I had broken my toe.)
Regraded Unclassified
CS
December 7, 1938
Mr. Oliphant told the Secretary today that
this is what he gave Alsop in an interview yester-
day.
Regraded Unclassified
December 7, 1938
C7
MORGENTHAU THE INNOVATOR
Tripartite Arrengement with England, France, Belgium, Switzerland, and
The Netherlands.
Stabilization Fund.
Foreign Monetary Agreements:
Mexico and Canada - silver.
China and Brazil (involving gold also).
Mexico and China - Foreign Exchange.
[evelustion of the Dollar and Maintenance of its Stability.
Coordination of Treasury Law Enforcement Activities.
Fervice Schools for Enforcement Agents, Including Arms Practice.
[fficioncy Studies of Various Bureaus by Treasury Administrative Staff,
Coordination of Public Relations Policies.
[ivision of Laboratories for Entire Treesury.
Special Physical Laboratory for Currency Studies.
Furnishing of Psychiatric Diagnostic Services to Federal Courts.
Intrance of Vessels by Radio if no Disease is Aboard.
Internal Revenue Decentralization Plan.
Procurement Made General Purchasing Center for Government.
Cristion of Architectural Advisory Committee, Coordination and Control
of Building Design.
Treasury Art Project.
Identical Bids, Monopolies (tires, cement, etc.).
Meorganization of Research and Statistics.
Tetablishment of General Counsel's Office and Abolition of Solicitor.
New Section in Revenue - Reorganization, Receivership and Bankruptcy.
lichmond Self-Help Plan.
Statement on Prices.
United States Savings (Baby) Bonds.
Regraded Unclassified
88
December 7, 1938
Sumner Welles called at 11 o'clock. He
raised the question was there any legal doubt 8.8
to the tung oil being in conflict with the nine-
power pact of 1922. I told him there was none.
He said that he 18 ready to go shead with
it for one reason. Notwithstanding the fact
that Mr. Hull has cabled that he is opposed to.
it, inasmuch as the President has given his word
to General Chiang Kai-Shek, the consequence of
the President's breaking his word 1s far much more
important than anything else, 80 that he, Welles,
is for it.
And the second thing he told me was that
tomorrow, at Brussels, an inter-Governmental com-
mittee on refugees 18 meeting secretly with the
Germans. He said he understood that the Presi-
dent approvedthe memorandum on German counter-
vailing duties. I told him the first I knew
about it was last night I learned, from a memor-
andum which Oliphant sent me, that the Department
of Justice had this and were asking for additonal
information. Welles said, "For Heaven's sake,
don't do anything before tomorrow because it
would just kill this meeting." I promised I
would not do anything until I talked it over with
him again.
Regraded Unclassified
C9
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE December 7, 1938
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Haas DA
Subject: Estimate of national income for 1939.
National income payments for the current year 1938
are expected by the Department of Commerce to total about
64 to 65 billion dollars. In estimating what they may be
in 1939, It 18 necessary to assume certain levels of busi-
ness activity and commodity prices. Business expectations
for 1939 currently held by the Federal Reserve Board's
research staff center around an average FRB index of 106
in that year, which seems to us a reasonable figure for use
in estimating national income. The commodity price trend
in 1939 will be 80 much effected by political developments
abroad that prediction is very difficult. The trend of the
BLS index of commodity prices continues gradually downward,
and has 86 yet shown no signe of beginning en upturn. Cur-
rently the BLS index 18 around 77-3. A rise to an average
of 80 in 1939, while not 8 forecast, may be taken 88 8
basie for estimating national income.
Assuming an FRB index of 106 and 8 BLS price index of
50 in 1939, we expect the national income to show no sub-
stential increase over this year's figure, probably not
exceeding the current estimate of 64 to 65 billions by more
than one billion dollars.
An important reason for expecting a relatively small
change lies in the fact that national income payments do not
respond immediately to changes in industrial production, but
the various components of the national income lag to 8 greater
or less extent behind production. Employment and dividends,
for example, may not respond for 8. number of months after
business has turned upward. Owing to these and other lage,
the national income in 1938 was held relatively high by the
high level of business in 1937. Similarly, the national
income in 1939 will be affected to an important degree by
the low level of business in 1938.
70
Secretary Morgenthau - 2
The downward trend of commodity prices 16 a second
importent reason for being conservative in our estimate of
national income for 1939. Commodity prices have not
responded in a normal way to improved industrial demand,
owing to unfavorable conditions abroad. This will strongly
affect agricultural incomes, and will also be reflected in
corporation dividends and in other components of the national
income.
In 1937, the estimated national income of 69 billions
WAB associated with an average FRB index of 110 in that year
and 105 in the previous year, and with a BLS price index
averaging 86.3. The national income in 1939 will be asso-
ciated with an index of 106 (assumed) in that year and 86
in the previous year, and with an assumed BLS price index
of 80. It seeme apparent from such a comparison that the
national income in 1939 cannot be expected to approximate
that of 1937.
It should be kept in mind that the published figures
on national income are no more than estimates, subject to
frequent revision, and that they are based in part on
estimates rather than factual data.
Regraded Unclassified
71
December 7, 1938.
2:40 p.m.
Operator: Go ahead.
HMJr:
Hello,
Mariner
Eccles:
Oh, hello.
HMJr:
Mariner?
E:
Yes, Henry.
HMJr:
I don't know what -- if you've got something, when you're
through I want to give you some information.
E:
Oh, well, what it was -- was, I was going to call you at
about twelve o'clock -- 8. little after twelve, and you
were out, and then I went out. Maybe - I Just wanted
to tell you the way we were going to convert.
HMJr:
Well, nobody has told me.
E:
Well, now we decided thirty million of the notes; thirty-
five million of the nine year two percent bonds -
HMJr:
Thirty-five million of the nine.
E:
Of the two percent.
HMJr:
Yes.
E:
And eighteen million of the two and three-quarters.
HMJr:
I see.
E:
It was a sort of a compromise.
HMJr:
Uh-huh.
E:
Some of them didn't think they should take any bonds --
That 18, the long bonds.
HMJr:
Yes.
E:
And some thought they ought to take more -- I mean, you
know, there W&B Just a discussion -- and 80 this was sort
of a --
HMJr:
Compromise.
E:
Yes. The question wes pretty largely whether we should
Regraded Unclassified
72
- 2 -
take forty of the notes instead of thirty; or whether we
should take twenty or forty of the middle bonds; or
whether we should take none of the long bonds; or whether
we should go up to thirty of the long bonds.
HMJr:
I see.
E:
So it 1s thirty thirty-five and eighteen. It really
doesn't make very much difference, I don't think, but
it does put us in a position here to either increase the
long if necessary or to have possibly some to sell.
HMJr:
Right. Well thank you for telling me. Now this ie what
I would like to inform you -- the President 18 going to
see this Fiscal and Monetary Committee most likely at
two O'clock on Monday.
is
On Monday?
HMJr:
Yes.
E:
Uh-huh.
HMJr:
And on this thing that they brought in that I call the
Ruml plan -- Ruml doesn't like it, but I thought for lack
of a better name we'd call it the Ruml plan.
E:
Yes.
HMJr:
I thought it would be good to have a dress rehearsal
Monday morning.
E:
Well, I think it is absolutely essential to have one.
HMJr:
So shall we say 10:30 Monday morning?
E:
That would suit me fine.
HMJr:
Right.
E:
Is it certain that it 18 at two -- -- that's tentative now,
isn't it?
HMJr:
Well, the President told me, but he would see us
for two hours.
E:
Well, Monday morning would suit me at 10 o'clock.
HMJr:
10:30.
E:
10:30.
Regraded Unclassified
73
- 3 -
HMJr:
And with the President at two.
5:
Yes.
HMJr:
I've asked for two hours.
E:
Yes.
HMJr:
Maybe I will get an hour.
E:
Well, I tell you, an hour isn't enough.
HMJr:
I've asked for two and told him it wasn't any use to
have less.
E:
It wouldn't do him any good to go into this thing at all
unless he is going to give enough time to understand it.
HMJr:
No, I've asked him for two hours.
E:
Ie Ruml -- can Ruml come down?
HMJr:
Well, I'm going to get word to him.
E:
Um-hm.
HMJr:
I'm going to get word to him
E:
Well, that's fine -- I'll, I'll try to get -- I'm glad
you notified me this far in advance. It will give me a
little time to do some thinking.
HMJr:
Well, I let you know just as soon as -- well, I knew
yesterday afternoon.
E:
Yes, well that's fine. Thanks.
HMJr:
Thank you.
E:
Alright, good bye.
Regraded Unclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
74
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
December 7, 1938
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Herman Oliphant
For your information
AAA
Bullitt came to my office at 4:30 today. I stated briefly
the scholastic record of William Welles Robbins and said that it
was far below the standard ordinarily applied in choosing men for
the Treasury Legal Staff. He said that entirely satisfied him,
and I did not need to say any more.
Joy
Regraded Unclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
75
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
December 7, 1938
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Herman Oliphant
For your information
Bob Kintner called me at 4:35 today and it turned out that
Alsop was also on the line. He said that Hanes had told him that I had
said to Hanes that someone had told me that Hanes had given the story
to Bob Kintner about his handling taxes to the exclusion of myself. Bob
said he just wanted to say that he had not got the story from him (Hanes),
but that Alsop got it from me when I told Alsop that he wanted to see
Hanes, not me, at the time he came in and wanted to talk to me about
taxes. Bob then asked me who gave me this report and I declined to say.
When Alsop broke into the conversation, it became bilarious,
and I asked him what the technique was for making the New York Times with
his column. He said, "The prescription was simple-all I have to do is
to either mention one of Sulzberger's favorite New York Jewish friends,
who are also my closest friends, or merely hint that Sulsberger's taxes
might be reduced."
for
Regraded Unclassified
76
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE DEC 7 1938
TO Secretary Morgenthau
FROM Mr. Oliphant
To get your instruction
Another conference was held this afternoon in my office with
Messrs. Hamilton and Ward of the State Department on the Chinese
tung oil proposal.
We made a suggestion to meet what I understood was the objec-
tion raised by the State Department. The suggestion was that any
arrangement entered into would provide: (1) that the amount of tung
oil promised for American consumption would bear the same propor-
tion to the presently available supply as the amount purchased for
such consumption in 1937 bore to the amount produced in that year,
and (2) that the period of the contract be extended to five years
in order to lessen the maximum amount of oil undertaken to be
delivered in any one year. The representatives from the State
Department indicated that this would remove all objections which
they had made under the Nine Power Treaty.
It developed, however, that they had a further objection
directed to the Treaty of 1844. In order to overcome this objec-
tion, it appears that it would be necessary to remove the Chinese
Government entirely from the picture.
to
Regraded Unclassified
Rangoon. weekly cable
raithead 77
THE UNDER WASHINGTON SECRETARY OF STATE Haipong.
December 8, 1938.
EI. Bank.
Dear Henry:
I am giving you for your personal and
confidential information a copy of an aide
memoire left with me this morning by the
British Chargé d'Affaires.
Some time ago there commenced an off
the record and unofficial exchange of views
between this Government and the British Govern-
ment with regard to the possibility that both
Governments give consideration to retaliatory
measures of a commercial or financial character
that might be taken in view of the discrimina-
tion shown by the Japanese Government against
United States and British commercial and
financial interests in the Far East. This
aide mémoire, as you will see, deals with
this question.
Will you let me have the benefit of your
views with regard to the specific suggestion
made in this communication from the British
Government. What I would like, of course,
particularly to know is whether this Govern-
ment could take such a step as that proposed
by the British Government without specific
authorization from the Congress of the United
The Honorable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
States.
Believe me
L Kills
78
COPY
AIDE MEMOIRE
CONFIDENTIAL
Sir A. Cadogan informed the United States
Charge d'Affaires in London on December 3rd that to
their regret His Majesty's Government were still not
quite ready to furnish considered views in regard to
possible punitive measures of retaliation or pressure
on Japan. It had, however, occurred to them, he said,
that third party interests in China might derive a
certain measure of protection and benefit if, quite
apart from economic and financial reprisals, steps
were taken to support the Chinese currency. The Chinese
Government had in fact recently requested that British
banks should make a contribution of at least $3,000,000
sterling to a currency stabilization fund, an equal amount
being put up by Chinese banks. A small committee of
Chinese and British bankers would control policy and
the operation of it through the two British banks 1.e.
the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank and the Chartered Bank
of India, Australia and China. The Chinese Government
intimated unofficially at the same time that if foreign
support could be increased to five or ten million pounds,
the margin of safety would make the Chinese dollar 1m-
pregnable over a long period.
Unclassified
79
-2-
The United States Charge d'Affaires was informed
that His Majesty's Government were in fact considering
a proposal to introduce legislation to guarantee a con-
tribution of $3,000,000 by the Hong Kong and Shanghai
Banking Corporation to the projected fund. Appropriate
arrangements would of course be made to try to ensure that
the fund if set up would be utilised solely for the pur-
poses for which it was said to be necessary.
So far His Majesty's Government have reached no con-
clusion in the matter but their decision on the question of
B. contribution to a currency stabilisation loan would be
greatly influenced by the knowledge that the United States
Government were willing to take parallel and simultaneous
action.
BRITISH EMBASSY
WASHINGTON, D.C.
December 7th, 1938
Regraded Unclassifie
loand to foley 12/29
returned my doley 12/20 80
81
December 8, 1038.
MEMORANDUM
TO:
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM: Mr. Gaston
SUBJECT: Memorandum of November 23rd to the President from Chairman
Ecoles.
The general subject considered in the memorandum is the do-
sirability of banking legislation and Chairman Booles' personal
viows with respect to the nature of the legislation which seems to
him desirable.
I. TIMING OF LEGISLATION - Chairman Eccles thinks there
should be legislation at this seasion of Congress.
II. PROCEDURE - Chairman Eccles does not think it desirable
that Federal agencies should agree upon BL program of legislation to
be presented to the Congress. Instead he would have the President
make brief reference in his annual massage to "the need for further
constructive banking legislation. leaving it to Congress to conduct
a disinterested inquiry and work out the legislation. Ho suggests
that the Board of Governors in its annual report "make a reasonably
complete statement of the existing conditions and express willingness
to appear before Congress, if called, to advise upon appropriate
legislation."
III. FORM OF LEGISLATION -
(a) Merger of Federal banking supervisory agencies to
avoid conflicting jurisdiction. If called upon to testify Chairman
Eceles would suggest that the Chairman of the F.D.I.C. be appointed
to the existing vacancy on the Federal Reserve Board and that the
Chairman of the Board of Governors be put on the F.D.I.C. to fill
a vacancy that would be created by eliminating the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency. The Secretary of the Treasury would
appoint the third member of the F.D.I.C. Board. The reorganised
F.D.I.C. would take over all bank supervisory functions, leaving
regulatory functions in the Federal Reserve Board. It is further
suggested that the new F.D.I.C. be physically housed in the Federal
Reservo building or in adjacent quarters. "This joint housing would
in turn eliminate duplication of statistical and other functions."
82
2
(b) All insured banks should be blanketed into the
Federal Reserve System.
(o) The Federal Reserve System should be "freed from
private banker influence.' To accomplish this bankers should be
removed from the directorates of the Federal Reserve Banks, leaving
three representatives of commerce, agriculture and industry to be
elected by the banks; three others to be appointed, 68 now, by the
Board of Governors and the seventh to be chosen from or by State
bank supervisory authorities. The System would buy the stock in
the Vederal Reserve Banks now hold by the banks and after accumula-
tion of EL sufficient surplus all earnings would 80 into the Treasury
D.B a franchise tax.
(d) Federal Reserve Syotom should have more power,
specifically (1) Increased power to deal with foreign balances,
particularly those of foreign governments and foreign central banks."
(2) The System "should have restored to it the power to buy Treasury
bills directly from the Treasury BE can be done by every other central
bank in the world."
(e) It is also highly desirable to discontinue purchases
of silver which likewise further increase the excess reserves of the
banking system. "That the silver policy is not even politically
justifiable is indicated by the attached resolutions of the American
Mining Congross."
IV. REASONS AND OBJECTIVES -
(a) "Our banking system remains fundamentally unsound.
Responsibilities and authority are scattered among various agencies;
thore is much overlapping, duplication, conflicting jurisdiction;
...
offorts of the Treasury and of the Reserve System to carry out that
(easy money) policy tend to be frustrated because some of the agencies
pursue contrary practices or policies;
#
there are 'nunerous para-
lyzing discriminations" as between different classes of banks;
-
enforcement of sound banking standards and the Government's ability
to carry out national policy in the public interest become 3. mookery
when banks may at will escape supervision by the Federal authorities.
This makes for the competition in laxity which has long been n. blot
on the American banking system."
(b) Powers of the Federal Reserve System to cope with
extraordinary credit developments such n.s. "the fortuitous inflows
of foreign capital and gold" are wholly inadequato "and the Reserve
System in placed in the untenable position of having a tremendous
responsibility which it is incapable of discharging because of lack
of adequate powers and divided and conflicting banking authorities
scattered among Federal and State jurisdictions."
83
- 3 -
(e) The present system leads to disputes over authority
and "recults in the frustration of monetary and credit policies by
actions of supervisory agencies." Example - last spring's coordi-
nation of bank examination policy can not be applied in a sympathetic
and understanding way because of "wide differences of interpretation
and application." The effoct of the easy money policy of the Admin-
istration "and the Reserve authorities" is largely nullified "when
bank examiners following outworn methods entirely unrelated to
monetary policy, criticize the banks for making the kind of loans
which are required by the communities in which they operate."
(d) The Chairman would regard himself 6.6 remise in his
obligation to the President if he were "to let the impression stand
that I felt that the banking situation WBS safe, and that no steps
needed to be taken to safeguard it against the dangers ahead."
V. COMMENT (By H.E.G.) ON ECCLES RECOMMENDATIONS -
(a) Throw the fight into Congress. I could think of
few things that could do more harn to the Administration than this,
which calls for the airing of intra-administration squabbles and
unwillingness by Chairman Ecoles to submit himself to the regularly
established channel for colation and appraisal of suggestions for
banking legislation. It seoms to me it would be a clear abdication
of the President's responsibility. The only merit I can see to
this suggestion is that there might be some sense in consulting a
few responsible leaders of both parties on the Hill after some
reasonable degree of understanding had been reached among the various
agencies concerned.
(b) Extension of the Federal Reserve's power. Rocles
proposes that the Federal Reserve Board shall have two out of three
places on the F.D.I.C., which is to be responsible for all bank
supervision and that the F.D.I.C. should be, to all practical effect,
nade an agency of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Sys-
tem. The mero proposal is not to me 80 objectionable 6.5 the stated
purpose for which it is to be done, which is to use the examining
power 8.8 a control mechanism for relaxing and tightening credit. I
don't think it is true that "our banking system remains fundamentally
unsound" or that there is "a competition in laxity," or that other
banking agencies are frustrating the policies of the Administration;
or that there are "paralyting discriminations" B.S between banks.
The domination over the entire monetary and credit system of the
country which Chairman Ecoles seeks would, it seems to me, be far
more perilous than any of the defects, or a combination of all the
defects, of the present system. I doubt that the Congress would
want to place in the hands of a. continuing board such autocratic
powers over the economic life of the nation or that any President
would dare to recommend it.
Regraded Unclassified
SUBMITY of essorandum to the President
1. Banking situation, dealt with 00 emergency basis, needs to be put 00
permanent basis before ending bank holiday.
1. Banking system should be integral part of Government mechanism to met
domestic or internationally created esergencies.
S. Government lacks power to cope with foreign capital; gold inflee of 7
billions in last 5 years; multiplication of Federal agencies) conflicting
jurisdictions; discriminations against sember banks; competition in laxity
inevitable when banks can at will escape supervision; Government cannot
make policy effective; easy money policy frustrated by contrary examination-
investment policies.
4. Need for slimplification greater than ever due to increase in Federal agencies;
precedents in Farm Credit Administration; Home Loan Bank Board. Chart.
5. Inadequate power to absorb impact of foreign capital, except as Treasury
storilized; unpopular; would increase interest rates, add to public debt.
6. Stop silver purchases; Mining Congress resolutions.
7. Bank aramination and investment policy contrary to easy money policy; upon-
sent of last spring requires sympathetic administration; these policies
must be closely integrated with monetary policy.
8.
Action needed at this session; grave risk to let situation go until after
1940; give opposition issue.
9. Procedure; President's message; Reserve Board should report facts) this
approach preferable to attempt to get agreement of Faderal agencies;
Congress jealous of prerogatives; prearranged Administration bill eight
provoke partisen attack; better to put responsibility up to Congress which
will be to blass if it fails to act; Administration would get credit for
legislation if Congress acts.
10. Form of legislation; transfer Comptroller's and Reserve examining functions
to FDIC, interlock FDIC and Reserve Board, giving former supervisory and
latter regulatory powers; cover all insured banks into Reserve System,
abolishing membership as such but requiring insured banks to carry reserves
with Reserve banks, exempting from insurance assessments; take bankers off
Reserve bank boards; abolish stock, letting System build up capital out of
earnings, surplus to be paid annually into Treasury.
11. Would also recommend pover to doal with foreign government or central bank
balances) restoration of power to buy Treasury bills directly from Treasury.
12. Important thing is to solve problems; if better may available than foregoing,
ready to accept; would not wish to & contrary to President's vishos, but
would like moral support.
15. Retantion of Reserve Bystem probable; adequate facilities, staff, personnal
Board named by President) have responsibility without power) untersible position.
14. Chairman's obligation to miss facts mose to President; question of reappoint-
nexts failure to report situation to Congress would imply ignorance w fear
$ do é
Regraded Unclassified
85
Regraded Unclassified
November 25, 1938.
TO
- The President
FROM - Chairman Ecoles
Need for banking legislation
In March, 1935, you declared 6. National Reergency.
It should be terminated before your tarn expires. Yet it wa-
not be safely terminated until a banking system has been
created which can withstand the impact of changing economic
conditions, and a coordination of Federal banking supervision
has been established that will be capable of exerting its in-
fluence towards the control of an inflation or towards quahion-
ing a deflation when either of these conditions becomes danger-
ous to the national economy.
The Administration's courageous and effective actions
in dealing with the most acute banking collapse in history have
svoked universal commendation. The restoration of confidence
in the banks and the subsequent recovery, however, have tended
to observe the feet that our banking system remains fundamental-
Ly unsound, It has been dealt with on an energency basis. It
nesde now to be dealt with on & breader, HOPO permanel basis
86
- 2 -
of resenstruction so that it can function effectively at a
integral part of the Government's mechanisms for coping not
only with potential future emergencies of inflation w de-
flation but also with an emergency that night be created by
the international situation. The effective organization of
the banking system is a basic and essential part of any -
prohensive program of preparedness.
The system is net now so organized. Responsibilities
and authority are scattered among various agencies) there is
such overlapping, deplication, conflicting jurisdiction; there
is lack of uniformity both in practices and in policies #
that, as for example in connection with the Administration's
easy money policy, efforts of the Treasury and of the Reserve
System to carry out that policy tead to be frustrated because
- of the agencies purses entrary practices or policies;
the system is characterized by numerous paralysing dis-
criminations as betsom neuber banks of the Reserve System,
insured banks and State banks not under Federal supervision;
enforcement of and banking standards and the Government's
ability to carry out national policy in the public interest
becaus a nockery de banks my at will wasps supervision w
the Federal authorities. This makes for the "empetition is
Regraded Unclassified
87
Regraded Unclassified
- $ -
laxity which has long been - blot on the American banking
system.
Because of the multiplication since 1989 of Federal
agencies either with supervisory or lending powers, or both,
the situation has become even more unsatisfactory, and the
need for reorganisation, consolidation and sisplification the
more urgent. in excellent presedent 10 to be found in the
Administration's bringing together under the Farm Credit M-
ministration of the seattered authorities that previously
vero divided among the Federal Farm Board, the Federal Farm
Loan Board, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, the Do-
partnent of Agriculture and the Treasury Department. As the
President declared, this reorganization of the farm credit
povers TMP "to eliminate overlapping, prevent duplication,
settle scuflicting jurisdictions-in short, to provide a more
efficient, logical and consolidated credit service for the
farmers at low cost." The BASS general reasons apply with
over greater force to the banking situation today. Another
presedent is to be found is the Administration's serging in
the Home Loan Bank Board supervision of the operations of the
Home Ovners' Loan Corporation, the loss Loss Bank System, the
Federal Savings and Loan Associations and the Federal Savings
and Loss Insurance Corporation.
88
- 4 -
is striking contrast, the attached chart portrays
the disorganised, complex and irrational stresture of the
Federal banking agencies.
Beyond these conspicuous structural defects, has-
aver, the banking system is in no position today to withstand
another severe inflationary or deflationary crisis, and the
Federal authorities are without adequate means of exerting a
centrol over the vast and volatile credit reservoirs, swollen
by the fortuitous inflows of foreign capital and gold, nor has
the banking system my adequate I of protecting the
domestic economy from these foreign govements.
If the Federal Reserve System, with its nation-vide
organization, extensive equipment and trained personnel, be
any basic justification for existance it is to exert an 10-
fluence towards greater economic stability and to sitigate
speculative credit excesses and inflationary or deflationary
extremes. Ist while the Congress has vasted the Reserve System
with certain powers to cope with such credit developments,
these posers today are wholly inadequate, and the Reserve
System is placed is the untenable position of having & too-
responsibility which 11 is incepable of discharging
Regraded Unclassified
89
- 5 -
because of lack of adequate powers and divided and conflicting
banking authorities scattered anong Federal and State juris-
dictions.
In the past five years there has been an addition of
GIVEN billion dollars to the monstary gold stock of the country,
resulting principally from & flight of capital free Europe. On
the basis of reserves created by this gold there could be a
credit expansion that would wreek our economic machine. Ist
there is no power in any agency of Government to take action to
control these reserves, except the power of the Treasury to do
80 by increasing the public debt. This is politically difficult
and would result in a rise in the cost of borrowing. If the
Treasury had to berrow a constantly increasing amount for the
purpose of sterilizing present excessive gold stocks, as well
as future inflows, the result would be an increase in the
interest met not only 08 the amount borrowed for this purpose
but also on all borrowing that the Treasury had to undertake.
Bone method other than this must be devised for dissouraging
the inflew of foreign cepital and gold and for controlling the
effects on our BceHoKy of the gold that has already come to
this country and that my - in the future.
Regraded
30
Regraded Unclassified
- 6 -
It is also highly destrable to dissontimes purchases
of silver which likewise further increase the excess reserves
of the banking system. The silver program is an understancy
and useless cos for monetary and credit purposes and SERVICE
solely as & subsidy to silver producers. That the silver
palicy is not even politically justifiable is indicated by the
attached resolutions of the American Mining Congress.
Results of present organisation of Federal authorities
Not only does the present set-up foster inefficiency,
but it leads to disputes over authority and results in the
frustration of monstary and credit policies by actions of super-
visory agencies. As a recent example, at the President's No-
quest last spring a conference of the Federal banking agencies
we called under the leadership of the Secretary of the Treasury
for the purpose of better ocordination of bank examination
policy. After extended discussion and compromise, an agree-
sent was finally reached, coupling with it a modification of
the Comptroller's Regulation. Sympathetic and understanding
administration is necessary to carry out the purpose and spirit
of the agreement in practice. Such administration is not to be
expected the there are vide differences of interpretation end
application of the terms of as agreement representing a -
31
- 7 -
promise of widely divergent views.
Outworn examining practices have not only frustrated
Administration policy which the Treasury and Federal Reserve
have sought to carry out, but have served to accentuate so-
flation on the downswing and to encourage over-expansion and
speculation on the upswing. Congress has recognized by legis-
lation and the Reserve authorities are endervoring to follow
the principle of taking monetary action DO as to reduce the
violence of both inflation and deflation. Both the Ad-
ministration and the Reserve authorities have consistently
followed an easy many policy designed to encourage bank lead-
ing and investment ao as to stimulate business, which, is turn,
would relieve the Government of a correspending amount of
public borrowing. The effect of these policies and actions
is largely mullified when bank examiners following outsom
methods entirely unrelated to mentary policy, criticise the
banks for making the kind of loans which are required by the
communities in which they operate.
01d-fashioned bank examination methods, still being
purcued, attempt to foree banks to liquidate as the downswing,
thereby accentuating deflation and undersining the banks' loans
Regraded Unclassified
92
- a -
and investments. This not only discourages the banks from
saking DEV loans at the very time the Government is attempting
to encourage them to do so, but it places additional burdens
upon the Federal budget by requiring the Government to set up
Federal agencies to supply the credit which the banking system
is thus discouraged from supplying, and to expend the supply
of money and put it into circulation through relief and other
programs because of the deficiency resulting from bank liquid-
ation and the failure of private credit to expand.
The time for improving the quality of bank assets is
under been conditions. That is when banks make loans and 10-
vestamts that later get than into trouble. Housver, this is
the very time when bank examination policy fails to diseourage
unsound loans and investments because it persists in neasuring
value by the artificial yardstick of ticker quotations, which
are likely to be as unrepresentative of true worth in a
speculative period as they are when all prices are abnormally
depressed.
I have net forth the foregoing at - length net
only as an example of policies, due to the existing
diffesion of authority, but because this an particularly no-
fleets the necessity for close coordination of bank amminsion
Regraded Unclassified
23
- 9 -
and investment policy with Government emetary policy.
Authority over monstary policy is largaly useless
unless such authority is closely integrated with bank or
amination and investment policy. In principle, authority
over all these functions should be vested in we agracy,
but, in any case, should be vested in closely coordinated
agencies.
The situation calls for action at this session of Congrass
These problems should not be left for consideration
later than this winter insumuch as a year from now the country
will be on the eve of 1 presidential election. The banking
holiday should be terminated before that time. To leave the
situation until after 1940 would involve a delay that night
prove disastrous in the face of future speculative and is-
flationary potentialities and taking into account world -
ditions together with the exposure of our credit system to
foreign influences.
To let the situation drift would not only indicate
or unwillingness to face it, but would give the
opposition an opportunity to naire an issue of it in the 1940
compaign. If the Administration were to pet the responsibility
up to Congrees at this session, not only would there to MP
Regraded Unclassified
S4
- 10 -
opportunity to make such a case against this Administration,
but responsibility for future consequences would be upon the
shoulders of the Congress.
The procedure
It would be desirable if the President in his assange
to Congress would in a paragraph or two indicate in & general
my the need for further constructive banking legislation to
emable the banking system to deal more effectively with the
present situation and future developments. Then, in its ennual
report to Congress, the Board of Governors, it seems to no,
should make & reasonably complete statement of the existing 000>>
ditions and express willingmess to appear before Congress, If
called, to advise 00 appropriate legislation. Or, should the
Board for any reason not see its may clear to make such a No
port, then the Chairman at least should do 60.
This course - to as to be far prefereble at this
time to attempting to bring about an agreement among Federal
banking agencies upon a specific piece of legislation, which
would be regarded as - Administration Mill and would be almost
sertain to be attacked on partisan grounds. Hereover, as you
are aware, the members of Congress are jealous of their yrs-
Regraded Unclassified
95
Regraded Unclassified
- n -
regatives and resentful at having any 900 agency present out-
and-dried legislation for passage. If the President requested
Congress to assert this prerogative and to work out necessary
legislation, hostile members of Congress would not be able to
side-step the responsibility, and all agencies interested in
the legislation would have an equal opportunity to present
their views.
If legislation results, the credit would redound to
the Administration. Whereas, if Congress fails to act after
having been requested to do so, the ones will be on the Congress
or on the groups that blocked action. Instead of leaving an
issue for the Republicans to make much of in 1940 and against
which the Democrate would find it difficult to sake a defense,
those responsible for blooking the legislation will be on the
defensive.
Form of legislation
I believe that Congress would be willing to initiate
& program bringing about a merger of Federal banking supervisory
agencies that would larguly avoid conflicting jurisdictions end
effect & meh better set-up of the Federal agmoles.
The Comptroller of the Currency is almost entiraly to-
day an emaining agency for national banks, the other functions
56
- 12 -
of the office being ainor. The Federal Reserve System a-
selmes State member banks. The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation examines State insured banks that are accessbers.
It would com to as to be politically feasible to obtain
legislation which would marge the emaining functions of the
Comptroller's office and of the Federal Reserve System with
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, wherens any other
method of complete consolidation of these functions would, in
ay opinion, be impossible to obtain from Congress. This
would be legical because all of the banks DOW examined by the
various Federal agencies are insured banks. This would place
in one agency all Federal examination, supervisory end charter-
ing functions, while there should be consolidated in the 14-
serve System all of the regulatory functions, this eliminating
the numbrous discriminations now existing between member banks
and nonsesber banks. Attached is a assorandus showing the
many existing discriminatory provisions of law.
If this were done, it would be important, however,
to have emminations, chartering, supervision of trust depart-
emts, and other supervisory functions earried - with close
Regraded Unclassified
97
- 15 -
coordination with the Federal Reserve. To bring this about,
I would suggest, if called upon to testify, that the Chairess
of the FDIO be appointed to the vacancy now existing as the
Board of Governors and that the Chairman of the Board of
Governore be put on the FRIC to fill the vacancy as that Heard
which would result from nerging the office of Comptroller. I
would suggest that the third member of the FRIG be designated
by the Secretary of the Treasury to represent his on the FDIC
Board and to serve at his pleasure. The effect of this would
be to have on the FDIC Board two out of three members who are
also members of the Federal Reserve Board. This would afford
an excellent opportunity to work out a harmonious and 00-
operative program of relations and of integrating emmination
with anustary policy. In the DSV Federal Reserve Building there
is considerable available space and there is also an adjoining
vasent building lot for future expansion of all the offices No
quired by such a surger. This joint housing would, in turn,
eliminate duplication of statistical and other functions.
I sention the foregoing possible solution of the
erganisation problem, but should - better set-up be devised,
OF should you prefer some other course, I would naturally wish
Regraded
SB
Regraded Unclassified
- 14 -
to defer to your judgment. My our guiding view to anrely
that the present set-up is unsound and impractical, and I
as not wedded to any one solution but only to the necessity
of getting 0000 solution. The most practicable compremise,
I think, would be the plan suggested, calling upon both the
Reserve System and the Comptroller's office to give up their
examining functions to the FDIC, then coordinating the FRIC
and the Reserve Board no that policies, now and in the past
repeatedly in conflist, may be harmonised.
An important part of this pattern, I think, would
be to do away with the saisting legal barriers to membership
in the Reserve System, and, in feet, to scrap altogether the
restrictive membership requirements, by blanksting all insured
banks into the System and requiring that they earry their No
serves with the Reserve banks, at the came time, of course,
being entitled to all of the privileges of the Reserve System.
One provision that I favor, which would, in my judgemt, make
this proposal more attractive to the insured banks, would be
that they be relieved of paying insurance assessements on the
funds they carried with the Reserve banks as reserves. This
would also have the desirable affect of tending against the
99
Regraded Unclassified
- 13 -
over-comentration of correspondent bank bulances in the large
essay emters, chiefly in New York. It would have as insidental
effect of serving to put a botton of 1/12th of 1 per cent -
interest rates.
I would also recomend, if asked, that the Federal
Reserve System be completely freed from private banker influence
and unde unsquivosally a public body. While the truth is that
the System is not banker dominated, it has been such criticized
by Fatman, Coughlin and others because private bankers are on
the boards of the twelve Federal Reserve banks and because sember
banks hold stock in the Federal Reserve banks, on which stock
they receive a 6 per cont dividend, a rate that is out of line
with current returns.
I, accordingly, would recomend that bankers be 10-
noved from the directorates of the Federal Reserve banks; that
such directorates consist of three representatives of comerce,
agriculture and industry who would be elected by the banks; that
three others representative of the public interest be appointed,
as now, by the Board of Governors, and that a seventh director
be chosen either from among or by State bank supervisory
authorities. This would reduce the musber of directors free
100
Regraded Unclassified
- is -
sine, LS at present, to seven, and would give the Board an
equal number with those elected by the banks, while the State
banking authorities would be represented by the seventh member.
I would also recomend that the Reserve bank stock
be done away with entirely, as it is not necessary. I would
suggest that the Beserve System be permitted to accumulate in
its capital account out of earnings 8. sufficient amount to off-
set the loss of capital due to paying off the stock, but all
earnings in excess of such amount to be paid into the Treasury
each year as a franchise tax. These two changes would resove
too principal, though exaggerated, complaints against the
present set-up of the System.
It is also important that the Reserve Bystem be given
increased posse to deal with foreign balances, particularly
those of foreign governments and foreign central banks. Like-
vise, the Reserve System should have restored to it the power
to buy Treasury bills directly from the Treasury as can be done
by every other central bank in the world.
There are various other recommendations I would make,
if celled upon, which I feel would strengthm and simplify the
existing banking eystem, but the foregoing are the principal
1 use i
101
- 19 -
It would be very helpful to no to feel that I bed
your moral support in connection with remedying the banking
situation at this time. I would not wat to make recomend-
stions contrary to your wishes, if I should be asked to testify
before Congress. The steps I have outlined would, I think,
seet with a sinimus of political resistance, while assomplish-
Lag desirable results.
Retention of Becorve System
Since no modern economy can get along without 4
central banking organisation, I have assumed the continuance
of the Reserve System in any plan of recrganisation. The Re-
serve System, created searly a quarter of a century ago, per-
forms missrous exemptial functions for the banking system, and
if abolished would have to be replaced by some other system to
perform the seme functions. The Reserve System has an extensive
physical plant, consisting of the 12 Federal Reserve banks with
their 24 branches and agencies, located in principal cities
throughout the country, and the Board of Governors in Washington
occupying a recently constructed building with emple facilities
to assomendate all existing Federal banking functions, and with
naturial savings in the elimination of duplication. All of this
represents a large investment in property. In addition, the Be-
Regraded Unclassified.
102
- 10 -
mrso System has a continuing and trained personnel both in
the field and in Washington.
The Board of Governors of six nembers nov-sever 10-
quired by law-has its om trained staff of Lewyers, emainers,
statisticians, economists, etc., the personnel in Weshington
numbering more than 850. Under the law the Board is a -
tinuing agency, and it is able to contribute that expertuses
which follows from continuous service. It is able to devote
its full time and resources to the single purpose of dealing
with banking and monetary matters. The present Board was
selected entirely by this Administration. It is one, there-
fore, in which the President can have confidence. Under 02/-
isting circumstances, the Board is in the unenviable position
of leaking authority to discharge the responsibilities imposed
upon it by law, and I question whether the Board can hold or
continue to attract the services of public-spirited - if this
situation is not remedied.
Speaking for myself, I would not wish to continue in
the Chairmanship of a System which in the sinds of the public
and of Congress is charged with great responsibility for w
creising controls over demestic credit and menetary conditions,
Regraded Unclassified
103
- 19 -
when, in fact, as it exists today, the System's powers and
authority are largely limited to the performance of mechanical
functions.
In conclusion
Without venturing to speak for other members of the
Board, I, as the Chairman, find syself in the situation where
I would be open to the charge of failing in my public duty,
and I feel that I would be equally remise in Ky obligation to
the President, if I were to let the impression stand that I
felt that the banking situation was safe, and that no steps
needed to be taken to safeguard it against the dangers ahead.
My term expires a year from February, and I have no right
choice, it - to me, except to bring to your attention well
in advance of the end of my tera the necessity for remodial
action before the problems become acute, and there is a flare
back of criticism. Otherwise I would be justly charged either
with not knowing the faste or withholding them for -
reason. While my resppointment, a year from February, may be
out of the question for other reasons, in any case, as I view
it, I should not put the President in the position of -
sidering for respointent an official who had no for failed
Regraded Unclassified
104
- 20 -
in the discharge of the responsibilities of his effice.
I think it is clear that, as Chairman of the Board,
I have a responsibility to bring these general considerations
to your attention so that, if you consider it appropriate to
do 80, you may include in your massage the request that the
Congress take cognisance of the situation with a view to pro-
viding the necessary remedies end safeguards. Thereby, I
feel, the Administration will have done its part, and the
responsibility for setion will be clearly upon the Congress.
Attachments.
Regraded Unclassified
105
PRINCIPAL BANK SUPERVISORY RELATIONSHIPS
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
48 STATES
STATE BANK
SUPERVISORY AUTHORITIES
F.R. SYSTEM
COMPTROLLER
RFC
LOANS
OF THE
TO BANKS
$1118500.000
TREASURY
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
CURRENCY
FDIC
CAPITAL FURCHASED
12 F. R. BANKS AND
(BUREAU OF THE TREASURY)
25 BRANCHES
CUMULATIVE THROUGH
DIC. 31 1987
MONETARY CONTROLS
FISCAL POLICY
OPEN MARKET
OPERATIONS
GOLD AND
RESERVE
SILVER POLICY
REQUIREMENTS
STABILIZATION
REDISCOUNT
FUND
POLICY
OPERATIONS
CHARTERED BT
LICENSE a
EXAMINED BY
SUBMIT REPORTS TO
RESERVES REQUIRED BY
SUBJECT TO REGULATIONS OF
EXERCISE OF TRUST POWERS AUTHORIZED BY
DEPOSITS INSURED BY
BURROW FROM
SELL CAPITAL ISSUES TO
BRANCHES AUTHORIZED BY
et, H.C.A. VOTINE PERMITS FROM
DY
LICENSED BY
EXAMINED BY
SUBMIT REPORTS TO
RESERVES REQUIRED BY
SUBJECT TO REGULATIONS OF
EXERCISE DF TRUST POWERS AUTHORIZED BY
DEPOSITS INSURED BY
BOHROW FROM
SELL CAPITAL ISSUES TO
BRANCHES AUTHORIZED BY
H. H.C. A. VOTING PERMITS FROM
CHANTERED BY
EXAMINED BY
SUBMIT REPORTS TO
RESERVES REQUIRED BY
SUBJECT 79 REGULATIONS OF
EXERCISE OF TRUST POWERS AUTHORIZED BY
DEPOSITS INSURED BY
BONROW FROM
SELL CAPITAL ISSUES 10
BRANCHES AUTHORIZED BY
CHARTERED BY
EXAMINED BY
SUGMIT REPORTS TO
RESERVES REQUIRED BY
SUBJECT TO REGULATIONS OF
EXERCISE OF TRUST POWERS AUTHORIZED BY
BORROW FROM
SELL CAPITAL ISSUES TO
BRANCHES AUTHORIZED BY
NATIONAL BANKS
STATE MEMBER BANKS
INSURED NONMEMBER
NONINSURED BANKS
(MEMBERS)
BANKS
EXCLUSIVE of MUTUAL SAVING BANKS
NUMBER 1081
NUMBER 7450
NUMBER 1100(es)
NUMBER 5260
DEPOSITS $14,352,000,000
DEPOSITS $6,300,000,000
DEPOSITS $1200.000,000
DEPOSITS $ 26,487,000.000
ESTIMATED)
(ESTIMATED)
MAJOR SUPERVISORY RELATIONSHIPS
NUMBER AND DEPOSITS AS OF DEG. 31, 1937.
INCIDENTAL SUPERVISORY RELATIONSHIPS
Regra Unclassified
106
DISCRIMINATION IN FEDERAL BANKING LAWS
In addition to laws peculiarly applicable to the National
Banking System, the Federal Reserve System or the Deposit Insurance
System as such, Congress has enacted many laws for the general pur-
pose of preventing unsound banking practices and requiring banks to
operate in & manner conducive to the public interest.
It would seem that laws of the latter class should apply uni-
formly to all banks subject to the jurisdiction of Congress; but
they do not do SO. Some of them apply only to national banks, most
of them apply to all member banks of the Federal Reserve System,
but only a few apply to nonmember insured benks.
This is not the result of deliberate policy or design but of
fortuitous circumstances incident to the gredual development of Fed-
oral supervision of banking.
From 1863 to 1913 Congress assumed jurisdiction over no banks
except national banks; and the Foderal banking laws onsoted during
this period naturally wore made applicable only to national banks.
In 1913 Congress extended its jurisdiction to those State
banks which chose to join the Federal Rosorve System and extended
some, but not all, of the general regulatory provisions of the
National Bank Act to them.
Proctically all romedial or regulatory banking laws onacted
from 1914 to 1933, inclusive, wcro made applicable to all momber
banks, State and national aliko.
Regraded
Unclassifi
107
-2-
In 1933 Congross extended its jurisdiction to all State banks
which chose to have thoir deposits insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation; but it WLS not until 1935 that it started ex=
tending its regulatory provisions to them; and so far only a few of
the general regulatory provisions of the Foderal banking laws have
been extended to thom.
The rosult is shown in the attached table, which disregards
laws poculiar to the organization of national banks, membership in
the Fodoral Reserve System, or the insurance of bank deposits and
rolates only to general regulatory provisions which could properly
bo made applicable to ell banks subject to the jurisdiction of Con-
gross.
A glance over the table will disclose that these laws leave
State member banks more freodom than national banks and leave non-
member insured banks much moro freedom than member banks.
Stated differently, it diecloses that although the Federal
Government has assumed the responsibility for insuring the deposits
of all insured banks, it has not thrown the same safeguards around
the transaction of the banking business by non-member insured banks
0.3 it has with reference to momber banks.
In view of the facts that all national banks are required
to be member banks, all momber banks are required to have their do-
posits insured, and momber banks pay approximately 85 por cent of
the assessments to support the deposit insurance system, the result
sooms not only nonsensioul but unjust.
Regraded Unclassified
108
-3-
In order to remedy this situation it is not necessary to
require that all insured banka be national banks or to require
that they all be member banks. It would be sufficient to extend to
all insured banks those general regulatory provisions of law which
Congress deems necessary or desirable for the purpose of preventing
unsound banking practices and requiring the banking business to be
conducted in a manner conducive to the public interest. To do so
would reduce the risks of deposit insurance, eliminate unfair dis-
crimination between different classes of insured banks, and require
all insured banks to operate in the public interest.
On the other hand, if any of these general regulatory laws
are too strict or are not necessary or desirable in the public in-
terest, they should be modified or repealed and should not be left
on the statute books to hamper member banks alone.
Regraded Unclassified
109
COMPARISON OF FEDERAL STATUTORY PROVISIONS
REGULATING AND RESTRICTING THE BUSINESS OF
DIFFERENT CLASSES OF BANKS
Applicable to
Type of Statute
National
State
Nonmember
Banks
Member
Insured
Benks
Banks
Restrictions on real estate loans.
Yes
No
No
Regulations governing exercise of trust powers.
Yes
No
No
Restrictions on acting as insurance agent.
Yes
No
No
Restriction on acting as real estate loan broker.
Yes
No
No
Prohibition against holding "other real estate"
for more than five years.
Yes
No
No
Limitation on indebtedness which bank may incur.
Yes
No
No
Restriction on loans to executive officers.
Yes
Yes
No
Restrictions on dealings with directors.
Yes
Yos
No
Prohibition against paying preferential rate of
intorest on deposits of directors, officers, otc.
Yos
Yos
No
Restrictions on intorlocking diroctoratos betwoon
bank and other banks.
Yos
Yes
No
Rostriction on inturlooking diroctorato botwoon
bank and socurities companios.
Yos
Yos
No
Prohibition against socuritios affiliatos.
Yes
You
No
Prohibition against acting as modium or agent in
connoction with loans to doalors in scourities.
Yos
Yes
No
Prohibition against affiliation with other
corporations.
Yos
Yos
No
Limitations on loans to affiliatos.
Yes
Yua
No
imitations on invostment in bank promisos.
Yes
Yes
No
Regraded Unclassified
110
-2-
Type of Statute
Applicable to
National
State
Nonmember
Banks
Member
Insured
Banks
Banks
Minimum capital requirements.
Yes
Yes
No
Prohibition against loaning on or purchasing
own stock.
Yes
Yes
No
Restrictions on withdrawal of capital and
payment of unearned dividonds.
Yes
Yes
No
Prohibition against impairment of capital.
Yes
Yes
No
Requirement that reserves specified in Federal
Reserve Act be maintained.
Yes
Yes
No
Prohibition against making loans or paying div-
idends while reserves deficient.
Yes
Yes
No
Rostrictions on purchase of investment securi>
tios and stock.
Yes
Yes
No
Limitations on acceptance powers.
Yes
Yes
No
Limitations on loans to one borrower.
Yes
Yes
No
Limitations on loans secured by stocks or bonds. Yes
Yes
No
Minimum capital for branches.
Yes
Yes
No
Restrictions on establishmont of branches.
Yes
Yes
Yes
Restrictions on payment of interust on deposits. Yes
Yes
Yes
Prohibition against loans or gratuitics to bank
examiners.
Yes
Yes
Yes
Regraded Unclassified
Regraded Unclassified
KICENPTS you DECLARATIONS OF POLICY
ADOPTED M THE AMERICAN KINING COMMINS
RESPOCTION THE ADMINISTRATION'S PROCHAN,
September 28, 1955, at Chicage, Illinois, the Vestern Division
of the imerican dining Congress adopted a Declaration of Folley -
taining the following
"Constitutional Government
"Is resent the attitude of MADY in authority in our Govern-
next who sook by specious 1180 of words, phrases end interpretations,
to pullify the plain intest and spirit of our Constitution, To look
forward with confidence and faith to the time when the Supreme Court
again will declare in Language unsistakable that its provisions, made
for the preservation of individual liberty and freedom of action, are
yet valid and binding. (Underacoring supplied.)
"Bareancracy has grown to such an alaraing extent that is-
dustry is nov faced with & government, not by a system of checks and
balances through legislative, judicial and arecutive branches, but &
government by politically appointed commissions and administrators.
Three-quarters of a million persons are employed by the Government,
noteounting the legislative and judicial branches, the Army and Havy,
and special agents of the Department of Agriculture. Registration
1s reaching est to every please of our American life. (Underscoring
supplied.)
the Delais
*Var Federal public debt is DOV in 010000 of thirty billions
of dollars, and the appropriations más by the Surmiy-fourth Congress
wire in excess of too billion dollars. No government can 11 - year
after year spending nore this it receives, and piling deficit upon
daficit. Bach a course inevitably destroys the currency, and leads
to inflation and repadiation. Our Covernment steald. therefore take
impliate des to balance the Federal Dutest hr strict limitation of
112
1.
"gevernaental expenditures. Taxes should be lavied only to accride
MONTH and not to effect cocial reforms. or to carry est
pchence of redistribution of (Undersearing supplied.)
"No oppose what is company known DE 'managed currents!
(Underseering supplied.)
"Government in Business
"Government, by its very nature, cannot conduct business
efficiently; its invasion of business destroys individual enterprise,
injures all citizens by unfair competition, and dries up the source
from which its revenue is derived. To condemn and oppose such invo-
sion.
"Labor
To condemn the attempt on the part of Congress to set up
an outside political body to intervene between employers and employees
in their industrial relations.
"Relief
"Be favor direct relief at subsistance rates rather than
work relief administered by Federal agencies."
=
January 15, 1986, at its 20th Annual Neeting, the American Mining
Congress adopted 6 Statement of Principles containing the followings
"Check bureaucracy, abandon government W an and return to
government by law.
Regraded Unclassified.
113
1.
October 1, 1938, at Deaver, Colorado, the Western Division of
the American Mining Congress adopted a Declaration of Policy com-
taining the followings
"Texation and Finance
"And the Federal tax laws to reestablish the flat rate
of corporation tax, to restore the right to make consolidated No
terms, to remove the tax on dividends received by corporations, to
permit business losses of one year to be deducted from future 10-
come, to provide fall allowance of capital lesses, and to permit
annual declaration of value for capital stock taxes, particularly
in case of mining properties in the development stage."
"Extension of Federal Government
"Se deplore the tendency to center supervision of busi-
2008 in the Federal Government.
% oppose the growth of bureeneracy, and urge a return
to government by law instead of by executive order or administra-
tive decree.
Trade Agreements
"Changes in tariff rates should not be mde through trade
agreements with foreign countries without specific approval of such
changes by Congress after public hearing."
September 10, 1987, at Salt Lake City, Utah, the Western Divi-
sion of the American Maing Congress adopted M. Declaration of Folicy
centaining the followings
Tentis
The sising industry views with concern the enstituation
of excessive and unnecessary expenditures by the Federal Government.
Regraded Unclassified
114
* recommend the reartablishment of the flat rate of
corporation tax, the resteration of the right to min consolidated
returns, the removal of the tax a dividends reseived by corporm-
tioms, the carrying forward of business lesses of 000 year to be
deducted from future income, and the unlimited deduction of capi-
tal leeses.
"Extension of Natural Gevernment
" deplare the growing tendency to regulate business by
the Federal Government.
% appear the growth of and wirke & return
to government by law instead of by - through executive order or
administrative decree.
"labor
The essential interest of employe and employer is to ob-
tain efficient preduction through the cooperative efforts of labor,
management and capital. Government interforence with such coopera-
tion should be avoided."
October 27, 1958, at Los Angales, Celifornia, the Festera Divi-
sion of the American Mining Congress adopted a. Declaration of Policy
containing the following:
Tentis
"Consistent with our belief of may years, vs view with
over-incroasing apprehemsion the continued unhalanced national but
gets with mounting expenditures and progressive deficit financing
made necessary thereby. Sound and proven theories of Government
finance denend that the esatrel of these expenditures MUST be No-
turned to Congress. There alone, as the Constitution provides,
responsibility for Government revenues can be united with responsi-
bility for Government expenditures. Having properly resumed its
Regraded Unclassified
115
s
"constitutions] powers in this respect, Congrees, if it would preserve
the Batien from the financial cataclysms which have enveloped se may
countries, should and must limit Federal expenditures to - amount
which as be covered by taxation yield."
Regraded Unclassified
116
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE December 8, 1938
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
MA
FROM Mr. Oliphant
For your information -
I talked at some length this morning with Mr. Lawrence Morris
(who represents the Chinese delegation) and Ed Foley about the Chinese
loan, with particular regard to some of the objections raised at the con-
ference yesterday by Messrs. Hamilton and Ward from the State Department.
Morris pointed out that it would be possible to rearrange the Chinese
program to suit any formula acceptable to us.
At 2:15 this afternoon, the three of us met with Mr. Hanes in
his office. Hanes agreed to extension of the period of the loan from
three to five years, a formula for the apportionment of the supply of
tung 011, the substitution of e Chinese private corporation for the
Chinese Government as the procuring agent for the tung oil in China, and
a guarantee of the loan by the Bank of China in lieu of 8. guarantee by
the Chinese Government. Hanes expressed himself as being opposed to the
use of any of the tung oil loan proceeds for war materials. Lochhead
was called in and said that a condition to this effect should not create
any insurmountable obstacle since the Chinese trading corporation would
have other moneys to spend in this country, and by segregation of ac-
counts could use the tung oil loan money only for the purchase of non-
belligerent materials and other funds for the purchase of munitions.
Mr. Chen was then called in and he verified Lochhead's statement. He
Regraded Unclassified
117
- 2 -
also reiterated in substance what Morris had told us as to their
willingness and ability to meet any reasonable formula we proposed.
Hanes then expressed himself as being satisfied, and at his sugges-
tion I called Summer Welles at 4:20. I recited to him the substance
of our conversation with Messre. Hamilton and Ward, whom he had sent
over for me to talk to yesterday. I stated that they had expressed
themselves as entirely satisfied with the following changes, which
would remove any objections on the score that we were countenancing
a Chinese monopoly or seeking to get more than our share of the tung
oil production. These changes are:
(1) The period for the delivery of the 225,000 tons is
to be lengthened from three to five years, thus further reducing the
amount deliverable in any one year even further below recent produc-
tion figures.
(2) That there will be no obligation to deliver to the
United States & greater percentage of what they actually have for de-
livery to anybody than the ratio of last year's delivery to the United
States to last year's total production.
I then mentioned to Welles the further objection of Messrs.
Hamilton and Ward, that the Goverment of China was appearing in the
transaction as such. This objection, I said, would be net by the
organization of & new corporation in China by private individuals,
which would deal with the American corporation. I mentioned that some-
where back of such private corporation would, of course, be the Foreign
Trade Commission, and Welles said that that would be entirely satisfac-
tory.
118
- 3 -
He then interrupted to state the thing which had given
a
him "grave perplexity", namely, that since we were coming to square
issue with Japan on whether the Nine Power Pact was still in force,
he didn't want Japan to have any violation on our part to point to.
I then asked if I might go over the whole matter again with
him so as to be sure he had it entirely in mind. I then recited:
(1) That no monopoly law had been passed, or would be
passed by China.
(2) I repeated the double change, i.e., extending the
period from three to five years and fixing a ratio to measure the
supply to be made available to the United States, to meet the objec-
tion that we were grabbing more than our part of the tung oil.
(3) I again stated that the new corporation was to be
formed by China and that back of it somewhere would be the Foreign
Trade Commission.
(4) I then said that the loan would be guaranteed by the
Bank of China, not by the Chinese Government.
(5) I mentioned that all the proceeds of the loans were
to be spent in the United States and that none were to be spent for
belligerent materials.
He then said, "It is entirely satisfactory with us over
here that the thing go through on this basis. Would you be good
enough, when it has been drafted, to send me a copy personally?"
Regraded Unclassified
119
- 4 -
I repeated that I understood on the basis stated it was
entirely satisfactory for the loan to go through and he again said
it was, and thanked me rather profusely for having given the matter
so much attention.
Regraded Unclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
120
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE December 8, 1938.
TO
The Secretary
FROM
Mr. Taylor
As I told you over the telephone, at the Export-Import Bank meeting
I gave final approval to the I.T. & T. financing. This involves ten-year
serial maturities with a coupon and a purchase price of approximately
95, which averages out to about a 5% basis. A group of banks, including
Guaranty, National City, J. P. Morgan, end others, will take five million.
The Export-Import Bank will take ten million. This financing will olear up
all current indebtedness of the I.T.& T., with the exception of ordinary
commercial Bills Payable, and, in the opinion of those familiar with the
situation, will put them in good shape, as after paying off their debenture
issue which natures on January lat, with the proceeds of this financing
and cash which they have accumulated to meet the maturity, they will have
no other maturities prior to 1952. No publicity will be given out until
an agreement on the publicity has been reached between the banking group
and the Export-Import Bank. On the whole, I think it will be fairly well
received as it combines the banks' taking ten-year loans with cooperation
on the part of the Government to help finance industry on a long-term basis,
In addition there was some discussion of the Portugese Bridge proposal.
It appears that in order to get the business we will have to raise our ente
from five million to slightly over six million -- if it is good at all,
six million ought to be 8.8 safe as five. This proposal 18 not in final form
but we will have to give an answer fairly soon.
Regraded
121
- 2 -
I also had an extended conversation with Mr. Bursley,
who handles the Mexican end of the State Department, Cairns and
Johnson, in connection with sending an investigator to Mexico
to clear up the suspected dumping aspects of certain oil sales
which are being made through Eastern States Petroleum. We
are writing the State Department a letter asking for their help
in arranging for the visit of our investigator, as State thinks
that the situation is so delicate that if one of our men started
investigating this particular case without the advance permission
of the Mexican Government, that the public reaction might be
unfortunate.
WV.
Regraded Unclassified
122
Kunming, Yunnan,
8th December, 1938
The Honorable
Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Department of Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I attach reports typed from notes sent me by Dr. Buck
from Chengtu.
Respectfully,
Evid Saunders
Enid Saunders
Secretary to Dr. Buck
- vehicles gel IN governt
01400 of :
TREV20MA DELYSLMENT
WH 18 a
BECEIA
Regraded Unclassified
123
INDEX
Page
Interview with Governor Wang Chan-hsu of Szechuen
1
Statistical Department, Szechuen Government
3
Highways, Szechuen
4
Interview with Mr. Kao, Chief Secretary, Commission
of Finance, Chengtu
5
Chengtu
6
Central Aircraft Company
7
Interview with Dr. Y. G. Chen, President of the
University of Nanking and Member of the People's
Political Council
8
Income Tax
9
Regraded Unclassified
124
1
Chengtu, December lst, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
INTERVIEW WITH GOVERNOR WANG CHAN-HSU OF SZECHUEN
"In the name of the people of Szechuen I express thanks for all the
help from America in this war. We still need more assistance in the form of
military supplies and we hope and desire this help from America.
"We do not fear a Japanese attack in Szechuen as we have made pre-
parations. We have recruited and are giving training to 800,000 new soldiers.
We have plenty of men and the recruiting has had no adverse effect on our
economic life as we have taken those without important work to do.
"The Chinese Communists are not a problem in Szechuen. They are
fighting wholeheartedly with the Central Government against Japan. They
are not B. large group and China has nothing to fear from them.
"Russia wants China to fight Japan as it is for her protection.
We accept Russia's help but not her political doctrine. In China we have
end give our allegiance to only one party, the San Min Chu I (the three prin-
ciples of the Kuomintang Party).
"We are giving urgent attention to transportation and are building
a narrow gauge railway from Szechuen to Kunming to be completed in two years.
"We are pushing gold mining to increase gold production."
Regraded Unclassified
125
2
Note: Governor Wang, a military general, is a native of Szechuen and
very loyal to the Generalissimo. He is stated to be a straight forward
type of person, but with limited ability. He often rides to the office
on horseback to save gasoline. I gained a favorable impression of him.
Regraded Unclassified
126
3
Chengtu, December 2nd, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
STATISTICAL DEPARTMENT, SZECHUEN GOVERNMENT
The Statistical Department of the Szechuen Government has an
ambitious plan under way for obtaining various detailed statistics from each
hsien; and the outlook, judging from the staff, is promising. One of the
men is a former student of mine, who has had good training at the University
of Nanking.
Regraded Unclassified
127
4
Chengtu, December 5th, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
HIGHWAYS, SZECHUEN
The Commissioner of Highways of Szechuen states that the new road
to Kunming, connecting with the Chungking-Chengtu highway at Lungchong, is
passable in the Szechuen portion, but not fully completed. He is uncertain
about the exact progress of the Yunnan portion.
A limited amount of highway construction is carried on in the nature
of extension of existing roads and their improvement.
Regraded Unclassified
128
5
Chengtu, December 5th, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
INTERVIEW WITH MR. KAO
CHIEF SECRETARY, COMMISSION OF FINANCE, CHENGTU
The Commissioner of Finance has been ill for some time, so my
interview was with his chief secretary, Mr. Kao. The revenues of the pro-
vince are 50,000,000 yuan, chiefly from land taxes, but one-fifth is from
goods tax in transit. Szechuen being 8. rich province does not feel pinched
for revenues as do the provinces of Kweichow, Kansu and Tsinghai. However,
during this war the province is feeling the need for additional income.
Mr. Kao states that Central Government notes are in circulation in
every hsien, and only in the distant hsien is the circulation of silver dollars
still practised. Collection of silver is still taking place. Gold production
amounts to over one million ounces annually, and some effort is being made to
increase the production.
Regraded Unclassified
129
6
Chengtu, December 2nd, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
CHENGTU
Adequate pursuit plane protection for Chengtu 18 in the process
of realization. One hundred and fifty Russian pursuit planes and thirty
bombers, some of which have arrived, are to be stationed at the Chengtu
end other airfields in Szechuen. One airfield at Chengtu is to be given
over to the Russian training force, and the other kept for the strictly
Chinese training force. Mr. Schultze of Central Aircraft states the General-
issimo is cautious about having too many Russians in Szechuen, as he does
not want too much Russian influence.
New forces are at work in Chengtu. Streets are kept very clean
and policemen check up and see that sidewelks and pavements in front of each
doorway are kept clean. Yesterday I saw B policeman admonishing a store-
keeper for the mess in front of his shop, which was a strong contrast to the
otherwise clean street.
The movement to save gasoline is effective and now one does not
see wives of officials riding about in their husbands' cars, or such cars
parked in front of theatres and restaurants.
Regraded Unclassified
130
7
Chengtu, December lst, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
CENTRAL AIRCRAFT COMPANY
The Central Aircraft Company has decided to build its plant near the
Burma border along the Kunming-Burma road, rather than at Kunming. It will
turn out two bombing planes per day. Protection will be afforded by their own
men and their own pursuit planes. The location appears excellent, as Japanese
pursuits cannot accompany their bombers that distance.
Mr. Schultze, 8. Curtiss-Wright man in charge of Central Aircraft's
repair shop at Chengtu, speaks well of the ability of the Chinese to learn
the art of plane manufacture and of past accomplishments. At Hangchow the
company was turning out eighteen bombers per week, all manufactured there
except engines and a few other parts.
The activities of Curtiss-Wright in China are a good illustration of
how many types of American business could assist China and at the same time
make reasonable profits.
Regraded Unclassifie
131
8
Chengtu, December lat, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
INTERVIEW WITH DR. Y.G. CHEN, PRESIDENT OF UNIVERSITY
OF NANKING AND MEMBER OF PEOPLE'S POLITICAL COUNCIL
"At the meeting in November of the People's Political Council, Dr.
Kung referred to the help of the U. S. Treasury, and to the favorable outlook
for some type of credit from the United States. If this further assistance is
not forthcoming it will affect Sino-American relationships, because the Chinese
may feel forced to apply for more help from Russia on her own terms. We do not
went the same feeling to develop toward America as has occurred toward England
on account of the method of Czechoslovekia's settlement and her apparent willing-
ness to compromise at China's expense in the Sino-Japanese issue.
"As long as England and the United States help both sides, Jepan and
Chine, and Russia helps only China, we Chinese are bound to feel more friendly
toward Russia." (There 18 strong feeling in regard to the continued sale of war
supplies by the United States to Japan. Chinese cennot understand how Americans,
if they are friendly to China, can continue to permit such sales. J.L.B.)
"On December 15th the Kuomintang Party leaders are meeting to discuss
further the question of peace possibilities and foreign policy. In January the
People's Political Council will meet again. At the last meeting, in November,
the attitude was that this is an unfevorable time to consider peace terms."
Regraded Unclassifie
132
9
Chengtu, December 2nd, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
INCOME TAX
When in Lanchow I talked with Mr. Wu, who has charge of income tax
collection for the provinces of Kansu, Ninghsia, and Tsinghai. The collec-
tions from these three provinces are exceeding the estimated collection, and
since January 1st have amounted to 50,000 yuan. It is expected that the
collections next year will amount to 800,000 yuan.
22
133
Kunming, Yunnan,
8th December, 1938.
The Honorable
Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Department of Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I attach a copy of a message sent you by Dr. Buck, through
Mr. Campbell, on December 2nd, 1938.
Respectfully,
Evid Saunders
Enid Saunders
Secretary to Dr. Buck
Regraded Unclassified
134
Chengtu, December 2nd, 1938
To Secretary Morgenthau
From J. Lossing Buck
COPY OF MESSAGE SENT THROUGH CAMPBELL
Several of my Lanchow reports have been delayed in the mails. One
important general predicted 8 Japanese attack on communications west of Lanchow
via Mongolia or Ninghsia, and believes it can be successful, although he declares
a more vital blow to China would be a successful attack a on Tungkwan and thence
to Hangchung in Southern Shensi. Japanese test of Tungkwan defences have found
Chinese defences strong and situation there is still favorable to Chinese.
Chinese fear Japanese attack will be greatly assisted if Yellow River freezes.
Szechuen loyal and Governor expresses confidence of Szechuen defences, although
more foreign assistance war supplies urgently needed. Governor expresses thanks
for all American help to date, but states hope that still further assistance
possible.
journers - - -
DEATHING
OHICE of ipc 200
DELVELNEW1
TAB IS 1826
/
BECEIAED
Regraded Unclassified
135
PARTIAL PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
It
FROM: American Embassy, Berlin, Germany
(part air)
DATE: December 8, 1938, 3 p.m.
NO.: 704
No. 37 FOR TREASURY FROM HEATH.
The concern of the Reich Government over the export
and foreign exchange situation has recently become more
acute as evidenced by the export conference presided over
by Funk the first of this month and the latter's announce-
ment that export orders must have primacy. The Economics
Ministry has been trying not to increase export subsidies
but recently reports of several cases of increased bounties
were received as well as cases where Hamburg exporters
have through the intervention of the Ministry of Economics
forced reluctant German manufacturers more interested in
the profitable internal market to give preferential atten-
tion to the manufacture of export goods. While the October
foreign trade figures for greater Germany show an increase
of imports over the disturbed month of September of 34
million marks to 526 million marks and an increase of
exports of 48 million marks to 490 million marks there is
still a trade deficit of 36 million marke which, however,
is less than the 51 million excess of imports in September
and the 64 million excess in August. For the first ten
months imports of greater Germany totaled 4,983 million
marks and exports 4,637 million marks leaving a trade
deficit of 356 million marks as compared with a eurplue
Regraded Unclassified
136
os . I
of exports from Germany amounting to 362 million for the
first ten months of 1937.
Statistics of gold imports and exports are available
only for old Germany. During the first seven months of
the year, despite the trade deficit, there were net gold
imports of 94.5 million marks lending support to an author-
itative statement to me that German trade statistics tended
to over-value imports. In August there were net exports
of gold of 13.5 million, in September of 91 million, and
in October 41 million marks. These shipments have had
little reflection in the published gold reserves of the
Reich. The Reichsbank's disclosed reserve has remained
constant around 70 million. The Gold Discount Bank's
October statement, however, showed a decrease in its gold
stock from 47 million to 40 million marks.
The Reich's debt statement for October shows an
during the month
increase of 1,849 million marks (cuiscion) to B. total of
25,076 million marks. The increase was entirely due to
the issue of long term bonds. There was a net decrease of
45 million marks in the disclosed short term debt due to
the maturity of three and six months treasury bills. The
controlled financial press had predicted there would be &
substantial decrease of short term dabt during October and
to the extent of 45 million marks, this was achieved.
The
Regraded Unclassified
137
- 3 -
The undisclosed debt consisting mainly of "special
bills" is of course not included in the debt statement.
Re my telegram of July 9, 11 a.m.: the British Financial
Attache is still of the opinion that this unrecorded debt
runs from 18 to 20 billion marks. He believes that about
6 billion marks of this is held by industry, and about
12 by the banks. He believes, too, that the net aggregate
bill holdings of the Reichebank, the Gold Discount Bank
and all private banks which on the thirty-first of October
amounted to 15,275 billion marke - not including single
bills of the Gold Discount Bank - are made up of commercial
bills only to the extent of 2 1/2 to 3 billion marks, and
that indefinitely renewable Government "special bills"
make up the balance of this total. A few months ago it
was stated in the Financial Press that private banks had
in their portfolios no more "special bills", but there
1s good evidence that such is not the case. For the past
two or three months, it is known, German industry had
been
becoming
progressively less liquid and the banks
have been taking up its holdings of "special bills". It
is also known that it is the tendency of the Reichsbank
to pase on "special bills" which it has accepted for
discount to the private banks. 80 far it has not been
possible for me to get any reliable estimate B.B to what
part
Regraded Unclassified
138
- 4 -
part of the bill holdings of banks is composed of "special
bills" and what part 18 commercial paper. During the
28
year 19(emission) - a period corresponding in activity
with the present period - commercial bill holdings of German
private banks were about 4 billion marks; those of the
Reichsbank were about 2 billion. Because Government orders
make up a greater part of the present economic activity,
it 18 to be assumed that there has been a decrease in the
proportion and amount of commercial paper, but that it is
down to 2 1/2 or 3 billion seems doubtful.
During the first seven months of the fiscal year which
began April 1 there has been a net increase in the Reichs
debt of 6,578 million marks. With the last loan of 1500
million (payments for which do not begin until January)
Government borrowing for the current fiscal period will
presumably be in excess of 8 billion marks unless important
economies should be effected which no one in the Government
with whom I have talked expects. Semi-official forecasts
are for tax and miscellaneous revenues of 17 billion marks
making a total Central Government budget of 24 billion marks
or a third of the national income. The Government's borrow-
ing of a billion marks compares with estimated money capital
formation of 7 billion marks during the calendar year 1937.
Money savings during 1938 will doubtless show an increase
over 1937 but industry has been relatively "starved" in
favor
139
- 5 -
favor of Government borrowing notably the Reichsbahn has had
to put off orders for new rolling stock. For the first nine
months of 1938 only five private industrial bond issues
totalling 158 million were permitted as compared with private
bond issues of 307 million in 1937. To be sure share issues
total 698 million marks for the first ten months of 1938
(1937, 333 million marks) but more than half of this was
for the Reich owned Hermann Goering works. The Government
seems able to borrow without difficulty however. Recent
issues of Treasury bills bear slightly less discount than
those of last summer when certain issues went to 3 5/8.
January bills were offered at 3 3/8% and later maturities
at 3 7/16 to 3 15/32.
In public and in private Schacht insists that as
long as the Government meets its deficits by long term bond
issues, inflation is automatically checked. So much confi-
dence is not felt by other observers in the Government.
I was told by one well-placed source that while the price
stabilization control of the Reich has been remarkably
administered, gradual hidden increases are not being
prevented. Despite the statistics, he insists, a very
slow but merciless deorease in the real wages of the
individual workman is taking place, as well 8.8 & decrease
in the standard of living. Judging from his own contacts
and
Regraded Unclassified
140
- 6 -
and experience, he does not expect that there will be any
real slackening of the "must" orders for ambitious party
plans, for the four-year plan, and for the military in
order to increase the output of consumption goods. In his
opinion the cartelized industry will be able to repulse
additional taxation and will be successful in opposing
inertia against efforts to lower costs and prices for
consumption goods. In his opinion no successful measures
will be taken to halt a very gradual inflation and 8. deter-
ioration of the workman's real wages and standard of living.
Unless some unforeseen event takes place, however, he does
not think that the grumbling of the working and other classes
will break through the present discipline sufficiently to
bring about a change in the present program of the Govern-
ment. Those here who have knowledge and experience of the
situation have the general feeling that there is a gradual
continuing economic deterioration and strain. However, not
many believe that this deterioration and strain or the
dissatisfaction evoked by it will have any early decisive
outlet or results on the present Government's political
or economic organization.
The projects and organization of the party are costly,
and such actions as racial persecution have their effects
on foreign trade; however, these observers believe that
despite these facts, and barring some decisive miracle,
it
Regraded Unclassified
141
- 7 -
it will be possible to maintain the "discipline" of the
workers and other sections of the population against
a considerable restriction of living standards. They also
believe that it should be possible for the highly competent
bureaucracy of the Treasury, the Economics Ministry and
the Reichsbank to makeshift to keep the economic machine
running for a considerable time without actually breaking
down, although dislocation and deterioration will be
apparent.
END MESSAGE.
GILBERT.
EA:LWW
Regraded Unclassified
242
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Paris, France
DATE: December 8, 1938, 5 p.m.
NO.: 2079
FOR THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT.
Transactions on the exchange market here today were
on a moderate scale under erratic and cautious conditions,
pending the result of the vote in the Chamber.
We have been told by our market contact that there
is no serious doubt that Daladier will be successful. He
also says that in financial circles it is apparently be-
lieved that he will have between 50 and 100 votes for a
majority. Sterling has alternatively been bought and sold
by the fund, at rates varying between 177.50 and 177.75.
France are being offered now at 177.60 by the fund. It is
thought that a elight amount of sterling has been gained
on balance. Sterling forward rate about 15 centimes for
one month; for three months about 50 centimes.
END SECTION ONE.
WILSON.
EA:LWW
143
PARAPHASE SECTION TWO, NO. 2079 OF DECEMBER 8, 1938
FROM PARIS
At opening rentes were lower, but they improved later
on to about the closing point yesterday.
Today's JOURNAL OFFICIEL published the decision
canceling the designation of Jouhaux as a member of the
Bank of France's General Council.
Today's Bank of France statement (as of December 1)
shows that gold reserves increased by 204,000 francs. The
Commercial portfolio decreased 1,200,000,000 francs and
note circulation increased 2,650,000,000 francs. Deposit
and current accounts decreased 2,600,000,000 francs. Gold
cover percentage declined from 60.21 to 60.17.
END SECTION TWO.
WILSON.
EA:LWW
Regraded Unclassified
144
PARAPHRASE, SECTIONS THREE AND FOUR OF TELEGRAM NO. 2079
OF DECEMBER 8, 1938, FROM PARIS
The press today carries a semi-official statement that
Reynaud told the Finance Committee of the Chamber last
evening that on December 15 or 16 he would be prepared to
open discussion of the 1939 budget. Furthermore, for the
month of November the budgetary revenue was 175,000,000
francs over and above estimates, and since the beginning
of November 6,000,000,000 france were repatriated.
Reynaud is also reported to have said that Treasury re-
quirements were such that it would not be possible for the
Government to envisage a diminution of the yield of measures
embodied in the decree laws recently issued.
In today's AGENCE ECONOMIQUE there is a report from
its correspondent in Amsterdam that next week there will
be a meeting of officials of Mendelssohn and Company and
other Amsterdam banks for the purpose of undertaking a
conversion operation of the 7 percent Moroccan Railway
loan into 8. thirty-year loan at 5 percent. The new loan
would be issued at 98.
END MESSAGE.
WILSON.
EA:LWW
Regraded Unclassified
145
December 8, 1938.
4:48 p.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
John
Hanes:
Hello.
HMJr:
Johnny?
H:
Yes, sir.
HMr:
Am I making a record of this?
H:
Wait just a minute -- yes, O.K., Henry.
HMr:
Who's with you?
H:
Nobody now.
HMJr:
All right. Well, I wanted to tell you this -- the
President Just called me.
H:
Yes?
HMJr:
And he said that & "little birdie" told him that if I
would see young Giannini to talk with him, that every-
thing would be all right. So I said, "Well, Mr. Presi-
dent, let me tell you what the present situation 16."
I said I just got through talking to Johnny Hanes who
had & meeting at the Comptroller's office at which I
believe Eccles and Jones were present. Am I right?
H:
Mr. Eccles was not there - Mr. Jones and Mr. Crowley
were there.
HMr:
But not Eccles?
H:
No.
HMJr:
And I said they got along beautifully, and I said that --
that on everything except the question of putting in new
capital, but I said they are going to meet again tomorrow
and they are making excellent progress. I said, further-
more that my understanding of Preston Delano 18 that he 18
keeping me as an ace in the hole, and that he 18 only
going to come to me after they come to an agreement, and
that if and when they do make such an agreement, I'll walk
across the street, if I can still walk, and see you.
65
Yes.
HMJr:
And I said with this plan working, I said, don't you think
it would be a mistake for me to Bee Giannini? He said
Regraded Unclassified
146
- 2 -
"Oh, absolutely !" He said what information I had was
brought to me last night.
H:
Yes.
HEW :
So he said, "That's simply fine." So I wanted to give it
to you, and having nobody to dictate to, I wanted to make
a record of it, you see?
3:
Sure.
HIJr:
And I wanted to let you know BO that you know that Just --
BO when you carry the ball, and if the coach 18 giving me
some signals from off the benches, I went you to know
what they are.
Yes, sir. Well, I'm glad to get that. That may explain
in some way the attitude that I reported to you earlier -
you know, the friendly attitude that was taken there this
morning -- that may explain it, don't you think?
HWr:
I don't know. What I imagine is -- I should imagine --
WBS that Jesse saw the President.
Yes.
SWr:
Why wasn't Eccles there today?
H:
Well, I don't know why he wasn't there. Well, now wait
a minute -- wouldn't that be -- wouldn't it be natural
that Eccles would not come to this thing since he might
be drawn into later as -- later 8.8 a judge in the case?
Wouldn't it be out of place for him to come?
HWr:
Well, if I might make this suggestion -- I think it would
be better to invite him and let him turn it down, but you
can think that over, 80 that he can't again say the way
he said in the case of Douglas, that he didn't know any-
thing about it.
H:
Well -- well, we've got a record of that I think that
covers that point slright -- because Preston showed me 8
letter that he had from Marriner this morning --
HMJr:
Yes.
(ii)
In which all these points were taken up and I think that
covers it. However, I'll go down to Preston's office and
look it up right now and see that -- that -- and If it
doesn't cover it, and I think you are right, we should at
least notify him that we are carrying on.
Regraded Unclassified
147
- 3 -
HAIr:
And does he want to come?
H:
And does he want to come. All right.
Jr:
Or does he went to send his chief bank examiner?
H:
All right,
Folger.
B:
All right.
HMJr:
Now the only other thing - the President said, "How are
you getting along on the Anglo California" -- BO I said
that we -- that you took the letter over and spent a
couple of hours with Jesse, the result of which was that
he wrote me a letter including the paragraph that the bank
management would be satisfactory to us.
Yes,
BWr:
And he said, "Well, that's really fine," he said, "You
had better knock wood you seem to be getting along 50
well."
Yes.
HWr:
And he was very Jolly -- and, -- and, very much pleased,
Good!
Wair:
But I wanted to get that to you 80 that you -- to let you
know that's Just the way I'd play 1t, that's all.
Yes, sir. Well, now do you feel like spending flve
minutes with me if I come to see you?
HISS:
Well -- well, I'm not -- what time would it be?
I was Just going on by to say "hello" to you and Just
drop -- just drop this Chinese thing.
Mr:
Well -- I'm -- I'm not --
You're not up to it?
HIJr:
I tell you -- I really would -- I'd love to see you, but
if I stay home tomorrow, I'd like to ask you to come.
Righto! Well, I was only coming if you wanted me now,
and -- because I just didn't want to -- if you wanted to
talk all right, if you didn't, I didn't have a thing in
the world on my mind. I told you everything that 18 going
on.
148
- 4 -
HMJr:
Well, that's darn nice. I'm -- I'm -- I'm so uncomfort-
able.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
So that --
H;
Well, let's -- I won't come, and we'll -- if you want me
for anything why you know how to get me.
HMJr:
If I'm home -- ah -- I have to stay home tomorrow, then
I'll ask you if you would come up.
H:
I'd be delighted.
HWr:
Are you home tonight.
H:
Yee sir. I'll be at home tonight. I'm having dinner with
Douglas tonight at home on a
situation,
BO -- I hope he's coming. I'm not sure yet.
HMJr:
I appreciate 1t, but I think I'll postpone it until
tomorrow.
H:
O.K. Fine, and if you want me you can get me.
HMJr:
And you've got this thing of the President which doesn't
change it, other than it just means that somebody has
been talking to him and my guess would be that it was
9:
Alright.
HMJr:
And it's alright.
H:
Yee, don't you think 80?
HMJr:
Don't you think 80?
H:
Yee -- yes, I don't see anything wrong -- I don't -- of
course I haven't had time much to think about this -- I
don't know if it 18 he. I don't think it was he.
HMJr:
You don't think it was?
H:
I don't believe it was. He was with me all night last
night.
HMJr:
And did he say --
H:
No -- no, he didn't eay -- he didn't mention anything
about it to me all evening.
Regraded Unclassified
149
- 5 -
HMJr:
How was he, anyway? Well, you can tell me about it when
I see you.
H:
Alright -- I'll tell you the whole conversation when I
see you.
HMJr:
Alright.
H:
It 18 interesting.
HMJr:
He -- He -- how shall I put it? He's no less friendly
towards the Treasury.
H:
No -- no -- it couldn't be better.
HMJr:
I called him up to try to get him to have lunch with me
today -- that was yesterday.
H:
He -- he told me that you did, and he said that he was
sorry that he had another engagement. He wanted to see
you.
HMJr:
It turned out I couldn't have seen him anyway.
H:
Yes.
HMJr:
But he 1s no less friendly?
H:
Not a bit in the world. No. No. He is in good shape,
I think.
HMJr:
Well, Johnny, if I'm home tomorrow, I'll see you.
H:
O.K. Fine.
HMJr:
Good night.
H:
Good night, and thank you.
Regraded Unclassified
149A
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Washington
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE,
Press Service
Friday, December 9, 1938.
No. 15-65
Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau today announced the subscription
figures and the bases of allotment for the cash offering of 2-3/4 percent
Treasury Bonds of 1960-65 and of 1-1/8 percent Treasury Notos of Scries B-1943.
Roports received from the Foderal Reserve banks show that cash sub-
scriptions for the offering of Treasury bonds aggregate $5,732,000,000 and for
the offoring of Tronsury notes aggregate $3,646,000,000. Subscriptions for
the bonds were allotted 7 percent, and subscriptions for the notes were allotted
9 porcent. No proferred allotment was given, and subscriptions for both issuos
were allotted on a straight percentogo basis, with adjustments, where necossary.
to the $100 donomination.
Further details as to subscriptions and allotments will be announced
when final reports are received from the Fodoral Roserve banks.
000
Regraded Unclassified
150
RE FEDERAL BUDGET AND RECOVERY
December 9, 1938.
(Meeting at 2211 30th Street)
5:15 p.m.
Present:
Mr. Hanes
Mr. Taylor
Mr. Bell
Mr. White
Mr. Stewart
Mr. Williams
Mr. Viner
Mr. Currie
H.a.Jr:
Well ....
Stewert:
Here we are.
H.M.Jr:
Are you fellows "learnt"?
Stewe rt:
We've been doing our best to learn.
H.M.Jr:
Uh-huh.
Bell:
Burnt.
H.A.Jr:
Learnt.
Bell:
Burnt.
H.M.Jr:
No - learnt.
Stewart:
We've had a full day seminar.
H.a.Jr:
Did you? Well, it's terribly nice of you to give it
all the time; but it is swfully important if it's
right, and it's more importent If it's wrong.
White:
It's very much more important.
H.M.Jr:
Well, which one of you g entlemen wants to
....
White:
I can just probably start it off; then they can
speak for themselves individually; because we
didn't have a great deal of time to sum up the
views.
Regraded Unclassified
151
-2-
We started with an agenda and moved through it,
discussing Questions of what the national income
would be and what the budget might be, and then
went on to the specific problems that you were
interested in. And I think it's the feeling of
the men who were there that that approach as a
method of either determining what changes to make
in the budget or as a method of presentation is
quite unsatisfactory, and that there wesn't enough
time to see whether any positive contributions might
be made either in the direction of suggesting
specific changes in the budget or specific measures
outside the budget; that would be a matter for sub-
sequent discussion.
Now, with that very preliminary cursory observation,
I think they each ought to speak for themselves,
express their own views on the subject.
H.M.Jr:
Shall we go around the way you're sitting? Jake?
Where's Professor Hansen?
White:
Well, Professor Hansen wasn't able to attend all
day. He started in, had a half hour; then he sent
word through John Williams that something very
important to him had come up in the Social Security
Board and ne couldn't get away today.
E.M.Jr:
Fine.
Williams:
Some question that he was expected to declare himself
on today.
H.M.Jp:
I see.
Williams:
Be had agreed to come down for that.
H.M.Jr:
Jake?
Viner:
Why, what I got that was positive 1s the desirability
of studying both the revenue and the expenditure
aspects of the budget to see whether you can select
certain items and say those items would be - are
most - let's say on the revenue side, are most
hurtful to business recovery, and those that are
.52
-3-
less; and that if you can make any shifts, the
snifts should be from the former to the latter.
Similarly in the expenditures, that some could be
selected as more stimulative to business recovery
and others as less, and that the expenditures
should be shifted as far as possible in the
direction of the former and away from the latter,
in so far as other considerations don't stand in
the way.
On the method of presentation there, aside from the
logic still, mere mode of presentation, I feel
myself that you mustn't use any figure unless you
are prepared or have somebody else prepared to
explain in pretty specific terms just how you
resuned it; that you can't t defend a budget in
terms of
Bell:
Telking about the multiplier now.
Viner:
Yes.
"dite:
Several possibilities; not only the multiplier
Viner:
but the percentage of expenditures which get
into consumption. If they ask you the question
"How do you get that figure?" you must be able
to answer it; if you can't answer it, you mustn't
use the figure.
If you could come to a pretty definite consensus
on the arranging of the items, it might be worthwhile
to out them in en order - say, E, B, C, D, E - not
use any ratios, but put them in an order of desire-
bility, which is just another way of saying you're
going to compare the merits of the various items,
say "this is more or less bad than that." I
wouldn't go any farther than that; I mean as far
as figures are concerned, in order of rank is as
far as I'd go, and I'm not sure that you can safely
go that far.
May I ask you a question? Is it true
- or maybe
I could either - need to ask either White or Currie -
that those multipliers were arrived at by
figuring the things backwards?
"hite:
I suspect that those multipliers were arrived at by
Regraded Unclassified
153
-4-
merely B preliminary estimate on the basis of
what Jake has just said: saying that "these are
high, these are low, and these are about medium";
and then there have been some studies and a lot
of writing with respect to the rank of multipliers
done in theoretical work, and that he had some
familiarity with that work
H.M.Jr:
Perdon me - who is "he"?
White:
Sanford, whatever nis name is, at the New York Bank.
and that he said, "This is the high multiplier;
we'll use the figure 3g. This is a low multiplier;
we'll use 8 figure of 1. This is somewhere in between;
we'll use 2 or 25."
I suspect that that was the way it WES arrived at.
Williams:
I think we ought to say, as long as Senford's name
has been mentioned, that he was pulled in on this
job.
White:
I don't know anything sbout his merit.
Williams:
He has no conviction about it. He was asked to do it.
8.4.Jr:
Mr. Vice Presldent, it's no reflection on your bank.
Williams:
1 wanted to make the point clear.
H.M.Jr:
Even though I'm & little wrong here, E little wrong
there, I've still got my sense of humor.
White:
I still - John, I dian't say the Bank of New York.
Williams:
Nor even Sanford.
6.M.Jr:
Just the reason I raised the question at this time -
in discussing this with some Treasury people, the only
way tney could arrive at it is that they had the
expenditures and they had the collections and they
had the national debt figure and they just worked
it backwards and arrived at the multipliers and then
arranged them accordingly. I wondered whether that
was what
Regraded Unclassified
154
-5-
mite:
I don't think that was done. Oh no, what they did
was not a substantial violation of the logic. I
think you probably would find agreement here that
the range of what they were driving at - what they
called the multiplier - was about two and less than
four, whatever you call it; and that there would be
some order of hign, low, and middle. And once naving
granted that you would get variations and that the
variations, the relative movements, would not be
greatly different, 30 with different points of view
you might get one one way or the other. But I don't
think they attempted to fix up the multiplier in
order to make the end result come out, because it
wasn't necessary and they wouldn't have gotten eny-
where substantially even if they tried to do it.
H.M.Jr:
Snall I go on to Professor Williams?
Viner:
I'm through.
williams:
Well, I thought ne had done B good job in arranging
these multipliers, though I agree ne did it in this
general way: The range is in here somewhere, and
here's & tax that affects consumption a good deal
and nere's one that probably affects it very little.
Well, you get your extreme, then you fit them in the
best way you can. But I don't feel that you can do
much with that approach. That is, we all know, we
knew before, that taxes have a certain impact; some
bear on consumption, some on investment, some on
savings. Similarly with expenditures. I don't feel
that we know any more about it now than we did
before, and that the real problem is Just about
where it was before, and I should think we'd have
to 60 at it in other ways than this one.
You wouldn't go as far as Viner: tast we could, for
instance, arrange them in their order of - let's
say, h, B, C.
Williams:
I think it would be very desirable to arrange them
in this order internally, that is. to say, within the
Treasury, and to give thought to it and perhaps change
tue order as you got more light. But I should think
it would be very undesirable to publish any such list.
I think we're not sure enough of our ground to do
that.
Regraded Unclassified
155
-6-
K.d.dri
Well, do you feel that there is, for instance, a
difference as one is to three between some kinds of
taxes? Is there that much difference?
Williams:
I think probably SO, I can't see it clearly, talking
in terms of one and three; I prefer to say that some
taxes have S very great effect on consumption, others
have very little effect. I don't know what the
figures are; I don't believe anybody does.
Taylor:
Might even be more.
Williams:
Might even be more.
Taylor:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Stewart?
Stewart:
I think the question partly is whether or not this is
a promising approach to a problem, with enough promise
30 that in the near future it's going to have practical
value. I should doubt whether you'd be able to agree
among yourselves as to the order of the incidence of
each item.
Part of the idea is a very simple idea. We have
always known that taxation of various kinds has had
varying effects on consumption, and so forth, but
when you get to determining the precise amount, under-
take to assign a figure, I don't think we know enough
or anybody knows enough at the present time to do any
such thing at all. It struck me, ¿S I said at the
meeting, ES just assigning numbers rather than giving
any sort of statistical figure for it.
So it doesn't strike me really as a promising line
of inquiry for any practical effect.
n.a.Jr:
Not enough for the present to philosophize about it.
Stewart:
It's in the field of abstract ideas. Then the
question is whether or not in the field of abstract
ideas, and in the hope you'll get more figures in
more time, it's worth while working at. That's a
separate question.
Viner:
Do you mean by that, Stewart, that you wouldn't say
as between two taxes, that in 8 given stage of 8
Regraded Unclassified
156
-7-
business cycle, one was & more preferable form than
another in its effects on the economy?
Stewart:
question of ranking the whole group is what we were
telking about; and even as between one and another,
I think it would be swfully difficult to do.
Williams:
The extremes are pretty easy.
Currie:
Actually I think all that's necessary - there's only
a few things which offer a possibility of change,
and there your investigation could be concentrated.
williams:
Aving in mind, too, the administrative difficulties;
it is very difficult to treat these things flexibly,
it seems to me, especially on the revenue side. If
you know your extremes, know à few instances where
you are fairly sure of your ground, that may be very
useful in thinking about the problem and preparing
tax measures or passing upon new tax proposals. It
might be useful. but as for setting it up as a
general framework of attack on the problem, parti-
cularly publicly - that would seem to be a very
great mistake, to me.
H.M.Jr:
well, I'm going to be terribly frank, the way I lways
am when you people come down to advise me. As
Secretary of the Treasury, not as chairman of this
other committee, I just want to ask Currie and White:
supposing I decide that this thing is not practical
and I don't want to recommend 1t; what are the chances,
do you think, that they'll go around me anyway and
get it to the President?
white:
No, not one chance in D thousand.
H.A.Jr:
Are you sure?
White:
Positively.
Currie:
I know that Chairman Eccles has grave reservations
along the lines that have been expressed.
H.W.Jr:
Really?
White:
And there were in the Industrial Committee. You see,
what we did, Mr. Secretary, was try two other
approaches which were less undesirable, let's put it,
Regraded Unclassified
157
-8-
than that original one, and seeing whether we
could save out of that some concept which would
enable a presentation possibly in the forms of
high, low, and middle, or more or less of each
desirable, or in some rough quantitative forms
of the other. but I know that the criticisms and
suggestions which they had to make will be given
consideration, so that if there is conviction that
the thing doesn't work there, I would say there
isn't a chance in the world that they' go around.
But there are certain other aspects of it that
possibly present two points of view that go to
little more fundamental issues about which there
will have to be further discussion. But none of
it will emerge until that's discussed with you.
I'm positive 01° that. Wouldn't you (Currie) say
that?
Currle:
Oh yes.
Aniter
Nothing I could be more positive of, because there
would be just nell to pay: because we know how the
technical men feel about this thing.
Currie:
Yes.
H.Z.Jr:
Well, you people - now shall I say - who are present-
ing the evidence, so to speek
Currie:
AS you know, I nsd no responsibility for this method
of approach, and I felt just as Mr. Viner has put it,
that it's perfectly valid 85 a qualitative matter.
We all have, I think, a firm conviction that certain
types of taxes are more repressive than others and
that certain types of expenditures are more expansive
than others. But when you start to apply a definite
figure to any individual tax receipt or tax expendi-
ture, then I think you expose yourself to attacks
on that definite figure - "How diù you arrive at it?"
It might be this; it might be that. We're not in a
position statistically, in quantitative terms, to
defend that figure. I'll maintain that practically
all W.P.A. figures will stimulate consumption - very
stimulating. But if you'd have to put & percentage -
very difficult.
H.M.Jr:
Well, may I just keep on the tax and revenue thing
Regraded Unclassified
158
-9-
thing for a minute. I'm not digressing, but I'm
coming over now into - you know, I can't emphasize
how confidential this is, but here's the thing
that's placing Bell, Hanes and myself - this is the
thing. We've really got only from now until Monday
night. I see it's out in the paper now that the
President is going to see the leaders, the Vice
President and the rest of them, the 17th; so between
now and the 17th, he's saying to us, "Well, if you've
got something, give it to us." I don't know whether
he said that to you (Bell), but he said it to me.
So I stalled him until Monday afternoon so I could
get you people down to look at this thing.
Now roughly - Dan, you bring me up to date - the next
budget that we're working.on, without the additional
things, planes, anything over and above, just the way
we stand tonight - the expenditure's around nine
billion, isn't it?
Bell:
Yes, that's right; they're under nine billion, they're
high in the eights.
Hanes:
Eight six.
H.V.Jr:
"nat?
Hanes:
About eight six.
H.d.Jr:
How much?
Bell:
That much if you consider about a billion and 8 half
for WPA.
H.M.Jr:
There you are. You're getting the very inside.
Billion and a half for relief brings it up to eight
six. Nothing in there for planes.
Bell:
Nothing for the new program. The old plane program
is in there.
H.M.Jr:
And if you put in the new plane program, it might be
500 million to a billion.
Bell:
That's what they're talking about. I don't think they
can spend that much money.
Regraded Unclassified
159
-10-
H.V.Jr:
Anyway, it's between 500 million and a billion.
So the program on the expenditure side is roughly
eight six
Bell:
... without - yes.
H.M.Jr:
Without the extra planes. And the other thing might
be 500 million to a billion. But I haven't talked to
the President in two weeks, so I don't know where he
is after two weeks. I don't know whether you (Bell)
have.
Dell:
No, I haven't. I don't think ne knows. He's waiting
for a definite program from the War Department.
H.M.Jr:
From the War Department.
Bell:
That's right.
H.M.Jr:
And if the present tax base is not changed and if
business - George Baas says the national income for
the next calendar year will be about the same as it
is this year; quoting Currie and nis people, they
think it willbe about five billion more, or sround
68 billion. night?
Currie:
68 as compared to 62 this year.
R.M.Jr:
And George says it will be
vorrie:
Income paid out will be the same.
H.I.Jr:
If it stays at 62, then, as I say, we take in
about five billion dollars next year.
bell:
houghly, yes.
8.2.Jr:
And if he's (Currie) right, we'll take in about five
and a half billion.
Banes:
Nearer six.
Bell:
Really?
danes:
I think so.
H.M.Jr:
Well, let's split the difference and say that our
income for next year - and that's only for six
months of it - is five and B half billion; let's be
Regraded Unclassified
100
-11-
on the conservative side. And let's say that
we're going to spend 500 million for planes. Let's
say it's going to be nine billion dollars, see? So
the deficit is a difference between five and a half
and nine, or
...
Bell:
Three and & half.
H.M.Jr:
-hree and a half. dight?
Bell:
Right.
H.M.Jr:
And it might be even more - four. And the deficit -
it looks to us like a deficit of between three and
four billion.
Viner:
Is that eight six figured on the basis of appropria-
tions or on the basis of expectations, or on - as to
what they'll actually spend?
Bell:
That's an expenditure figure, but it's very rough,
because we haven't had the final figures, in any
case. But I can't see any material difference
between next year and this year, including WPA.
Viner:
What's it going to be this year?
Bell:
Be around eight nine.
Viner:
Fight nine.
Bell:
Probably a little higher because of the additional
requirements for WPA, but not much over nine.
Viner:
And the revenues?
Bell:
Revenues were last estimated at five billion. That
hasn't been changed.
H.M.Jr:
Am I right that it will be between three and four
billion?
Bell:
I think that's a conservative estimate.
Hanes:
I didn't hear the first part of it.
H.M.Jr:
I said the deficit, as of tonight - between three
and four billion.
Regraded Unclassified
181
-12-
Hines:
Yes.
Bell:
Inat's right.
H.M.Jr:
Somewhere, depending on where the national income
goes and how much extra for the planes, between
three and four billion.
Taylor:
In terms of & net contribution, would it be that,
or is that an accounting job?
Bell:
that's the budget deficit.
B.M.Jr:
Now here's the thing: what can we do about it? See?
I mean that's our problem.
Anite:
dr. Secretary, most of the discussion, practically
all of it, relates to - their opinion is pertinent
merely to that form of presentation on these other
issues; as to what can be done on the outer budget,
investments, and so forth,
c.M.Jr:
I know.
*nite:
they didn't have much time.
L.V.Jr:
I know, but as long as they're here I'm going to
give them the works. I mean there's no use having
part of the picture. They might just as well have
the whole picture and get part of my headache.
And the reason for the - now, one of the suggestions
was made, and that comes back to this thing. And
the President liked it, and he's in that mood. I
have never seen him in the mood where he really is
more enxious for constructive suggestions than he
is now. I mean he's hungry for some of us to tell
him what to do. And he's very anxious to keep the
budget deficit down to at least - what did he say,
8 billion and & half or two? Two, wasn't it?
Hell:
No, he was talking first about the two and a half
billion figure that we took him.
H.M.Jr:
Then he wanted to cut.
well:
de wanted to try not to increase it beyond that,
Regraded Unclassifie
102
-13-
find some way of financing the additional expendi-
tures that would increase that deficit.
H.A.Jr:
Now, the simplest way is the suggestion - efter all -
Was that if you take the present War Department and
Navy Department budget, it comes to approximately a
billion one.
Bell:
That's right.
H.M.Jr:
And then you add as much more as he decides and
Congress decides for the planes. I mean it can be -
whatever it is - but - and the thought that we went
to nim with - and that comes back to this thing, you
see - was the possibility of e national defense tax,
with some kind of a stamp - battleships, sirplanes -
so everybody knew, whatever the thing was, that was
it. Of course, the easiest thing you think of is a
sales tax, and we got some figures out on from one
to five percent on the sales tax; a one percent tax
produced $308,000,000.
Bell:
277, wasn't it?
danes:
Well, it was about - you've got to figure that out
a little differently than we did before, because it
depends so much on whether you cancel the present
excise taxes, which yield about $380,000,000 a year.
H.H.Jr:
That's the figure I had in mind.
lianes:
The present excise taxes, which are sales taxes,
yield about $380,000,000. Well, if you're going
to - of course, this wouldn't be done, because
certain of those excises would not be changed; for
instance, your tax on tobacco would certainly not
be reduced. Therefore, you've got to eliminate the
tobacco taxes, for instance, which yield about
$400,000,000. But leave that out. That'll make 8
big nole in your 380 million.
H.M.Jr:
But new?
Banea:
The new taxes would yield about $230,000,000 per cent.
H.M.Jr:
Per cent. That's the easiest, and that's why I'm
coming back to this multiplier business. A person
could very easily raise another billion dollars with
Regraded Unclassified
163
-14-
a five-cent
Bell:
Four-cent
H.N.Jr:
four-cent sales tax. Now, in recommending that -
let's say that the Treasury and I decided to recom-
mend that, and are we recommending something which is
more deflationary than any other tax, you see? I
mean that's - and if that's correct and there isn't -
I'm convinced that there is very little chance of
outting down on the expenditure side - what other
form of taxation can we suggest to keep this deficit
within reasonable bounds? And that's, Harry, you
see
White:
That's the problem.
H.M.Jr:
that's why I figured - I mean you people are too
valuable to me to give you just a piece of the
picture. I've never done that. I've always given
it to you all. You've always kept the confidence.
Therefore, I want you to have the whole picture.
I think in five minutes I've given it to you. If
I haven't given it to you, Question me. But there's
the picture.
The easiest thing is the sales tax. Now, for the
first time since Roosevelt's been President, he
didn't throw us out of the office when we suggested
the sales tax. He liked it, and I think he'd take it.
But, on the other hand, you people may say, "Now
wait E minute, that's falling too hard on the
consumer classes, and that isn't - something else."
But there you are. Should we go, can we go through
another year with a three to four billion dollar
deficit, or should we make the extraordinary effort
to cut down, or should we try to do it through
revenue? Now, there's the picture.
And I don't expect you to give me an answer like
that. But I'd be more than pleased to have you
cross-examine me and Hanes and Bell. Have I stated
it about right?
Bell:
That's about right.
H.W.Jr:
Dan?
Regraded Unclassified
EC4
-15-
Bell;
That's Ell right.
anything happened since to change it?
Boll:
No.
H.W.Jr:
John?
danes:
No, that's about the story.
Well, there you are.
Stewart:
You estimate that from a four percent sales tax you
might get a billion dollar yield, is that it?
Bell:
On Mr. Hanes' estimate, 230 million at one percent,
you get about 920 million, somewhere between 900
million and a billion collars.
white:
Mr. Secretary, without their acceptance of any such
concept as an exact multiplier, they still might
agree or might not - at least it's a basis for dis-
cussion - that the effect on the income stream and
on consumption and on business of attacks of that
kind might be much worse than some other place, and
that the net effect on the addition to this, that or
the other thing
.....
So the mere fact they've
discarded this approach doesn't mean that the under-
lying concept doesn't play a role in tneir determina-
tion and decision as to whether this is & good or bad
thing.
H.s.dri
I said that. That's why I'm raising it. I say the
only one that we've been able to think of, where you
canget it fast and get it, is this one. But as I
say, in view of what we've done end what I've lis-
tened to, maybe this would be the worst tax I could
suggest.
Vinor:
I'd certainly say the repidity with which you could
collect it is 8 disadvantage rather than an adven-
tage, because the offsetting expenditures will be
delayed, and on past precedent they will be delayed
even beyond the program.
"nite:
Not only that, but even if they were not delayed,
there may still be added to the income stream less
than what you take out.
Regraded Unclassified
205
-16-
Viner:
That's another question. I'm talking now about the
repidity of the tax itself. I'd say on that ground
alone, if you were going to finance it by a sales
tax, I might enact it but I would delay it for
perhaps six months after you thought the expendi-
tures were booked really to tart.
Bell:
You mean they'd be delayed beyond the time when the
particular expenditures took place for which they
were levied.
Viner:
Well, I'd certainly delay it until not earlier than
the time at which the expenditures would actually
take place in the form of disbursements to the
public.
Bell:
You mean for the national defense program.
Viner:
Yes.
Williams:
How would Congress receive the suggestion about a
sales tax?
H.d.Jr:
Well, I can only tell you what I think. I think
I'm correct in this, and you better goback - a
little bit of history. I think that Jack Garner
has always been for this when he was Chairman of
the Ways and Means. I think he always was & sales
tax man.
Bell:
I really don't know. I would have said the other
way.
H.V.Jr:
I think that's right.
Gaston:
I think he proposed it once and then withdrew it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, my impression is that he is a sales tax man.
But I'm just bringing this up, having that chart in
mind. The sales tax, under that, would have a very
high multiplier. And is it the worst kind of sug-
gestion? And here you've got this thing and we're
right up against the gun. And I don't blame myself
and my associates for this, because as I told publicly
the press conference, we've just been sitting here
waiting until the President told us what the figures
Regraded Unclassified
186
-17-
are, and we don't know. And you might say, "Well,
why the hell call us down on Friday to give you an
answer Monday," when the answer is that, without
breaking any confidence, Danny was over this week
on the War Department thing
Bell:
Yes, sir.
E.V.Jr:
and you don't know what the answer is tonight,
do you?
Bell:
No, sir, not on the new program.
H.M.Jr:
I mean, so there you are.
Williams:
My feeling is it would be a bad tax under these con-
ditions, when we are still hoping for a real I' ecovery
and where it looks as though the national income
wouldn't be much above what it is now next year;
to throw a thing like that in would be putting some-
taing on the wrong side, I think.
H.M.Jr:
You do?
Viner:
I would say that I'd find a little difficulty in
finding a worse tax under these circumstances. I
think I could find a worse one.
Taylor:
well, how would you compare that in effect - I mean
this is just guessing - with a tax on bank deposits?
Viner:
You mean on idle ones?
Taylor:
"ell, don't care whether they're idle or not; it's
the same kind of a thing. I mean you can
Viner:
Also on Government money.
Taylor:
Yes.
white:
Have to do a lot of other things. Have to put it
on short-term bills.
Taylor:
I wasn't advocating it.
White:
You'd be able to sell short-term bills for a hundred
and whatever the tax was.
107
-18-
Viner:
Keynes came in with - that WAS his solution, in the
middle of 1934.
White:
Fellow worked - this fellow Dehlberg in a book last
year took all the ramifications of it.
Williams:
de's an old student of ours in Cambridge; I don't
know whether you remember him.
danes:
What's the experience in Canada with the sales tax?
Viner:
Their sales tax is now eight percent, which is a
huge sales tax - eight percent on manufactured sale
prices. But they tried to adjust it 50 there shouldn't
be pyramiding, but there is some pyramiding. It
amounts to 5.2 percent of the value of retail sales
in Canada. And there are a lot of exemptions -
foodstuffs, groceries, and agricultural implements.
Lots of things are exempt for the farmer, and some
foodstuffs. But it produces 5.2 percent; an eight
percent tax produces 5.2 percent of the total etail
sales in Canada.
Now, a lot of that tax never gets into retail sales.
It gets into sales of services. For instance,
maintenance 01 buildings - that shows itself in
rent, you see.
But I don't know howyou reached your estimates.
Did you base it on retail sales?
Banes:
These were the estimates that we prepared - were
translated into somewhat later terms, because
these were only at the time, you remember, back
in 1932
Viner:
Oh.
Hanes:
LaGuardia and Nob Doughton fought the battle on the
floor of the House and defeated what then looked to
be like a program for the sales tax; and the Treasury
apparently was called on at that time to make esti-
mates 88 to what they would produce based on 1931
total sales volume. Now, we took those figures just
as they were worked by the Treasury - we didn't
rework them, but as they were worked by the Treasury
at that time, and translated them into 1935, figuring
Regraded Unclassified
108
-19-
that 1935 was a year comparable with 1938 and 1939.
We translated those figures into the volume of 135,
and that's the way the figures were arrived at.
Viner:
I must say that the Canadian tax - it's eight
percent, but it's eleven percent on imported goods,
You see, they collect the eight percent plus 8
special three percent, which you may say is
simply additional to the tariff, although they
call it a sales tax.
Administratively it works surprisingly smoothly;
and the public, because it's a manufacturers" sales
tax and is often levied several stages before it
reaches the consumer and a long way back - the
consumer is scarcely conscious of it. But it is
B stiff tax on the lower classes.
And I'd say here that from all the evidence I know
our tax system is certainly sufficiently stiff on the
poor. I think it is sufficiently stiff on the poor,
it is desdening to investment and enterprise on the
very rich, and that it's the $2,500 to $10,000 income
people wao are so well offin this country, as compared
to almost snywhere in the world; unbelievable they've
been left alone 85 much as they have. I'd say if
you're going to tax in terms of equity, there is
the untouched tax capacity.
White:
There are two alternatives. That was one - not
twenty-five to ten, but twenty-five, I think, to
a hundred thousand, somewhere in that neighborhood,
in which these items, the surtax proposals which they
had, would yield approximately $400,000,000 - the
surtax proposal which the Tax Research has gotten
up.
Williams:
How much?
White:
The other alternative was the estate and gift tax,
which they hope would be 350 - about 750 between
them, those two taxes.
Henes:
Estate and gift taxes were higher than that - about
480 million.
White:
You mean the proposal - that would mean about eight
or nine hundred million on both, which would be pretty
substantially - don't know now much the expenditure
Regraded Unclassified
109
-20-
would be. And then that would have several advan-
tages as against the other. In the first place,
right along the principles which we were discussing -
it would fit that; and that really lies behind in
part your own conclusions AS to the desirability
of the tax.
Then, it would avoid the difficulty you (Viner)
guggested, which is E real one: getting the money
before you spend it, which would be nighly defla-
tionary; wheress, that kind of 8 tax would probably
postpone that particular thing, if it became effective.
Viner:
You should do that with any tax. You ought to be
careful as to that with any tax. You could do it
with the sales tax by enacting 8 tax now to take
effect at É certain future date. I'd say that you
Bught to watch that you don't collect the revenues
before you start the expenditures.
White:
Then, E sales tix of that magnitude would have a
terrible effect anyway.
Viner:
A one percent sales tex, I'd say, isn't worth
collecting, doesn't produce enough revenue; it
isn't worth collecting.
Williams:
Woulan't the tax measure be under discussion during
the winter - wouldn't it - 1f you were going to do
enything about it?
H.d.Jr:
I would be surprised if the tax thing would come up
much before March. And of course, if I could write
it - I've said so; I'd say it again - I don't think
the tax bill should be passed until the last piece
or expenditure legislation is passed. I think that
you should get all the expenditure legislation and
keep your Ways and Means Committee back as a club
and say, "Now, we're not going to pass any tax
legislation until we hear the last appropriation
bill is passed."
Dan and I have talked this, haven't we? I mean I
think that's the thing to do, and of course to nold
it back just as long as possible. But what we have
to do for the President in his budget message is to
indicate the sources of revenue, lle always have,
haven't we, Dan?
Regraded Unclassified
170
-21-
Bell:
Well, sometimes we have. Put it's required in the
Act; the budget and accounting Act requires him to
state how the expenditures will be financed.
williams:
I feel that one of the important things that came
out today was - well, first, that there would be no
great increase of national income next year; and
then, more particularly, that the first quarter would
be down. I don't know myself whether that's so or
not, but I think that's the opinion here in Washington
among the economists. And if that's true, then I
think it becomes El very serious question whether any
kind of tax increase wouldn't be unfavorably
received and might not have a bad effect.
H.E.Jr:
Pardon me - you mean for the first quarter of the
next calendar year?
Williams:
+es. If you could tax idle savings and be sure of
doing it, why, I think I would be in favor of it.
But I think it is really very difficult to do that
without repercussions on sentiment and incentive to
investment and all that sort of thing. And if that's
the case and if the national income is not going to
be much above what it is now, I myself would be in-
clined to justify snother deficit. If it is felt
that for military reasons we must increase expendi-
tures, and if as a consequence of that we're to have
a deficit of the same general order of magnitude as
we have had, I would take that line on it, I think,
rather than try to increase the revenue; that's
elways calculated, I think,
H.2.Jr:
Well, I think - I mean we all agree that the kind of
taxes we have and the new taxes to be imposed would
have E definite influence on how much recovery we're
going to have.
Williams:
I should think SO.
H.M.Jr:
And I don't think that this Administration has paid
enough attention to that in the past.
Williams:
Uh-huh.
H.M.Jr:
I mean - what? I think they get all
Regraded Unclassified
171
-22-
White:
That's the basis of discussion: as to whether that
can be presented.
H.M.Jr:
Again in this room, I think too much attention has
been paid to the social effect and not enough to
how much income it will generate or
Viner:
... suppress.
H.a.dr:
Suppress. And I don't think we've approached it
enough from the standpoint of the net result in terms
of national Income, and that is - I think maybe out
of this chart will come that, and if we could get
What I'd like to do, gentlemen, is this, and I think
I'm right on this. I'm terribly anxious to get the
President to talk in terms of national income as an
objective. I'm terribly anxious to have him so
minded that when anybody brings anything to him he
will say, "Wait a minute, will this increase or
decrease the national income?" He's never done
that before. I think he is receptive to that if
we canget him to do that and express that philosophy,
if we're sure we're right. I'm pretty sure myself
that that's right and that that will be a big step
forward. I don't know how you feel.
Williams:
Oh yes.
B.M.or:
Now, we've never done that. Just say to anybody
that comes with a scheme, "Now wait a minute,
gentlemen, when this is through will this add or
subtract to the national income?"
Viner:
Put in other words, that's the old issue of
recovery versus reform.
H.M.Jr:
Well, all right, let's go that far, Jake.
Viner:
On, I'm for it; I always was.
White:
Of course, you used the word "reform" just a moment
ago
H.M.Jr:
Just E moment; knowing my President
....
Viner:
I think it's reform
Regraded Unclassified
172
-23-
H.M.Jr:
Just a minute.
....and knowing myself, that doesn't
mean I'd be for giving up old-age pensions and stuff
like that. See what I mean? I mean I think what
we've got, that sort of thing, we ought to keep.
Don't you?
Viner:
why, sure. I played some part in their having it.
Can't take that away from me, Harry.
H.M.Jr:
So I think there's a big job that We can do, without
using multipliers.
milliams:
Yes.
White:
You (Viner) spoke of taxing the poor too much. That's
what made me think of that.
Currie:
I think anything that decreases consumption next
year, when your plant is working at a low degree of
capacity, will be very defletionary. I think we
should avoid every possible way of decreasing con-
sumption. In fact, I think what we have to aim for
before we expect really substantial volume of capital
investments - that you have to increase consumption
sufficiently to more or less utilize the existing
plant before you expect to get any substantial volume
or new capital investment.
H.m.Jr:
Now, I just - and I know Jake likes to have fun -
I don't think it's a question of being against -
I don't think you have to weigh recovery and reform.
Taylor:
No, not at all.
Viner:
No. Of course, my position has been all along that
if you don't get recovery, you can't get reform.
H.l.Jr:
You can't hold reform unless you get recovery; can't
hold what we've got unless we get recovery.
Viner:
I hadn't thought of it from that angle, but there's B
lot in that, too.
H.M.Jr:
We can't hold reform unless we get recovery.
Viner:
I think that's probably true.
Regraded
173
-24-
White:
I take it Jake agrees that the criterion of a tex
should not be sociological.
Viner:
The things that I thought stood in the way were
punishment taxes and punishment sctivities and
threats on alleged reform grounds, and my point
was that those things were probably causing more
damage to the classes they were supposed to help
by reterding recovery than they were certainly
bringing benefit in their moral satisfaction or
otherwise.
White:
Couldn't we pursue Jake's line of thought and
possibly come out with something of that sort instead
of attempting to give any Quantitative figures on
it: merely allocate the kind of taxes which we're
likely to alter - don't have to go through the whole
list, because some we're not going to change anyway -
and say they're high, low, or medium, or some other
such qualitative terms; and, using that as the sort
of a symbol for the effect on the national income
of the specific tax under specific conditions which
we're envisaging, we can label these taxes as high,
low, medium or what not, and their effect on national
income.
Viner:
On some of them I think you may.
White:
This particular tax. We're not concerned with some
of them. There's no use talking about the effect of
paying interest on the public debt; we're not going
to stop paying interest, and we're not going to pay
more interest. But we may alter the estate taxes,
may alter the excise taxes, and those we can label
with some degree of unanimity in qualitative and
quantitative terms.
Stewart:
I should be doubtful about that as far 88 I'm
concerned, because I don't know enough to know what
the shifting and incidence of taxation is - shifting
and general incidence of taxation. I'm not confident
that we know enough about its bearing on national
income.
The criterion of taxation that appeals to me first
as a measure of desirability is that - my first
ranking is that of simplicity. When you pass from
that and say, "How does it bear on different classes
Regraded
274
-25-
in the community?" I em affected by the advantages
that come from not impairing the income of the lower
groups in the community; that is not with mference
to total national income, it is because I believe in
progressive taxation and so on. When I begin to
figure out what is the effect as a stimulus on the
business community and therefore upon the national
income of 0 flow of consumption and a flow of
investment, and the Influence upon enterprise, and
30 on, I'm extremely doubtful in the whole field.
I agree.
Stexart:
I should be most hesitant to arrange this thing in
an order which would say, "This is the way in which
tue national income is going to be affected."
Malse:
About that there is a very definite cleavage of
opinion, Mr. Secretary. And I think that what I
said earlier in the evening about there being no
danger of anything being put over on you - that
presupposes that there would not be further dis-
cussion about this engle and that it would not have
your acceptance and approval. I mean about that
point and not about the earlier discussion; but
about the ability to label a specific tax proposal
such as a sales tax as edding or subtracting from
the national income stream, I think there is a
definite difference of opinion which would have to
be tureshed out.
Currie:
I don't think, Harry, there really is a difference
of opinion. I think we'd all agree that a sales
tax now would probably be the most repressive type
of any tax you'd Impose.
shite:
I didn't know.
Currie:
and that more taxes in the middle income brackets
and the estate taxes would be less repressive.
Viner:
On the shifting and incidence, I'd say I'd be
perhaps, from the business cycle - the effect on
the income stream, I think I'd be more opposed
to a sales tax if I thought it weren't shifted
to consumers. And I'm opposed to a sales tax,
that is, a new sales tax, until the shifting
Regraded Unclassified
275
-26-
process has been solved, because its first impact
is to Just slice profit margins.
Williams:
Isn't this our idea: that we All agree that certain
taxes would affect consumption in deflationary ways?
we're all agreed on that. And where the question
comes in is, what's the effect of taxes on invest-
ment and incentive to invest on idle savings, and
that whole area. I'd find very much more diffi-
culty
White:
It was in regard to the first one
Stewart:
I doubt whether you're going to raise & billion
dollars of additional taxes without some defla-
tionary effect.
Viner:
Sure you can't.
Stewart:
When you go to that step, then you begin to consider
alternatives; when you begin to consider alterna-
tives, then you've got E combination of the human
feeling about the lower income classes of the
community, combined with the fact that the man who
has the larger income is usually the man who func-
tions as an entrepreneur, who hires people, and you
affect employment by affecting the incentives of
the man to employ somebody. In that field I'm
vague. I think Viner is much better prepared to
discuss this than I am. The reason I make an
exception is, I don't feel sure how these things
work out. I think there is always 8 risk about
a scheme that recommends itself on simple grounds
and discarding it because it isn't clear - an idea
which isn't very clear and which seems to have some
disadvantages. I don't say I'm for a sales tax;
I'm just not clear, so I don't really want to take
a position.
H.M.Jr:
You're not either for or against.
Stewart:
I Just don't want to commit myself.
E.d.Jr:
You also don't want to take the position - just a
little hint that Williams dropped - whether we
should attempt to raise the tax base at all.
Excuse me. I've got a couple doctors here. I'll
Regraded Unclassified
176
-27-
be back in a couple minutes. When I come down
I'm going to take an entirely different angle, and
I want to talk about expenditures. I want to talk
about - excuse me a minute - I want to talk about
expenditures.
(Secretary leaves room. Informal
discussion in small g roups continues
for ten or fifteen minutes until
Secretary returns)
H.M.Jr:
Do you mind - is this a pause?
Viner:
It's a pause.
H.M.Jr:
Well, the way I see this thing heading up is this:
1. Should we increase the tax base? 2. If so,
what kind of taxes? Huh?
Viner:
Well, I don't think the basic question has yet been
answered 88 to whether you should increase taxes at
all.
H.A.Jr:
Has it?
White:
No.
H.M.Jr:
That's what I say.
Viner:
Tax base - I thought he meant the income tax base.
Gaston:
He means the structure.
H.M.Jr:
I say: 1. Should we increase the total amount of
taxation - the tax structure? 2. If so, what should
we do?
Now I want to talk a minute on the other side. I'm
going a little bit out of my field. Bell's got to
help me. we haven't talked anything about expendi-
tures. The biggest single item after national
defense is agriculture. And the agricultural
appropriation is well over 8 billion dollars. Hanes -
I haven't had a chance - he's got the thing; they're
all fussing about a processing tax.
But again very much in the room, the one philosophy
Regraded Unclassified
-77
-28-
that Wallace nas had that has stuck to him is that
If the manufacturer is protected by e tariff, the
farmer should be protected by the same amount, and
therefore he's entitled to something to take the
place of the tariff; and in addition the city man
is being taken care of by a billion and a half for
unemployment, which he charges up to the city - the
unemployment load, plus the tariff load, and he says
the farmer should have his.
well, 1f you examine that, there is in that field
there well over a billion dollars which is going
to them, and - It will take me & couple minutes
to do this thing - we're finding ourselves rapidly -
very, very rapidly getting into a much worse position
then the Farm Board ever WES, with the technique of
Elways spending more money on top of more money on
top of more money to hola the price. We have now got
loans on or control ten million bales of cotton.
and as one very able farm economist told me the
other day - he's & really sincere person - he said,
"I'm not sure that all the money and everything that
you're doing on cotton isn't simply aggravating the
situation, as long ES you keep building up the amount
or cotton which the Government owns."
I'm not going to try to solve the agricultural problem,
but I'm talking in terms of big expenditures. And
you talk about getting money, Currie, outside the
budget - I mean look at the money that we've got tied
up in crops.
Viner:
Is that in the budget?
T.M.Jrs
Yes.
White:
Past budget.
R.R.Jrs
But it will take de a couple m nutes, if you'll be
a little patient with me.
AS I sey, that's the one thing that Wallace has
been consistent on. That's one thing we've averaged
one-sevento of the expenditure on, and I'll say in
this room I don't think we've gotten - ever gotten
our money's worth.
Regraded Inclassified
178
-29-
I think that as we go along and struggle, try to
reise two, three, four hundred million dollars more
money, we should in that struggle also look at big
expenditures - now, we went all through this thing
last year - and also weigh them as to their effect
on the prices. I'm particularly talking about
agriculture, because I'm convinced that the biggest
drag on recovery now is commodity prices, and I
can't see anything that Agriculture is suggesting
which is going to get us out of this situation. And
I taink - I'm very much afraid that in the next
two years we're just going to get deeper and deeper,
and it all comes out of the budget, sná we're piling
up these vast quantities of commodities which are
just depressant on the market. I'm talking in terms
of recovery, talking in terms of the budget; and I
tnink when we look at this thing we can't just over-
look an expenditure of a billion two - what is it?
Bell:
About a billion dollars. Billion two if you include
roads.
B.V.Jr:
Well, including roads, a billion two.
Viner:
You can't include roads.
H.M.or:
Pardon?
Vinera
You can't include roads.
8.5.dg:
Let's call it a billion dollars, and put roads where
It belongs, as a part of public works.
+hen the other thing on the expenditure side which
I think ought to be weighed - I mean there is
certainly - there is nothing which is pressing down
more, and we can worry about sterling and everything
else, but just as long as we have these huge stocks
of commodities, increasing hourly, and ell coming
out of the budget - I don't know anything which is
more deflationary than that. And the great trouble
is, again digressing a little bit, that what bothers
me the most is that the schemes, which are half-
baked, are more and more coming out of Agriculture
in order to kind of patch over this situation rather
than face this situation just coldly - I mean in a
cold-blooded way. I mean they're more - every day
I get things from the President which I know come
Regraded Inclassified
279
-30-
from Agriculture, which have nothing to do with
agriculture, but are right in my shop, in order
to kind of patch over this situation.
Then the other thing which I think on the expendi-
ture side - if we go into five hundred million or
a billion more money for national defense, plus all
the ships of the Maritime, everything else, I think
we've got to make up our minds that we've got to
take care of so many unemployed until we get this
machine going much faster than it's ever gone before.
Until we get up around 150 in the Federal Reserve
index, we're not going to do anything, we won't
reach a point where we can absorb the employables.
At least that's the way I feel. And how much on the
expenditure side will national defense do in taking
care of the unemployed, and if the President decides
to spend, say, two billion dollars for national
defense, does he still have to spend a billion and
a half on the unemployed? In other words, all I'm
suggesting is that we kind of take a look on the
expenditure side and just don't say, "Well, that
can't be touched," because I don't think that that's
correct, particularly when you take a look at
agriculture.
And I'd like to see you people - very friendly and
don't mind a little punishment - I'd just like to
throw that at you, I mean, as well as the other thing.
Stewart:
The billion dollars represents the annual expenditure
for the accumulation of surplus products?
taylor:
No.
stewart:
what's the billion dollars?
Taylor:
That's the total agricultural program. That includes
various things.
Bell;
That includes the AAA program.
Taylor:
Regular expenditures of the Department, and so on.
stewart:
Decreasing production.
H.M.Jr:
But it all goes out of the budget.
Regraded Inclassifier
180
-31-
Viner:
But doesn't inclue R.E.A. and doesn't include
Farm Credit appropriation.
bell:
No.
Viner:
Does it include rural relief?
Bell:
Yes, it includes the Farm Security Administration,
which is part of the Agriculture Departme nt.
White:
what was that R.E.A.?
Bell:
Rural Electrification Administration. Does not
include that. They're spending this year a
hundred million dollars. They'll drop a little
next year, unless Congress increases it.
Taylor:
I've got a bad thought to give you, Henry. Ne
passed him the other day - and service on the
public debt.
H.W.Jr:
We passed?
Bell:
Agriculture.
Taylors
Caught up. I hate to bring that up, but I mean
It's
H.M.Jr:
Doesn't bother me.
Viner:
It seems to me back in 134 and '35 we were figuring
the same way, and you were discussing the Department
of Agriculture appropriation as the measure of the
agricultural expenditures, and there were scattered
things outside which brought it up to 30 percent.
In other words, there are other things which go to
the farmer. Your figure is the Department of Agri-
culture figure.
Bell:
That's right. There are other expenditures such
as the R.E.A.
Viner:
I think there's something to be said for getting them
into a gross figure.
B.d.Jp:
I wasn't trying to - I was thinking in terms of
expenditures which are deflationary.
Regraded Unclassified
181
-32-
Currie:
I think in those terms, Mr. Secretary, putting
aside the questions of justice or equity, that
that type of expenditure - probably any r eduction
in that would be, as far as I'd be concerned, the
same as the equivalent reduction in housing expendi-
ture, something like that, from the point of view
Bell:
In other words, that has a high multiplier.
Currie:
That has a high multiplier. I'd say the money that
goes to the farmer in benefit payments is almost
entirely spent.
Bell:
That's like a WPA expenditure.
Viner:
Well, if the farmer is paying his debts
White:
It's not the same.
H.M.or:
Just 8 minute, I want to ask Currie - I wouldn't
argue with you a bit that the check which goes to
the farmer to reduce his acreage in cotton - that
the actual check that he gets - that that particular
check he spends and it will help the stores; but
look at the purpose.
Currie:
Well, there again, Mr. Secretary, it seems to me
like so many of these problems - the railway
problem, farm problem itself - and it must be
inevitably a program of patching unless we get up
the national income. 75 percent of farm income
is derived from dairy, livestock, fruit and vege-
tables sold to urban workers; we really can't
solve the farm problem until we get the urban
income up; and apart from that it seems to me
we'll just continue to patch.
Williams:
But wouldn't it be better to hand out straight
relief to him and avoid - and not give it to
the rich farmer, the prosperous farmer?
Taylor:
That's something else again.
H.M.Jr:
I'm talking about the technique.
White:
Jake's point is that some portion of that is used to
pay off debts and it's not in the same class with
the
Regraded Unclassified
182
-33-
Viner:
Don't be too sure.
Taylor:
How do you know some of these other boys don't
White:
The sharecropper doesn't get any of his check, to
speak of.
Viner:
Thing may be different now, but the sharecropper
was the one fellow that didn't get anything out of
it, and he'd be the one fellow that does spend it.
Bell:
He gets loans from Farm Security.
Viner:
Now. But he got nothing before; he got kicked off
his farm.
White:
He's getting it now.
Currie:
There's some offset in the rural rehabilitation
loans; part of that will be recoverable, and I
think they're a little different - in a little
different class from the benefit payments to the
farmers. In my own mind, I'd put them a little
Bell:
Initially they can be put in that class; eventually
they can be put in the WPA class, I think, the
greater majority of them.
Currie:
I don't know. The collections haven't been bad,
have they?
Bell:
Well, pretty low.
Currie:
Averything's low.
Taylor:
While you're on this subject, why, everything that
you said about the sales tax applies equally to the
processing tax, doesn't it?
Viner:
Oh, it 15 a sales tax.
H.M.Jr:
Check end double-check.
Taylor:
Well, I would like to emphasize that, because
H.M.Jr:
You know how I feel about the processing tax. What?
You know how I feel about the processing tax.
103
-34-
Taylor:
oh, absolutely. But I know John's going to be up
against a lot of this processing tax business, and
everything that applies to the sales tax applies
to that. I mean the complete impact
Currie:
Even more force because of the basic nature of
the items taxed, whereas in a sales tax at least
you get some luxury expenditures.
Viner:
And as that actual processing tax worked, there
was really a terrific lag between the levying of
the tax and the disbursement of the benefits to
the family - six or nine months, as I remember.
H.M.Jr:
Would you gentlemen be willing to do this for me?
For the rest of the time that you're here - I don't
want to push you too hard - see, the thing - it
divides itself into three things: 1. To go a fter
more taxes. 2. If we do, what kind of taxes?
and 3. Is there anything that we can do on the
expenditure side? Right? Isn't that the way
White:
4 - Is there any method of selling any one of
those ideas that they can think of?
H.M.Jr:
or anything else they think of. But that's the
problem that we have, isn't it, Dan?
Bell:
That's right.
H.M.Jr:
What?
Bell:
Yes, sir.
H.A.dr:
And right now I never was harder pressed for an
answer. I have no answer.
White:
Did you give some indication of what you thought the
military expenditures would be next year?
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Ask Bell.
Bell:
Well, I think the only thing you can do is give 8
range of somewhere between 500 million and a billion
Viner:
in excess of
Regraded Unclassified
184
-35-
Bell:
in excess of the present.
White:
That would be the appropriation for the fiscal
Bellt
All depends on what is appropriated. If there is an
authorization for a billion and a half, say, in
airplanes, I don't think they can spend a half
billion in 1940; but if that program is spread over
the entire Army as a billion and a half program -
other things except airplanes, in addition to
sirplanes - then they might spend a half billion
dollars.
Currie:
And about E. quarter of a billion, perhaps, for the
Navy, additional?
Bell:
Navy hasn't been mentioned in this program, because
they've got a program going of - they'll have eight
battleships laying down next year.
Currie:
But that will be an increase in spending over this
year - actual expenditure.
Bell:
If the present program is continued, yes.
Currie:
About 200 - 150.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Currie, the Army and Navy, as it is tonight, is
about a billion one. Isn't it?
Bell:
That's right - annual program.
H.M.Jr:
And on top of that you've got to add somewhere between
500 million to a billion, on top of the billion one.
Currie:
My only trouble, Mr. Secretary, is that it is really
a billion one for this fiscal year - Army end Navy -
isn't it?
Bell:
It's contemplated to be about a billion one for 1940,
without any new program.
Currie:
So if you attribute all this additional stuff to
Army, you're not attributing any additional expendi-
ture to Navy for the next fiscal year.
Regraded Unclassified.
105
-36-
Bell:
You've got it wrong. The billion one I'm speaking
of is the normal program.
Currie:
But we're trying to get the additional after this
fiscal year.
Bell:
Well, as it is, the additional will be somewhere
between 500 million and a billion. So if you spend
500 million of that program next year, you'll have
a billion six instead of a billion one, see, for
national defense.
Viner:
That means half a billion
Currie:
addition over this year.
White:
Not allowing any increased expenditure on the Navy.
Currie:
That's what I WES trying to get at.
Bell:
except what it takes to clear up contract authoriza-
tions on building contracts.
Currie:
Will that be lower than this year?
Bell:
Not over 50 million or 100 million.
H.M.Jr:
Well - I'm sorry, I'll wait.
Currie:
I think perhaps Harry had the same thing. The other
thing, the question mark, was the Social Security
program. I know that the Council - of course, you
people all know this too - is going to recommend
that the benefit payments, and more generous benefit
payments than now provided for in the Act, be com-
menced at the beginning of 1940.
Bell:
Fiscal '40.
Currie:
Is that included?
Bell:
No, that's not.
Currie:
Little more expenditure - perhaps 100, 150 million.
H.M.Jr:
1 wasn't aware of it, were you, Dan?
Regraded Unclassified
106
-37-
Bell:
Well, I've heard rumors but I haven't had any program.
Viner:
But if I remember rightly, though, the budgetary
treatment of Social Security, you can fix it up
there by re-estimating the ultimate obligations on
the Treasury.
Currie!
You're quite right, Jake, that will not increase the
budget expenditures.
Viner:
Not if you follow the practice of setting off as a
liability just what you estimate your revenue is
going to be.
Bell:
That all depends on what you're talking about. If
you're talking ebout advancing the date when they
pay benefits under the old-age provision, then it
makes no change in your budget, because you just
cut down on your investment of funds for that
account; but there is a scheme to increase the
grants to states for those who will not come under
the old-age provision. I understand there is a
scheme to increase the grants to states by about
100 or 150 million dollars. That's an actual cash
outgo.
Currie:
Then there is
Viner:
But you've got some Leeway on your investment figure,
haven't you?
Bell:
Not for that purpose.
Currie:
That's one of the places where you can increase
expenditures without increasing the deficit, as it
is set up.
Viner:
"here in the earlier years Dan Bell increased the
deficit without increasing expenditures.
Currie:
Yes.
Bell:
On what?
Viner:
"hy, by setting up as a liability a larger amount
than you were collecting as revenue.
Regraded Unclassified
187
-38-
Bell:
I set up the same amount 63 an investment that we
had in r evenue, so it had no effect whatever on
the deficit.
Gaston:
Not in fiscal 137, Dan.
Viner:
Not in fiscal '37.
Gaston:
Your transfers to the fund were greater than your
tax receipts in fiscal 137, I think, substantially
greater.
Bell:
Oh yes, we did that for a reason - yes,
Viner:
Well, you can do it the other way now.
Bell:
But it wasn't large.
Shite:
If you just convinced him out of that - took two
years to get nim out of that.
Paylor:
Wasn't large; but it's flexible.
Viner:
It's flexible. There's a law there, but the law as
any two men read means two different things.
White:
You (H.M.Jr) had a second point.
H.d.9p:
Yes, it isn't a point, but I wanted to get this
over. If you agree that we should have additional
taxes, is there any nice package which we could
wrap up in pink ribbons and say, "Gentlemen of the
United States, here is your national d efense tax,
and this is the nice pretty picture on it."
White:
Smells good, looks good, and it ain't good.
H.V.Jr:
Is there such a thing that we could take it and
Currie:
There has been a proposal for just upping the
corporation tax rate, because - partly on the
ground that that's easy and simple, end also it
bears on the beneficiaries of an armament program.
Viner:
I'd say that's all wrong, that there oughtn't to
be any rise in corporate taxation at all.
White:
Well now, there's disagreement on that point.
Regraded Inclassified
188
-39-
Viner:
If you want 8 tax on incentive to invest, that's
where you can be sure of it. You'll be getting
right in a bad spot.
H.M.Jr:
1 want - may I draw on the charity of you gentlemen,
can I draw on it for another day? Take pity on this
poor Secretary of the Treasury and sweat with me
for one more day.
(Several nod acceptance)
White:
Mr. Hansen said he would be able to devote tomorrow
morning.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'd be in touch, and when the atmosphere
clears, why, I'm available any time; just get in
touch. What?
White:
If you could begin at 9:30 - 9:30 tomorrow
....
Stewart:
9:30.
white:
... then you can have at least three or four hours.
And if you (H.M.Jr) will be available
H.M.Jr:
I only have one appointment, to go to the doctor,
at 12:15; but outside of that I have no appointments.
"hite:
I think on that discussion - I think that all the men
who are available, Wayne Taylor, Johnny Hanes, could
spend - because that kind of discussion is
Hanes:
I haven't got anything.
H.M.Jr:
You (White) mean sit right in.
White:
I think so, if they've got the time.
Taylor:
I'm fine all day tomorrow.
Hanes:
Sunday too, for me, if you want me.
H.M.Jr:
Magill will be here. You're (Bell) on call?
Bell:
I'd hate to spend all day, but I'll be available.
E.M.Jr:
You're available. "nd then when they come to see
me you're available.
Bell:
Yes, sir; I'm really in 8 terrible hole, but I can
run out for an hour or SO.
Regraded
Unclassified
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to