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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 190
May 16 - May 21, 1939
- A -
Book Page
Appointments and Resignations
Lonigan, Edna:
Future assignment discussed at group meeting -
5/18/39
190
286
Associated Gas and Electric Company
Grey, Ben: Report on Oliphant's two conferences with -
5/18/39
264
- C -
Cement
See Procurement Division
China
Yunnan-Burma railway and highway: American Consul,
Rangoon, reports probability that British will build
link when convinced of China's intention to complete
line in Yunnan - - 5/19/39
302
Czechoslovakia
See War Conditions: Germany
- D -
Dano
Foley memorandum on Hains Point with Hutchinson dog -
5/17/39
176
Dies Committee
Whitley, Rhea (Counsel) : Foley memorandum concerning -
5/19/39
386
- F -
Financing, Government
Home Owners Loan Corporation:
Haas memorandum concerning proposed refunding offer -
5/17/39
256
Instructions to Federal Reserve Bank of New York
concerning sale for Postal Savings account - 5/18/39
287
Financial picture reviewed at Treasury conference -
5/19/39
311
Conference between Treasury group, Fahey, Pavesich -
5/19/39
353
Conference between Treasury and Federal Reserve -
5/20/39
412
HMJr asks Watson to clear with FDR proposed announcement
of refunding of $900 million of Home Owners Loan
Corporation bonds - 5/20/39
434
Regraded Unclas ified
- F - (Continued)
Book Page
Finland
Minister again discusses with HMJr possibility of
second loan - 5/19/39.
190
348
France
War Debt: Further discussed by HMJr, Hanes, and
Monnet - 5/16/39
57
a) FDR's answer
- G -
Germany
See War Conditions
Gold
See War Conditions: Germany
Grey, Ben
Report on Oliphant's two conferences with Grey (Associated
Gas and Electric Company case) - 5/18/39
264
- H -
Helium
See War Conditions: Munitions Control Board (National)
Heller, Edward H.
See Procurement Division: Cement
Home Owners Loan Corporation
See Financing, Government
Housing
Wagner plan (rumored) to spend the $1,800,000,000 from
Stabilization Fund for housing reported by Duffield -
5/18/39
268
United States Housing Authority: HMJr reports to Senator
Wagner on Comptroller of Currency's opinion of effect
upon national banks of Section 4 of proposed bill ****
"bonds of local public housing authorities, secured
by pledge of annual contributions under contract with
United States Housing Authority, available for invest-
ment and underwriting by national banks and banks
affiliated with Federal Reserve System" - 5/20/39
420
- J -
Japan
Rentschler reports Japanese banks have gradually paid all
secured loans - 5/16/39
12
- L -
Lonigan, Edna
See Appointments and Resignations
Regraded Unclassified
- M -
Book Page
Monetary Study
HMJr, White, et cetera, discuss FDR's proposal at
9:30 meeting - 5/16/39
190
7
a) "To be brought in September, 1940, or any
September thereafter"
Munitions Control Board (National)
See War Conditions
- P -
Poland
See War Conditions: Munitions Control Board (National):
Helium
Bullitt reports on request for French loan of approximately
two billion francs; British loan of £60 million - 5/17/39
139,292
Procurement Division
Cement: Conference with Edward H. Heller, Collins, and
McReynolds; HMJr refuses to take personal action -
5/16/39
17
- R -
Revenue Revision
Tax statement to be made by HMJr before Committee on Ways
and Means:
Draft incorporating Viner's suggestions - 5/17/39
142
Statements on tax matters by members of Administration
during 1939
160
Blough memorandum: "Accuracy of estimates prepared by
Mr. Stam in memorandum for Senator Harrison" 5/17/39
177
Blough memorandum: "Penalty taxes on corporations
accumulating surpluses in excess of reasonable needs of
business (Section 102 and former Sections 104 and 220)" -
5/17/39
186
- S -
Spain
See Van Zeeland, Paul
Stabilization Fund
Treasury resume of bill extending Fund for two years, et cetera,
sent to Senator Wagner - 5/19/39
202
Wagner plan (rumored) to spend the $1,800,000,000 from
Stabilization Fund for housing reported by Duffield -
5/18/39
268
- S - - (Continued)
Book Page
Statements by HMJr
To be made before Committee on Ways and Means:
Draft incorporating Viner's suggestions - 5/17/39
190
142
Surplus Commodities
Wheat: Export sales and other market information,
as reported by Federal Surplus Commodities
Corporation - 5/9/39 through 5/13/39 (Haas
memorandum)
71
- T -
Taxation
See Revenue Revision
Toll Bridges
Upham memorandum on Reconstruction Finance Corporation
study of forty bridges constructed during 1920's -
5/20/39
343
- U -
United States Housing Authority
See Housing
United States Savings Bonds
Foley opinion concerning legality of purchase by
Morgenthau children - 5/16/39
81
- V -
Van Zeeland, Paul
Butterworth reports on rumor that Van Zeeland will act
for Dutch, French, and Swiss in matter of £20 million
loan to Spanish Government - 5/16/39
123
Venezuela
Conference in re economic mission to; present: HMJr,
White, Lochhead; Duggan, Briggs, and Collado - 5/19/39
325
a) HMJr asks them to withdraw first memorandum
matter and then let him and Hanes know
b) Conversation with Harrison (Federal Reserve
Bank of New York)
327
- W -
Wallace, Henry A.
HMr furnished with copies of memoranda, "Internal
economic progress versus European unsettlement" and
"The present job of government and private capital
in our democracy" sent to FDR as a result of FDR's
conversation with Garner at Cabinet 5/19/39
387
Regraded Uncla sified
- W - (Continued)
Book Page
War, Assistant Secretary of
Duties discussed at 9:30 meeting - 5/18/39
190
285
War Conditions
Germany:
Czechoslovakian gold: Bullitt reports on French
reaction to efforts of Germany authorities to
get control over part of Czechoslovakian gold
held in London - 5/19/39
299
Munitions Control Board (National);
Helium: Conversation between Ickes and HMJr con-
concerning blanket authority from Munitions Board
for export of - 5/16/39
2
Discussion at 9:30 meeting - 5/16/39
8
Foley memorandum advising against approval of
regulations authorizing export on licenses to be
issued by Secretary of State in quantities not
to exceed in any one year ***** 500,000 cubic
feet to purchasers within any one country -
5/16/39
56
Washington, State of
Ickes asks HMJr to talk to Yantis (outstanding leader)
concerning Collector of Customs - 5/19/39
377
Wheat
See Surplus Commodities
Whiteface Mountain Turnpike Bonds
Delano memorandum to Hanes concerning - 5/19/39
340
Whitley, Rhea
See Dies Committee
1
GROUP MEETING
May 16, 1939.
9:30 A. M.
PRESENT:
Mr. Hanes
Mr. Gibbons
Mr. Foley
Mr. McReynolds
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Haas
Mr. Duffield
Mr. Lochhead
Mr. White
Mr. Viner
Mr. Graves
Mrs. Klotz.
H.M.Jr:
I am sorry I could not see you people last night.
Did you have something, Mac?
McReynolds:
Before Mr. King comes over to see you, I want to
talk to you.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
McReynolds:
And I have a couple of other things here, but I
imagine you are too busy to take them up now.
H.M.Jr:
I have nothing until 10:30.
McReynolds:
I have just these two things that I wanted to take
up particularly.
(Insert telephone conversation with Ickes 9:48 -
May 16th between pages 1 and 2.)
2
May 16, 1939
9:48 a.m.
Operator: Secretary Ickes.
HMJr:
Hello.
0:
Go ahead.
HMJr:
Hello.
Harold
Ickes:
Yes.
HMJr:
Hello, Harold.
I:
Yeah.
HMJr:
How are you?
I:
Fine.
HMJr:
You don't sound fine.
I:
I know what you're going to talk about.
HMJr:
What? What?
I:
You're going to talk about a man on Public Works staff.
HMJr:
No, no, I'm calling about helium.
I:
Oh, about helium.
HMJr:
(Laughter) You done me wrong, mister.
I:
I have you wrong this time. All right.
HMJr:
No, I -- I thought if you could give me an appointment.
You see, the Munitions Board want a blanket authority
on export of helium, using Poland as an excuse. The
White House has called us up to do it
I:
Yeah.
HMJr:
we're standing pat.
I:
I haven't any objection to that export.
HMJr:
No.
I:
They cant do anything with that six
Regraded Unclas sified
3
- 2 -
HMJr:
No, but they want a blanket authority.
I:
They want blanket authority up to five hundred.
HMJr:
Thousand.
I:
thousand cubic feet a year in any one country.
HMJr:
Yeah.
I:
That isn't dangerous, Henry.
HMJr:
Oh, you're willing to go along on that?
I:
Yeah, I'm willing to go along on that.
HMJr:
Yeah, during -- five hundred thousand cubic feet in any
one year.
I:
Yeah, not over that in any one year, but they have to --
they have to have some safeguards in there that it isn't
being accumulated. You have to look out for that too,
their diplomatic agents, or something.
HMJr:
You're -- you're satisfied with that?
I:
Yeah, I'm
HMJr:
Well, after this magnificent fight you made, I didn't
want to do anything out of line, you know.
I:
No, no. You see, they -- for a zeppelin they take -- they
take a tremendous lot as compared with that.
HMJr:
Now
I:
Five hundred thousand isn't -- isn't much.
HMJr:
You evidently know something that I don't know.
I:
What?
HMJr:
That I wanted some man? Or were you kidding?
I:
What?
HMJr:
Were you kidding me about wanting some man?
Regraded Unclassified
4
- 3 -
I:
No.
HMJr:
No, this 18 all I wanted.
I:
All right, Henry.
HMJr:
This is all I wanted.
I:
All right, Henry.
HMJr:
Thank you.
I:
Good bye.
5
- 2 -
Gibbons:
The secretary of Congressman Casey, of Massachusetts,
called yesterday end wanted to make an appoint-
ment for Colonel Speaks, President of the Fisk
Rubber Corporation, of Chicopee Falls. I did not
tell her anything definite, because I thought,
perhaps, it was something you did not want to
talk to him about, and I did not want to bother
you until you knew what it was all about.
H.M.Jr:
This is something for Bell, the Director of the
Budget, and it 1s rather embarrassing for me to
be asking the Director of the Budget to do some-
thing for the President, when the Director of the
Budget is no longer under me. The President
wants the Director of the Budget -- this is the
way it 18 put up to me -- to inform him 8.8 to the
proper figures on the Senate Agricultural Bill.
Is Senator Russell right or 16 he not right? A
copy should be sent to the President, and I might
add that I would like & copy and send one to
Wallace. The President said the people in the
House do not know, and I do not know whether to
tell the Director of the Budget or --
McReynolds:
He can take it up directly, on the President's
instructions, with the Chairman of the Committee.
I will see Hal Smith and see if he understands it.
H.M.Jr:
All right. You will tell him that that 1s the
way I got the message?
McReynolds:
Yes. He can check up on it.
H.M.Jr:
On the reorganization plan -- the Chicago plan.
McReynolds:
Well, of course, the sixty days are not up yet.
It is still under you.
H.M.Jr:
I know.
McReynolds:
He was District Commissioner; he was Administrator.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, he was Administrator?
McReynolds:
He is one of you fellows.
H.M.Jr:
Harold?
Graves:
You wanted B. memorandum about these motion picture
cases for the Attorney General.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, yes.
6
- 3 -
Graves:
I understood you to say you wanted that for the
consideration of Mr. Hanes some time in advance
of your giving it to the Attorney General.
H.M.Jr:
That is right.
Graves:
Mr. Irey has that memorandum, --
H.M.Jr:
Right.
Graves:
And I take it that he will be ready any time you
are.
H.M.Jr:
Well, let it come up through Mr. Hanes to me,
and I will try to get it to the Attorney General
by the 19th, if possible; so that if Irey and
you can get it to Mr. Hanes and he can get it to
me tomorrow --
Graves:
Very well.
H.M.Jr:
Is that all?
Lochhead:
The foreign exchanges are not as strong as they
were, but they are gaining dollars, at least they
are not losing. They are gaining gold now instead
of having to sell their shipments to the Treasury.
H.M.Jr:
Yesterday was the 15th.
Lochhead:
I was going to ask about that,
H.M.Jr:
So was I. We both got trimmed.
Lochhead:
I think I got trimmed more than you did.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, no, I refuse to take second place.
Lochhead:
Well, I was kind of optimistic.
Gaston:
Harry and I are still two of those long-haired
fellows.
Lochhead:
I am building up to the time when I will not need
any at all.
H.M.Jr:
I do not know, but it 18 like they say on the
radio -- I am a sustaining program, a sponsored
program, or just a recording. I think it 1s Just
a recording. That isn't bad; 1s it?
Lochhead:
It 16 hot off the griddle.
Regraded Unclassified
7
- 4 -
Gaston:
You are non-commercial, anyway.
H.M.Jr:
But I think it is Just a recording. Harry?
White:
There was an outflow of gold the week of the 5th
for the first time, and the capital inflow has
dropped to forty million a week from twice that
amount. Wagner said that he was going to see you
about this investigation. I wanted to tell you
now, because he said the President, he gathered,
wants --
H.M.Jr:
An investigation.
White:
A monetary study. He wants to make it a "study",
because he said apparently there is going to be
increasing pressure for it.
H.M.Jr:
I read some place, or somebody told me that he
went down to see Mr. Eccles, and asked Mr. Eccles
why, after six years, we had to have a study to
find out what we were doing.
White:
I did not hear about that.
H.M.Jr:
I think that would be swell -- that study.
White:
He is going to change it from an "investigation"
to a "study".
H.M.Jr:
All right. Have a study. Bring it in about
September, 1940.
McReynolds:
Or any September thereafter.
H.M.Jr:
Anything else?
White:
That is all.
H.M.Jr:
George, have you been 111?
Haas:
Yes, sir; I have had the grippe.
H.M.Jr:
George, just answer this yes or no, if you can:
Is business getting better, is it standing still,
or getting worse?
Haas:
Yes. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
O.K. That helps a lot. You do not want to be
locked on that.
Regraded Unc sified
8
- 5 -
Haas:
It is going sideways; but there is something that
coincides or checks; yes.
H.M.Jr:
Meaning what?
Haas:
Favorable.
H.M.Jr:
Favorable?
Haas:
Yes.
Foley:
Jim Rowe called the White House yesterday, and
said Hull had asked the President to get these
regulations changed in regard to the sale of
helium. On the 4th of February, we approved the
granting of a license to sell 500,000 cubic feet
of helium to Poland for stratosphere flight, and
at the same time the State Department asked for
a change in the regulations; 80 that today, without
the approval of the Munitions Control Board, they
could grant licenses for the sale of helium up to
8. certain amount. Now, we have held up those
regulations, but it is not necessary to approve
those regulations in order to sell this helium to
Poland. It 18 just Joe Green telling the White
House that we are blocking the sale of helium.
Mr. Hopkins does not believe all of this power
should be concentrated in the State Department,
but that the Board should pass on each sale of
helium, and I also think that should be done.
H.M.Jr:
It 1s not blanketed?
Foley:
It would amount to the regulations saying that up
to a certain amount belium could be sold to any
country without taking the matter up with the
Munitions Control Board, but I think the Board
should pass on those --
H.M.Jr:
Can we get just one cleared up?
Foley:
We have already cleared it, Mr. Secretary, but
they have told the White House that they have to
have these regulations changed which is not so.
H.M.Jr:
Why don't you point that out to J1m Rowe?
Foley:
And may I also tell him that you do not think the
regulations should be changed, and that these
requests for helium export should be passed upon
by the full Board?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Regraded classified
9
- 6 -
Foley:
I think that is the position of Commerce also.
H.M.Jr:
All right; and also get word to Mr. Ickes.
Foley:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Before you call back the White House.
Viner:
Would you want to add that the amounts of helium
which they would want to clear without special
permission would presumably be too small for
military use? That is what they claim, that its
sale be limited to so low a level that it has no
military use.
Foley:
I think the Board should pass on that. I do not
see why there should be any exception. What they
are trying to do over there is to do it by
themselves and go around this Board. There are
five Cabinet members on this Board, and they all
have representatives, and it 1s very easy to get
them together in & few minutes. They have not done
so, and I do not think the regulations should be
changed.
McReynolds:
They do not expect to get approval. That 1s the
trouble.
Foley:
That is right. They are afraid the people would
block these things. Ickes is not on the Board.
McReynolds:
No, I understand.
H.M.Jr:
But he has put up a swell fight.
McReynolds:
He is not on the Board, but he has control.
Foley:
He has control of the helium. The Board grants
the licenses for the export of helium, if it is
of no military importance.
H.M.Jr:
O.K.
Foley:
Do you know about this controversy up at the World's
Fair in regard to the destruction of that statue?
H.M.Jr:
I have had it for breakfast, lunch and supper.
Do you know who the attorney for the artist 1s?
Foley:
Yes. Eddie Greenbaum. He has called & couple
of times.
10
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
Ed said he has a swell case, but he does not know
what to sue for.
Foley:
He has an application returnable this morning in
the Supreme Court up there for an examination of
the statue to determine what his cause of action
is going to be.
H.M.Jr:
But he does not know what he 18 going to sue for.
Foley:
He is going to ask for a mandamus to compel the
Commission to put the statue back on exhibition, if
it has not been destroyed.
(Insert telephone conversation with Gordon
Rentschler 9:58 - May 16th between pages 7 and 8.)
11
May 16, 1939
9:58 a.m.
Operator: Go ahead.
HMJr:
Hello.
Gordon
Rentschler: Hello, Henry. Good morning.
HMJr:
How are you?
R:
All right. Fine. Henry, Jim Perkins 18 coming down
for the Red Cross meeting on the 23rd.
HMJr:
Well, that's too far off.
R:
Too far off?
HMJr:
Yeah. I wished -- I was hoping to see him before that.
That's next week.
R:
Well, let's see, that is next week.
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
You'd like to -- you'd rather see him this week.
HMJr:
I'd like to see the two of you this week -- I really would.
I mean, what he -- this -- all of this stuff moves Bo
fast.
R:
Yeah. Well, let me check baok and see if we can -- we can
arrange that then.
HMJr:
Well now, if you fellows want to come down and have
lunch with me tomorrow I'd love it.
R:
Yeah. Now let's see, tomorrow
HMJr:
Is Wednesday. Have you got a bank meeting or something
or other?
R:
No, Wednesday -- let me see. I'd have to check on that,
Henry. How are you fixed on Thursday?
HMJr:
I give you the choice of Wednesday or Thursday.
R:
Wednesday or Thursday?
HMJr:
Yeah.
12
- 2 -
R:
All right, fine, Henry. Now I'll see if we can arrange
that.
HMJr:
Let Mrs. -- would you mind letting Mrs. Klotz know?
R:
Yes, indeed I'll -- I'll let her know.
HMJr:
Yeah, and when you
R:
There's something else -- I wanted to tell you that --
it's stuck -- it's been stuck for a couple of weeks
now.
HMJr:
What's that?
R:
And that 18 that the Jap banks came in.
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
And Paid all of their secured loans.
HMJr:
Yes.
R:
First one, and then another, and then another.
HMJr:
Yes.
R:
And I don't know whether that has any significance to
you or whether it hasn't.
HMJr:
No, I don't -- I'd have to think about it.
R:
Their acceptances are revolving just the same as usual.
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
That which -- that stuff which relates to shipments of
goods.
HMJr:
Yeah.
R:
But these were the borrowings against securities which
were American Treasuries, and in some instances British
Treasuries.
HMJr:
Well, that -- would you infer that they were selling
their -- their governments?
R:
They might -- they unquestionably sold some of their
governments, but on the other hand some of their
governments are still here. They took -- they took
13
- 3 -
about two millions of governments out and the balance
of their governments are here, 80 they've sold three
millions of them because they liked the price, but the
others
HMJr:
I see.
R:
......
-- the others they still have and nothing borrowed
against them.
HMJr:
Uh-huh.
R:
It's just one of the things that you might put along with
the other things you're thinking of.
HMJr:
Right. And if you do come down, I'd like a thumbnail
sketch what you think about the prospects for business
for the rest of this year -- unless that's looking too
far ahead.
R:
Yes, fine.
HMJr:
Well, give it to me as far as you can see anyway.
R:
Yes, all right. All right. Now, I'm sure that I can
do either one, Henry, because I can change any of my
plans
HMJr:
Well, I'd really like to talk with you, and you know
how this stuff is -- it gets cold awful fast.
R:
Yeah. All right, fine. I'll see how he's fixed and see
how we can work 1t. out.
HMJr:
Thank you.
R:
Right !
HMJr:
Good bye.
14
- 8 -
H.M.Jr:
He said that is all right. I will just keep it
for the record. (Secretary handed Foley paper).
Foley:
Surely.
H.M.Jr:
He said that 18 all right.
Foley:
Surely.
H.M.Jr:
He said he 1s satisfied; he knew all about the
five hundred thousand cubic feet in one year, and
he says it 16 all right.
Foley:
My point is that 1t WAS not necessary to change
the regulations, because we have approved this
specific sale.
Viner:
They do not want this to be a special favor to
Poland; they want to say that they have a general
rule for all countries, and they are operating
under general regulations.
White:
If they could get the regulations changed, then
they could not get any special regulations in
regard to Poland, and then they could get it
through without any objections.
Foley:
Bruce had written to the Attorney General and
asked him for advice and help, and asked me if I
would call the Attorney General, and I told him I
did not want to do anything until I could talk to
you.
H.M.Jr:
Surely. Give him all the advice you can, that is
swell. The only thing is his wife was taken out
to see the statue and it was not there.
Foley:
He told us last night that Flynn was willing to
have another statue made and have it put back.
Gaston:
He had a new idea. He called me up last night,
and said he had 3 request from the man in charge
of pictures to supply fifty pictures for exhibition,
and he wanted to write a letter to Ed Flynn,
telling him he would let him have the pictures,
only if he would give bond that they could not be
destroyed, and he wanted you to give that out,
together with B. letter from Ed Flynn's man.
H.M.Jr:
There is a smaller statue that they want to put down
in the Lincoln Memorial. I think he has always
had a run for his money, personally.
15
- 9 -
Gaston:
Do you want to let him write such a letter and
give it out?
H.M.Jr:
No.
Gaston:
I do not think 80.
H.M.Jr:
No.
Foley:
Do you want me to do anything on this Public Works
Finance Act of 1939?
H.M.Jr:
You tell him what to do. I have here an article,
on the basis of which Mr. Hanes has grounds for
suit for defamation of character. I do not know
whether it is up to the Secretary or his General
Counsel to sue for him or not, but I will read
this, anyway. I think it is one of the worst
things I have heard said about anybody. Have you
read it?
Gaston:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
This 1s what it says -- I do not know how these
things are handled.
Gaston:
The Secretary did pretty well.
H.M.Jr:
Listen. It says:
(The Secretary read the article by Pearson and
Allen dated May 16, 1939 and attached hereto.)
I think that is ground for suit.
Foley:
I have nothing further.
H.M.Jr:
Can you boys be ready at eleven?
White:
Yes.
(Conference concluded - -- 10. A.M.
Around the Cleak-TUESDAY. MAY 16. 19TH
Washington Daily
Merry-Go-Round
- - -
By DREW PEANSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN
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Reg
nclassified
17
Memorandum of Conference held
in the Secretary's Office at 10:30 a. m.
May 16, 1939.
Present: Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. Edward H. Heller and an associate of Mr. Heller's
Captain Collins, Procurement
Mr. McReynolds
Mr. Heller came in to see the Secretary, pursuant to an
engagement previously made, to discuss a bid that he and his
associates had submitted to the Procurement Division for & very
large quantity of cement to be used by the Reclamation Bureau
on the Shasta Dam.
The Secretary informed Mr. Heller that there were two
reasons why he would not personally review this case for him.
One reason, which was only incidental, was that he had no time
available to devote to it, The other reason, which was the
controlling reason, was the fact that Mr. Heller is & relative
of the Secretary's family and he would not under those circumstances
take action on the case personally.
He requested Mr. Heller to go with Captain Collins to the
Procurement Division and instructed Captain Collins to handle this
case the same as any other, and after his decision had been reached
and promulgated, he was to inform the Secretary what action he had
taken.
18
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
PROCUREMENT DIVISION
FICE OF THE DIRECTOR
WASHINGTON
May 15, 1939
MEMORANDUM TO THE SECRETARY:
On May 1 bids were opened for cement to be used by the Reclamation
Service in construction of Shasta Dam, California. The Proposal on which
quotations were received provided for
Schedule 1, 1,400,000 barrels to be delivered during
the calendar year 1940.
Schedule 2 provided for 5,800,000 barrels to be
delivered through the calendar years 1940 to 1944- (This
item includes quantity covered by Schedule 1).
Schedule 3 provided for the total quantity of 5,800,000
barrels with varying delivery requirements.
It appears that the question of immediate moment concerns only
Schedules 1 and 2, decisions reached with reference to them being equally
applicable to Schedule 3.
Bids were submitted by the following:
The Permanente Corporation,
Oakland, California (Schedule 2 only)
California Portland Cement Company,
Los Angeles, California (Schedule 1 only)
Riverside Cement Company,
Los Angeles, California (Schedule 1 only)
Beaver Portland Cement Company, et al.
San Francisco, California (All Schedules)
An analysis of bids submitted is attached hereto.
The Permanente Corporation did not bid on Schedule 1, covering
1,400,000 barrels but did quote on Schedule 2 calling for 5,800,000 barrels.
Their price, plus cost of transportation from Simla, California, to destination
at Coram, California, amounted to $1.8986,4 per barrel. This is the low bid
under Schedule 2.
The only other bid submitted on Schedule 2 was that received from
Beaver Portland Cement Company, et al, which consists of 5 other cement
companies as follows:
Regraded Uncl ssified
19
- 2 -
Calaveras Cement Company
Monolith Portland Cement Company
Pacific Portland Cement Company
Santa Cruz Portland Cement Company
Yosemite Portland Cement Corporation
The 6 companies, listed above as Beaver Portland Cement Company, et al,
have 80 worded their combined quotation as to make it obligatory on the
Government, in the event of its acceptance, to prorate the amount which each
company will supply at delivered prices varying from $2.06/ to $2.35/- per
barrel. If an award were made to the 6 companies on Schedule 2, such action
would result in a cost to the Government in excess of $1,500,000 over the
Permanente bid. Time has not permitted & study of this bid from 8. legal point
of view to determine its validity.
It is understood that the Permanente Corporation at present has no
cement mill but proposes to erect such a mill near Simla, California and that
Mr. Henry J. Kaiser, President of the Permanente Corporation, claims to have
ample finances for the construction of such a mill. A query received several
days ago from R. F. C. indicated that it had received through its San Francisco
office, an application for a loan of $3,000,000.
Inasmuch as current studies indicate that cement companies on the
west coast are operating at approximately 50% of capacity, the question of
policy arises as to whether the unutilized capacity should be further in-
creased by the construction of a plant to meet the requirements of the
proposals herein discussed. This question is one which it appears necessary
to settle prior to any award being made.
The Permanente Corporation has included in its proposal, the following
provision:
"Any delay of the contractor in making deliveries
due to interference or delay in the construction or
operation of contractor's cement mill by any order of
any court or of any public officer, board, commission,
or other public authority, shall be deemed a delay due
to unforseeable causes as that term is used in this
Article 5 despite any threats or warnings of any such
order or action."
If it is decided as a matter of policy to encourage the construction
of a mill by the Permanente Corporation, then it will be necessary to
negotiate with that Corporation for the elimination or modification of the
provision which it inserted in its bid which would relieve it from the
responsibility of supplying cement in the event of action by a court or other
public body estopping it from performance.
Regraded Unclassified
20
- 3 -
Further, in the event of an affirmative decision on the question of
policy it is believed that the acceptance of the bid as modified should be
referred to the Comptroller General before any formal contract is entered
into in order to avoid any complications from that source.
Concerning the bids on Schedule 1, in addition to that submitted by
Beaver Portland Cement Company, et al, the Riverside Cement Company and
the California Portland Cement Company also quoted prices. If an award is
to be made on Schedule 1, (on which Permanente did not submit a bid) it
would have to be made to Riverside for 610,000 barrels, the low bidder on
this quantity, and to Beaver, et al, for the remainder of this item, viz.
790,000 barrels. Such an award is subject to a favorable legal decision
as to the validity of the Beaver, et al, bid, and a further agreement with
them to accept an award for less than the amount bid on under Schedule 1.
H. E. Collins,
Acting Director of Procurement.
Enclosures
21
ANALYSIS OF BIDS
LOW-HEAT CEMENT FOR SHASTA DAM
Specifications No. 17136-SP-5-1
#
:
:
: Guaranteed :
Sched-: = Bid # Deliveries :
Delivered Cost to the Government
Bidder
I ule ;Item;Quantity
:
bbls.
:Quantity: Cost per # Total for 1 Total for
I
No.
#
No.,
bbls.
Daily,
Monthly
:
bbls.
#
bbl.
#
Item
:
Schedule
Riverside Cement Co.
:
1 : 1 $610,000 3,400, 85,000: 610,000.$2.085576.€ 1,272,201.36;) 2,931,689.98
Beaver Port. Cem.Co.,et al
#
1
: 1 ±1,400,000,8,000; 195,000
#
790,000:
2.1006185,
1,659,488.62:)
California Port. Cem. Co.
I
1 : 1 : 500,000;2,000; 60,000 # 500,000, 2.11948 # 1,059,740.00:)
The Permanente Corp.
I
2
# 2 £5,800,000,11,000,290,000 $5,800,000; 1.901016 +11,025,892.80; 11,025,892.80
Beaver Port. Cem. Co., et al : 2 : 2 ,5,800,000,11,000,290,000 $5,800,000: 2.171336 $12,593,748.80 12,593,748.80
Permanente Corp.
#
3
2
3
$3,100,000;
4,000,100,000
$3,100,000:
2.021016
:
6,265,149.60;)
Beaver Port. Com. Co., et al I 3 : 4 12,700,000; 7,000,190,000 +2,700,000; 2.233213 : 6,029,675.10+) 12,294,824.70
:
:
:
:
#
:
1
I
Permanente Corp.
:
3
=
3
13,100,000;
4,000,100,000
,3,100,000:
2.021016
:
6,265,149.60;)
Beaver Port. Cem. Co., et al
:
3
:
5 : 575,000,
4,000,
95,000
I
575,000;
2.1006185,
1,207,855.64;)
7,473,005.24
:
1
:
1
1
:
:
#
Beaver Port. Com. Co., et al : 3 : 3 $3,100,000; 4,000,100,000 +3,100,000; 2.189015 : 6,785,946.50;)
Beaver Port. cem. Co., et al I 3 : 4 2,700,000, 7,000,190,000 +2,700,000: 2.233213 1 6,029,675.10;) 12,815,621.60
:
2
#
I
:
I
:
#
:
Beaver Port. cem. Co., et al :
3
2
3
13,100,000
4,000,100,000
$3,100,000,
2.189015
=
6,785,946.50:)
Beaver Port. Cem. Co., et al # 3 = 5 # 575,000: 4,000, 95,000 # 575,000; 2.1006185, 1,207,855.64; 7,993,802.14
Schedule: Item # Item : Required Deliveries
No. : No. : Quantity # Daily 1 Monthly
1
:
1
:
1,400,000;
8,000
:
195,000
2
2 2 2 5,800,000; 11,000 : 290,000
3 = 3 : 3,100,000; 4,000 : 100,000
3
: 4 1 2,700,000; 7,000 1 190,000
3
: 5 : 575,000; 4,000 : 95,000
Regraded Unclassifie
22
Specifications No. 17136-SP-5-1
SPECIFICATIONS AND PROPOSAL FOR CEMENT
ISSUED
APRIL 4, 1939
By the Treasury Department, Procurement Division
Branch of Supply, Washington, D. C.
-
LOW-HEAT PORTLAND CEMENT
for
USE BY THE
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
BUREAU OF RECLAMATION
FOR THE SHASTA DAM
CENTRAL VALLEY PROJECT, CALIFORNIA
Bid of
Address
(To be submitted in duplicate)
To be opened at 10 a.m., May 1, 1939, at the office of the
Procurement Division, Branch of Supply, 7th and D Streets, S. W.,
Washington, D. C.
(1214-D)
23
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
PROCUREMENT DIVISION
BRANCH OF SUPPLY
Washington, D. C., April 8, 1939,
To all prospective bidders under Specifications No. 17136-SP-5-1
for Low-Heat Portland Cement for Use by the United States
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, for the
Shasta Dam, Central Valley Project, California, for which
bids will be opened at 10 a.m., May 1, 1939, at the office
of the Procurement Division, Branch of Supply, 7th and D
Streets, S. W., Washington, D. C.
1. The word "decrease" is hereby inserted before the
third word from the end of line 13 of paragraph 19 of the above-
described specifications.
2. Bids submitted must be in accordance with this
notice which shall accompany the bid.
- - -
24
CONTENTS
Form of bid
LOW-HEAT PORTLAND CEMENT
Schedules
Goneral requirements:
SPECIFICATIONS
26. References
General conditions:
27. Type and definition
1. Acceptance of bids
Dotail requirements:
2. Bid guaranty
3. Execution of contract and
28. Foreign materials in
performance bond
cement
4. Patents
29. Chemical composition
5. Oral statements
30. Compound composition
6. Advertising
31. Fineness
7. Proposals
32. Soundness
8. Representations and stipu-
33. Time of setting
lations pursuant to Public
34. Premature stiffening
Act No. 846, 74th Congress
35. Compressive strength
9. Delivery reports
10. Domestic materials
Sampling and inspection:
11. Federal tax
12. Rejection of bid
36. Sampling
13. Termination for breach
37. Rejection
14. Shipment
15. Extras
Tests:
16. Failure of Congress to
appropriate funds
38. Chemical analysis
17. Protests
39. Uncombined lime determina-
18. Comparison of bids
tion
19. Increase or decrease in
40. Compound computation
quantity
41. Fineness
20. Contracting officer
42. Soundness
43. Time of setting
Special conditions:
44. Premature stiffening
45. Compression tests
21. The requirement
46. Number of tosts
22. Deliverios
23. Failure to meet dolivery
requirements
24. Division of award
25. Shipment
indard Form No. IL
25
proved by the President
June 16, 1927
STANDARD GOVERNMENT FORM OF BID
(SUPPLY CONTRACT)
ORIGINAL Indicate which
DUPLICATE by erasure
PROCUREMENT DIVISION.
Branch of Supply, 7th & D Sts., S.V.,
Washington, D. C.
In compliance with your invitation for bids to furnish materials and supplies listed on the accompanying schedule,
indersigned,
poration organized and existing under the laws of the State of
toership consisting of
dividual trading M
city of
- hereby proposes to furnish, within the time specified, the materials
upplies at the prices stated opposite the respective items listed on the schedule, and Agrees upon receipt of notice of the
tance of this bid (by the date beginning the contract period). to execute, if required, the Standard Government Form of
fact (Standard Form No. 32) in accordance with the bid as accepted, and to give bond, if required, with good and sufficient
or sureties, for the faithful performance of the contract, within 10 days after the prescribed forms are presented for signature.
Discount will be allowed for prompt payment as follows: 10 calendar days
percent; 20 calendar days
at; 30 calendar days
percent; or as stated in the schedule. (Time will be computed from date of the delivery of the
ice to corrier when final inspection and acceptance are at point of origin, or from date of delivery at destination of port of embarka-
then final inspection and acceptance are at those points, or from date curred bill or voucher properly certified by the contractor is
di if the latter date is later than the date of delivery.)
THE UNDERSIGNED REPRESENTS THAT THE PRICES IN THIS BID ARE
NEITHER DIRECTLY NOR INDIRECTLY THE RESULT OF ANY AGREEMENT
WITH ANY OTHER BIDDER.
(Witome to signature)
(Full name of bidder)
DRTANT-State below address to which ordere should is forwarded.
(Address)
Nora-See Standard Government Instructions to Bidders and copy of the Standard Government Form of Contract, Bid
d, and Performance Bond, which may be obtained upon application.
To insure prompt payment, bills should be certified M follows: "I certify that the above bill is currect and just and that
ment therefor has not been received."
Regraded Unclassified
26
LOW-HEAT PORTLAND CEMENT
FOR USE BY THE
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
BUREAU OF RECLAMATION
FOR THE SHASTA DAM
CENTRAL. VALLEY PROJECT, CALIFORNIA
Schedules nos. 1, 2, and 3 are alternative schedules, and
award of contract will not be made for more than one of the schedules.
Items 4 and 5 of schedule no. 3 are alternative items, and award of
contract will not be made for more than one of these items. Bids
on part of all or any of the items of the schedules will be consid-
ered in accordance with paragraph 24 of the specifications.
SCHEDULE NO. 1
Item
Unit
Amount
no.
Articles or services
Quantity
Unit
price
Dollars
1
Low-heat portland cément
in bulk, in accordance
with the attached speci-
fications;
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of production
(State location)
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of storage
(State location)
(full quantity)
1,400,000
bbl.
bbl.
or
(partial quantity)
Amount to
be stated
by bidder
Point of production
Rail connection
Point of storage
Rail connection
27
SCHEDULE NO. 1 (Continued)
Item
Unit Amount
no.
Articles or services
Quantity
Unit price Dollars
The guaranteed daily and monthly deliveries for the quantity
bid on will be as follows:
Daily delivery
Monthly delivery
bbl.
bbl.
28
SCHEDULE NO. 2
Item
Unit
Amount
no.
Articles or services
Quantity
Unit
price
Dollars
2
Low-heat portland cement
in bulk, in accordance
with the attached speci-
fications;
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of production
(State location)
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of storage
(State location)
(full quantity)
5,800,000
bbl.
bbl.
or
(partial quantity)
Amount to
be stated
by bidder
Point of production
Rail connection
Point of storage
Rail connection
The guaranteed daily and monthly deliveries for the quantity
bid on will be as follows:
Daily delivery
Monthly delivery
bbl.
bbl.
29
SCHEDULE NO. 3
Item
Unit
Amount
no.
Articles or services
Quantity
Unit
price
Dollars
3
Low-heat portland cement
in bulk, in accordance
with the attached speci-
fications;
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of production
(State location)
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of storage
(State location)
(full quantity)
3,100,000
bbl.
bbl.
or
(partial quantity)
Amount to
be stated
by bidder
Point of production
Rail connection
Point of storage
Rail connection
The guaranteed daily and monthly deliveries for the quantity
bid on will be 8.8 follows:
Daily delivery
Monthly delivery
bbl.
bbl.
30
SCHEDULE NO. 3 (Continued)
Item
Unit
Amount
no.
Articles or services
Quantity
Unit
price
Dollars
4
Low-heat portland cement
in bulk, in accordance
with the attached speci-
fications;
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of production
(State location)
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of storage
(State location)
(full quantity)
2,700,000
bbl.
bbl.
or
(partial quantity)
Amount to
be stated
by bidder
Point of production
Rail connection
Point of storage
Rail connection
The guaranteed daily and monthly deliveries for the quantity
bid on will be as follows:
Daily delivery
Monthly delivery
bbl.
bbl.
31
SCHEDULE NO. 3 (Continued)
Item
Unit
Amount
no.
Articles or services
Quantity
Unit
price
Dollars
5
Low-heat portland cement
in bulk, in accordance
with the attached speci-
fications;
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of production
(State location)
F.o.b. cars or trucks at
point of storage
(State location)
(full quantity)
575,000
bbl.
bbl.
or
(partial quantity)
Amount to
be stated
by bidder
Point of production
Rail connection
Point of storage
Rail connection
The guaranteed daily and monthly deliveries for the quantity
bid on will be as follows:
Daily delivery
Monthly delivery
bbls.
bbls.
32
GENERAL CONDITIONS
1, Acceptance of bids. Bids are solicited on the basis that
acceptance of the offer to furnish any or all of the articles de-
scribed therein shall constitute B. contract between the bidder and
the United States Government, which will bind the bidder to furnish
and deliver the articles for which his offer is accepted. The plac-
ing in the mail of a list of awards, properly addressed to the bid-
der whose proposal is accepted, shall be considered a sufficient
notice of acceptance.
2. Bid guaranty. Guaranty will be required with each bid in
an amount not less than 10 percent of the total price bid,
3. Execution of contract and performance bond. There shall be
a formal contract, signed by each bidder whose proposal is accepted,
and by the contracting officer on behalf of the United States, which
formal contract is to be considered as additional and further ov1-
dence of the agreement made by the acceptance of the proposal. Such
formal contract shall be executed and returned by the contractor with-
in 10 days after receipt theroof, and shall be supported by n. per-
formance bond to the United States of America, on U. S. Standard Form
No. 25, in an amount not less than 50 percent of the estimated aggre-
gato payments to be made under the contract, and shall bo signod by
the contractor and a corporate surety, which has been approved by the
Secretary of the Treasury, or two or more individual sureties, and be
conditioned for the faithful performance of said contract and all of
its conditions and provisions. In lieu of sureties or performance
honds, there may be deposited (in accordance with Treasury Depart-
ment Circular No. 154, dated Feb. 6, 1935) bonds or notes of the
United States. ("Bonds or notes of the United States" means "any
public debt obligation of the United States and any bonds, notes, or
other obligations which are unconditionally guaranteed as to both in-
terest and principal by the United States.") Certified checks drawn
payable to the order of the Treasurer of the United States will be
accepted when the bonds of contractors are signed by two individual
sureties, in which event the individual sureties will not be required
to furnish affidavits of justification as to their financial respon-
sibility.
4. Patents. The contractor shall hold and save the Government,
its officers, agents, servants, and employees harmless from liabil-
ity of any nature or kind, including cost and expenses, for or on
account of any patented or unpatented invontion, article, or appli-
anco manufactured or used in the performance of the contract, in-
cluding their uso by the Government.
5. Oral statomonts. No oral statement of any person shall be
allowed in any mannor or dogree to modify or otherwise affoct the
terms of those specifications or tho contract.
6. Advertising. Successful biddors shall not uso awards na a
basis for advortising.
Regraded classified
33
7. Proposals. Proposals, after being prepared and signed in NC-
cordance with conditions herein given, shall be placed in the special
envelope provided, which shall be properly sealed, marked on the upper
left-hand corner with the name and address of the bidder and the class
number, and sent by mail, postage prepaid, or delivered personally to
the Treasury Department, Procurement Division, Branch of Supply, Sev-
enth and D Streets, S.W., Washington, D. C. As openings commence at
10 R.m., proposals, to receive consideration, must reach the Division
not later than that hour on the date of opening. An addressed an-
velope, which should be used for mailing, is enclosed.
8. Representations and stipulations pursuant to Public Act No.
846, 74th Congross. It is understood end agreed that this bid is sub-
mitted, and any contract awarded thereon in any amount exceeding
$10,000 will be performed, subject to the representations and stipula-
tions of Public Act No. 846, 74th Congress, and regulations issued by
the Secretary of Labor pursuant thereto, as follows:
(a) The contractor is the manufacturer of or B. regular dealer in
the materials, supplies, articles, or equipment to be manufactured
or used in the performance of the contract.
(b) All persons employed by the contractor in the manufacture or
furnishing of the materials, supplies, articles, or equipment used in
the performance of the contract will be paid, without subsequent de-
duction or rebate on any account, not less than the minimum wages as
determined by the Secretary of Labor to be the prevailing minimum
wages for persons employed on similar work or in the particular or
similar industries or groups of industries currently operating in the
locality in which the materials, supplies, articles, or equipment are
to be manufactured or furnished under the contract: Provided, how-
ever, That this stipulation with respect to minimum wages shall apply
only to purchases or contracts relating to such industries 8.8 have been
the subject matter of EL determination by the Secretary of Labor.
(c) No person employed by the contractor in the manufacture or
furnishing of the materials, supplies, articles, or equipment used in
the performance of the contract shall be permitted to work in excess
of eight hours in any one day or in excess of 40 hours in any one
week, unless such person is paid such applicable overtime rate as
has been set by the Secretary of Labor.
(d) No male person under 16 years of age and no female person
under 18 years of age and no convict labor will be employed by the
contractor in the manufacture or production or furnishing of any of
the materials, supplies, articles, or equipment ncluded in the contract.
(e) No part of the contract will be performed nor will any of the
materials, supplies, articles, or equipment to be manufactured or fur-
nished under said contract be manufactured or fabricated in any plants,
Regraded Un ssified
34
factories, buildings, or surroundings, or under working conditions
which are insanitary or hazardous or dangerous to the health and safe-
ty of employees engaged in the performance of the contract, Compliance
with the safety, sanitary, end factory inspection laws of the State
in which the work or part thereof is to be performed shall be prima-
facie evidence of compliance with this subsection.
(f) Any breach or violation of any of the foregoing representations
and stipulations shall render the party responsible therefor liable to
the United States of America for liquidated damages, in addition to
damages for any other breach of the contract, in the sum of $10 per day
for each male person under 16 years of age or each female person under
18 years of age, or each convict laborer knowlingly employed in the per-
formance of the contract, And E sum equal to the amount of any doduc-
tlons, rebates, refunds, or underpayments of wagos due to any employee
engeged in the performance of the contract; and, in addition, the agon-
cy of the Unitod States entoring into the contract shall have the right
to cancol samo and to make open-market purchases or enter into other
contracts for the completion of the original contract, charging any
additional cost to the original contractor. Any sums of money due to
the United Statos of America by roason of any violation of any of the
reprosentations and stipulations of the contract E.S set forth herein
may be withhold from any amounts duo on the contract or may be recovero
in n suit brought in the name of the United States of America by the
Attorney General thereof. All sums withheld or recovered 8.8 deductions,
rebates, refunds, or underpayments of wages shall be held in B. special
deposit account and shall be paid, on order of the Secretary of Labor,
directly to the employees who have been paid less than minimum rates
of pay as set forth in such contracts and on whose account such sums
were withheld or recovered: Provided, That no claims by employees
for such payments shall be entertained unloss made within ono year from
the date of actual notice to the contractor of the withholding or re-
covery of such sums by the United States of America.
(g) The contractor shall post a copy of the stipulation in D. prom-
inent end rondily accessible place at the sito of the contract work
and shall keep such employment records 0,8 are required in the Regula-
tions under the act available for inspection by authorized represents-
tives of the Secretary of Labor.
9. Delivery reports. Successful bidders will be required to
furnish on the tenth day of each month fl. written report of the number
of harrels of cement and the amount in dollar value of sales during
the preceding month under each itom upon which award is received 08
a rosult of this proposal. The report should be directed to the
Treasury Department, Procurement Division, Branch of Supply, Washing-
ton, D. C., and a copy of the report shall be furnished to the De-
partment of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, Denver, Colorado.
10. Domestic matorials. Unloss otherwise specified by the bid-
dor, it is understood and agrood that only such unmanufactured articles,
matorials, and supplies as have been mined or produced in the United
35
States and only such manufactured articles, materials, and supplies
as have been manufactured in the United States substantially all from
articles, materials, or supplies mined, produced, or manufactured, as
the case may be, in the United States shall be delivered pursuant to
a contract awarded as a result of this bid.
11. Federal tax. The prices bid herein shall include any Fed-
eral tax heretofore imposed by the Congress which is applicable to the
materials on this bid. If any sales tax, processing tax, adjustment
charge, or other taxes or charges are imposed or changed by the Congress
after the date set for the opening of this bid, and made applicable di-
rectly upon the production, manufacture, or sale of the supplies covered
by this bid, and are paid by the contractor on the supplies herein con-
tracted for, then the price named in this bid will be increased or de-
creased accordingly, and any amount due the contractor as a result of
such change will be charged to the Government and entered on vouchers
(or invoices) as separate items.
12. Rejection of bid. The right is reserved to the contracting
officer to reject any and all bids, to waive technical defects, and
to accept or reject any part of any bid if, in his judgment, the in-
terests of the Government shall require it.
13. Termination for breach. In the event any of the provisions
of this contract are violated by the contractor or any subcontractor,
the contracting officer may terminate the contract by written notice
to the contractor and purchase similar supplies in the open market or
otherwise, and the contractor and his sureties shall be liable to the
Government for any excess cost occasioned the Government thereby.
14. Shipment. Material furnished and delivered f.o.b. cars
at the shipping point shall be shipped on Government bills of lading
furnished by the contracting officer. The contractor shall prepare
all materials for shipment in such manner as to protect them from dam-
age in transit and shall be responsible for and make good any and all
damage due to improper preparation or loading for shipment.
15. Extras. The contractor shall, when ordered in writing by the
contracting officer, perform extra work and furnish extra material not
covered by the specifications or included in the schedule but forming
an insoparable part of the work contracted for. Extra work and mate-
rial will ordinarily be paid for at a lump-sun or unit price agreed up-
on by the contractor and the contracting of ficer and stated in the or-
der. Whenever, in the judgment of the contracting officer, it is in-
practicable, because of the nature of the work or for any other reason,
to fix the price in the work, the extra work and material shall be paid
for at actual necessary cost BS determined by the contracting officer,
plus 10 percent for superintendence, general expense, and profit. The
actual necessary cost will include all expenditures for material, Ia-
bor (including compensation insurance and social security taxes), and
supplies furnished by the contractor, end a reasonable allowance for
the use of his plant and equipment, where required, to be agree- upon
36
in writing before the work is begun but will in no case include
any allowance for office expenses, general superintendence, or
other general expenses.
16. Failure of Congress to appropriate funds. If the op-
erations of this contract extend beyond the current fiscal year,
it is understood that the contract is made contingent upon Con-
gress making the necessary appropriations for expenditures there-
under after such current year has expired. In case such ap-
propriation as may be necessary to carry out this contract is
not made, the contractor horeby releases the Government from
all liability due to the failure of Congress to make such ap-
propriations.
17. Protests. If the contractor considers any work de-
manded of him to be outside the requirements of the contract or
considers any record or ruling of the contracting officer or of
the inspectors to be unfair, he shall immediately, upon such work
being demanded or such record or ruling being made, ask for writ-
ten instructions or decision, whereupon he shall proceed without
delay to perform the work or to conform to the record or ruling,
and, within 10 days after the date of receipt of the written in-
structions or decision, he shall file a written protest with the
contracting officer, stating clearly and in detail the basis of
his objections. Except for such protests or objections as are
made of record in the manner herein specified and within the time
limit stated, the rocords, rulings, instructions, or decisions
of the contracting officer shall be final and conclusive. Instruc-
tions and/or decisions of the contracting officer contained in
letters transmitting drawings to the contractor shall be con-
sidered as written instructions or decisions subject to protest
or objection as herein provided.
18. Comparison of bids. Whenever applicable, equalizing
elements or factors not specifically mentioned or provided for
herein, such as the cost of transportation or of inspection (in-
cluding salaries, travel, and subsistence expenses), or any other
element or factor in addition to that of price which would affect
the final cost to the Government, will be taken into consideration
in making sward of contract. In determining awards, considera-
tion will be given to trunsportation costs indicated by rates
legally available to the Government, based upon commercial rates
on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission and the various
state commissions. Special rates will be considered provided they
are filed with the Procurement Division, Branch of Supply, Treasury
Department, Washington, D. C., not later than the date of open-
ing of bids.
37
19. Increase or decrease in quantity. The Government reserves
the right to increase or decrease the quantities specified and the
quantities stated by the bidder in the schedules by not to exceed
25 percent at any time before award of contract: Provided, That,
with the consent of the contractor, such increase or decrease may
be made in the total quantity under any contract at any time ba-
fore complete shipment: Provided further, That in the event the
quantity stated by the bidder for any item of the schedules is in
excess of an amount which is the same proportion of the total
quantity in that item that the guaranteed monthly delivery stated
by the bidder is of the maximum monthly requirement for that item,
the Government recerves the right to decrease the quantity stated
by the bidder to such an amount and also to the adjusted quantity
by not to exceed 25 percent: Provided further, That, with the con-
sent of the bidder, the Government may increase or decrease the
quantities stated by the bidder in the schedules by any amount
which may be necessary to secure the maximum monthly requirements
specified in paragraph 22 and the full quantity required, at the
minimum net delivered cost to the Government.
20. Contracting officer. Pursuant to article 14(b) of the
standard Government form of contract for supplies (U. S, Standard
Form No. 32), the Chief Engineer of the Bureau of Reclamation, or
any person authorized to act for him, is the authorized repre-
sentative of the contracting officer in all transactions with
respect to placing purchase orders, inspection, delivery, adjust-
ments, extras, changes, and payments.
SPECIAL CONDITIONS
21, The requirement. It is required that there be furnished
and delivered f.o.b. cars or trucks at the point of production
or f.o.b. cars or trucks at the point of storage approximately
1,400,000 barrels of low-heat portland cement, in bulk, under
schedule No. 1, approximately 5,800,000 barrels of low-heat port-
land cement, in bulk, under schedule No. 2, approximately 3,100,000
barrels of low-heat portland cement, in bulk, under item 3 of
schedule No. 3, approximately 2,700,000 barrels of low-heat port-
land cement in bulk under item 4 of schedule No. 3, or approx-
imately 575,000 barrels of low-heat portland cement in bulk under
item 5 of schedule No. 3 for use by the United States Department
of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, in the construction of
the Shasta Dam, Central Valley project, California. Schedule No.
1 covers the estimated quantity of cement required for the con-
struction of the Shasta Dam during the calendar year 1940 only.
Schedule No. 2 covers the estimated entire quantity of cement
required for the completion of the dam, with estimated delivery
requirements extending through the years 1940 to 1944, inclusive.
Under schedule No. 3, items 3 and 4 combined also cover the 08-
timated entire quantity of cement required for the completion of
the dan. Item 3 covers the estimated maximum quantity of cement
which will be required to be delivered at a uniform rate, The
uniform delivery provided for is 100,000 barrels per month, and,
if award of contract or contracts is made for item 3, the cement
38
requirement for each month up to and including 100,000 barrels
will be ordered from the contractor or contractors for this item.
Items 4 and 5 are alternative items and cover the estimated fluc-
tuating requirements in excess of 100,000 barrels per nonth. Item
4 covers the estimated fluctuating requirements for the entire con-
struction period, and item 5 covers the ostimated fluotuating re-
quirements for the calendar year 1940 only. The Government re-
serves the right to award B. contract or contracts for item 3 of
schedule no. 3 without making award of items 4 or 5. The diagrams
on attached drawing no. 214-D-2201 show the estimated distribu-
tion, by months and years, of the cement requirements. The di-
agrama are included in the specifications for the general in-
formation of bidders, and the Government does not guarantee that
deliveries ordered will conform to the distribution shown.
22. Deliveries. No bid will be considered unless based
on a dolivered price f.o.b. cars or trucks at the bidder's point
of production or point of storago. The cement shall be delivered
in carload or truck lots and at times as required and ordered by
the contracting officer. The estimated maximum daily and monthly
deliveries, in barrels, under the various schedules are as fol-
lows:
Maximum deliveries
Daily
Monthly
Schedule no. 1, item 1
8,000
195,000
Schedule no. 2, item 2
11,000
290,000
Schedule no. 3, item 3
4,000
100,000
Schedule no. 3, item 4
7,000
190,000
Schedule no. 3, item 5
4,000
95,000
Failure of the bidder to state guaranteed daily and/or monthly
deliveries in the spaces provided therefor in the schedules will be
sufficient cause for rejection of the bid. If more than one ship-
ping point is designated by the bidder, complete information as to
quantities and guaranteed monthly and daily deliveries shall be
given with respect to each shipping point.
23. Failure to meet delivery requirements. If the contractor
fails to begin delivery within thirty (30) calendar days after
being notified that the first shipment is to be made and/or to
meet the guaranteed daily and/or monthly requirements when re-
quested to do so, the Government reserves the right to secure
the deficiency elsewhere and to charge to the contractor the dif-
ference in delivered cost to the Government. Whatever sums may
be due as difference in delivered cost to the Government may be
Regraded Unclassified
39
deducted from payments due to the contractor or may be collected
from the contractor or the contractor's surety or sureties. The
term "delivery" shall be construed as applying to shipment of tested
and accepted cement.
24. Division of award. If the lowest bidder cannot furnish
the full quantity stated in the item or meet the maximum monthly
requirement of the Government, as stated in paragraph 22, the
Government reserves the right to divide the award botween or among
the bidders in such a manner as to assure a guaranteed monthly
delivery not loss than that required by the Government and the
procurement of the full quantity required at the minimum not de-
livered cost to the Government. Division of award between two or
more bidders will be made in the following manner, subject to the
provisions of paragraph 19: To the lowest bidder may be awarded
that quantity which is the same proportion of the total quantity
in the item that the guaranteed monthly delivery stated by the
bidder 1s of the maximum monthly requirement under that item.
Awards for the remainder of the total requirement may be made to
the next lowest bidder or bidders on B. like basis. Insofar 8.8
practicable, orders will be prorated among the various contractors
on the same basis as that on which awards are made, and, in the
event that deliveries under any contract are to be made from more
than one mill, as stated in the schedule, daily requirements shall
be prorated among the various mills in the same proportion as the
total amounts to be furnished from said mills.
25. Shipment. In addition to the requirements of paragraph
14, the contractor shall prepare all railroad cars in which bulk
cement is to be shipped in such manner as to protect the cement
from moisture and to prevent contamination of the cement by tramp
metal or other foreign material and to avoid loss of cement in
transit. The contractor shall be liable for loss of cement in
transit due to improper preparation of railroad cars and for any
damage resulting from such cause. Cars shall be loaded to max-
imum capacity. The cost of preparation of railroad cars for ship-
ment of cement shall be included in the unit prices bid in the
schedules. The unit of measurement will be the barrel, which
is 376 pounds, net. The brand and name of the manufacturer shall
be shown on all shipping advices accompanying shipments.
LOW-HEAT PORTLAND CEMENT
General Requirements
26. References. Those parts of Federal specification
SS-C-158 referred to herein shall form B. part of these specifi-
cations.
40
27. Type and definition. The coment furnished under these
specifications shall be low-heat portland cement, conforming to
the detail requirements specified herein, and shall be the prod-
uct obtained by finely pulverizing clinker produced from an in-
timate and properly proportioned mixture of materials selected
to give proporties hereinafter specified, with no additions sub-
sequent to calcination except water, gypsum, and, at the option
of the contractor, an organic compound manufactured under the
trade name "TDA", Provided, That the quantity of "TDA" to be
used and the manner of its use shall be submitted for the approval
of the contracting officer.
Detail Requirements
28. Foreign materials in cement. The cement shall be free
from tramp metal or other foreign materials which might cause in-
jury to or interfere with the operation of cement-handling equip-
ment. The contractor shall be liable for damages resulting to
such equipment from contained foreign materials.
29. Chemical composition. The following limits shall not
be exceeded:
Percent
Loss on ignition
2.25
Insoluble residue
0.75
Sulphuric anhydride (SO₃)
2.25
Magnesia (MgO)
5.00
Uncombined lime (CaO) in clinker
1.25
The ratio of the percentage of iron oxide to the percentage
of aluminum oxide shall not exceed 1.50.
30. Compound composition. The theoretical compound com-
position shall be within the following limits:
Tricalcium silicate (3 CaO.SiO₂)
Not more than 30 percent.
Dicalcium silicate (2 CaO.SiO₂)
Not less than 40 percent.
and not more than 65 percent.
Tricalcium aluminate (3 CaO*Al₂O₃)
Not more than 7 percent.
Tetracalcium aluminoferrite
(4 Ca0*A1203*Fe₂0₃)
Not more than 20 percent.
31. Fineness. The average specific surface of the cement in
a bin sampled shall be not less than 1,800 square centimeters per
gram, and the specific surface of cement in any individual test
sample shall be not less than 1,600 square centimeters per grame
41
32. Soundness. A specimen of neat cement shall not exhibit
a linear expansion in excess of 0.20 percent of its initial Eage
length when tested in the manner hereinafter prescribed.
33. Time of setting. The cement shall not develop initial
set in less than 60 minutes when the Gillmore needle is used.
Final set shall be attained within 10 hours.
34. Premature stiffening. Samples of cement taken from the
bin at the time or times of proposed shipment shall show no evi-
dence of premature stiffening when tested by the method herein-
after prescribed. Composite samples of cement will be tested
for promature stiffoning before completion of the 7-day strength
tosts and again, if deemod advisable, just bofore all of the 00-
ment in a bin or the cement in any portion of B. bin is to be re-
leased for shipment. Should any such tests on composite samples
indicate premature stiffening or an approach to premature stiffen-
ing, additional tests will be made on samples of cement drawn from
the bin at the time or times of proposed shipment or at any other
time before shipment as the Government may elect or B.S the con-
tractor may request. In lieu of making several tests on the same
cement to insuro that there is no evidonce of promature stiffen-
ing up to the time the cement leavos the mill, a single tost for
establishing whether a cement exhibits premature stiffening or
is suscoptible to the early dovelopment of premature stiffoning
may, with the consent of the contractor, be substituted if and
whon B. satisfactory tost for the purpose has been developed.
35. Compressive strength. The average compressive strength,
in pounds per square inch, of three mortar cubes composed of 1
part cement and 2.75 parts fine testing sand, by weight, shall
be equal to or greater than the following:
Age at
Compressive strength
test
(pounds per
(days)
Storage of spocimens
square inch)
7
1 day in moist air, 6 days in water
750
28
1 day in moist air, 27 days in water
2,000
The average compressive strength at 28 days shall be at least
35 percent greater than the strength at 7 days.
42
Sampling and Inspection
36. Sampling. The provisions of Federal specification
SS-C-158 for storage and sampling of coment shall be applicable
to the cement to be furnished under these specifications except
as hereinafter specified. At least 12 days from the time of
sampling shall be allowed for the completion of 7-day tests and
at least 33 days for the 28-day tests. Unless otherwise specified
by the contracting officer, one test sample of cement shall repre-
sent each 400 barrels of coment, and one test sample of clinker
shall represent each 2,000 barrols of cement. Cement clinker
for testing for uncombined lime shall be sampled by the com-
posite method as it is delivered to the grinding mill, unless
otherwise directed in writing by the contracting officer. Each
sample entering into the composite sample shall be of such size
and so taken that each size of clinker is fairly represented.
Each composite sample shall be crushed, in suitable crushing
equipment provided by the contractor, to 6. maximum size of one-
quarter of an inch and reduced to & representative 2-pound test
sample. Sufficient tests for uncombined lime will be made on
samples of both clinker and cement representing early production
to establish the relationship between test results, and it is
contemplated that subsequent tests will ordinarily be made on
the cement instead of the clinker, in which case appropriate al-
lowance will be made for difference in results between tests made
on the clinker and those made on the cement. Additional tests of
the clinker will be made, when necessary, to insure that the ce-
mont is within spocification requirements.
37. Rejection. Coment may be rejected at the discretion
of the contracting officer if it fails to meet any of the re-
quirements of those spocifications or if, on retost, any sample
fails to moot the soundnoss requirements. Comont romaining in
storage prior to shipment for & poriod greater than six months
after test shall be rotosted. Cement will be accepted by the
Government without swaiting the 28-day test results when the
characteristics of the cement have been established and there
is definite justification for anticipating, from the 7-day test
results, that the 28-day requirements will be satisfied: Provided,
That any cement formally accepted on the basis of 7-day or 28-day
test results will be subject to rejection if there is evidence
of premature stiffening at the time or tinos of proposed shipment.
Tosts
38. Chemical analysis. The methods of chemical analysis,
except for the determination of uncombined line, shall be in ac-
cordance with those described in Federal specification SS-C-158.
Regraded classified
43
39. Uncombined line determination. The uncombined lime
content shall be determined by the method outlined below. This
is the method given by Lerch and Bogue in Paper No. 23, Portland
Cement Association Fellowship at the Bureau of Standards, on "Re-
vised Procedure for the Determination of Uncombined Lime in Port-
land Cement. The determination is based on the solution of the
uncombined line in BL hot solution of glycerol and alcohol and the
subsequent titration of the dissolved line with an alcoholic
solution of ammonium acotate in accordance with the reaction
CaO + 2CH3 COONH 4 . (CH3COO), Ca + H2O + 2 NH3*
(a) Clycerol-alcohol solution.- solution shall be propared
consisting of one part, by volume, of U.S.P. glycerol and five
parts, by volume, of absolute or anhydrous ethyl alcohol. To
each liter of this solution, two ml of an indicator shall be
added. The indicator shall be prepared by dissolving 1 gram
of phenolphthelein in 100 ml of absolute alcohol. It is ea-
sential that the glycerol-alcohol solution be neutral to the
indicator. If the solution is colorless, dilute sodium or po-
tassium hydroxide in absolute alcohol shall be added until the
pink color appears. This color shall be just removed by a drop
of an alcoholic solution of ammonium acetate. If the initial
color is pink, it shall be just removed by the alcoholic solu-
tion of ammonium acetate.
(b) Standard alcoholic ammonium-acetate solution.--A stand-
ard alcoholic solution of ammonium acetate, approximately 0.2N,
is required. This solution shall be prepared by dissolving 16
grams of crystalline ammonium acetate in 1 liter of absolute
or anhydrous ethyl alcohol. This solution shall be standardized
by titrating against pure calcium oxide. The calcium oxide should
be freshly prepared by calcining pure calcite or calcium oxalate
in B. platinum crucible at 900° to 1,000° C. to constant weight.
Ordinary C.P. CaO should not be used. A few grans of the calcite
or calcium oxalate shall be ground to an impalpable powder and
heated as before. About 0.1 gram shall be weighed and transferred
to a. 200-ml Erlenmeyer flask containing 60 ml of the neutralized
glycerol-alcohol solution. The solids in the solution shall be
dispersed by shaking. A water or air reflex condenser shall be
inserted in the nook of the flask and the sixture boiled for 20
minutes. The condenser shall then be removed and the solution in-
mediately titrated, while near boiling, with ammonium-acetate solu-
tion. The condenser shall be replaced and the solution boiled for
20 minutes. The titration shall be repeated at 20-minute inter-
vals. The titration is complete when no further color appears in
the solution during continuous boiling for one hour. The value of
the solution shall then be calculated in terms of grame of line
equivalent to each milliliter of ammonium-acetate solution.
Regraded lassified
44
(c) Test procedure.-The olinker to be tested shall be ground
to an impalpable powder. A 1-gram sample shall be weighed and
transferred to a 200-ml Erlemmeyer flask containing 60 ml of
the glycerol-alcohol solution. The solids shall be dispersed
in the solution by shaking. The condenser shall be attached and
the mixture boiled on the hot plate. The solution shall be ti-
trated, as in the standardization, at 20-minute intervals until
no further color appears after boiling for one hour. In the
final titrations, if there is doubt of the exact end point, a
drop of indicator shall be added to the quiescent liquid in the
flask and careful observation made of the point at which the in-
dicator strikes the solution. If no color appears, the end point
has been reached. The uncombined limo content of the clinker
shall then be calculated from the known limo value of the ammonium-
acotate solution used.
40. Compound computation. The compound composition shall
be calculated from the chemical analysis by the method outlined
below. The method is as given by Bogue in Paper No. 21, Portland
Cement Association Fellowship at the Bureau of Standards, on
"Calculation of the Compounds in Portland Cement," except that
no account is taken of uncombined lime. Compound percentages
shall be computed to tenths and reported to the nearest whole
percent.
(a) Method of calculation.--Each percent of SO₃ enters into
combination with 0.70 percent CaO to form 1.70 percent CaSO4:
CaO - 80.065 58.07 # 0.70 percent CaO
(0₁)
SO₃
Each percent of Fe203 enters into combination with 0.64 percent
A120₃=
Al203 Fe203 - 159.68 101.92 =0.64 percent A12O3
(a₁)
and, with 1.40 percent CaO:
4
CaO
224.28
a
= 1.40 percent CaO
(02)
Fe₂O₃
159.68
to form 3.04 percent 4 Ca0*A1203*Fe₂0z* The total MgO is record-
ed as uncombined MgO+ The total A1203 minus (a₁) gives the
A1203 (a₂) available for combination as 3 CaO*Al₂O₃· Each por-
cent of (a₂) will enter into combination with 1.65 percent Can to
form 2.65 percent 3 CaO*Al₂O₃:
3 CaO = 101.92 168.21 = 1.65 percent CaO
(c₃)
A1₂O₃
Regraded Unclassified
45
The amount of CaO available for combination with Sio₂ is ob-
tained by subtracting, from the total CaO, the sum of the CaO
(c₁) combined as CaSO4' the CaO (o2) combined as 4
and the CaO (c3) combined 0.0 3 CaO*Al2Oz:
Total CaO - (0₁ + 02 + os) = CaO available to combine (c) with
sio₂
The total SiO₂ (s) is calculated first to combine with CaO to
form 2 CaO*SiO₂ Each percent of S10₂ (s) will combine with CaO
to form 2.87 percent 2 CaO*SiO₂:
2 CaO.SiO, sio₂ = 60.06 172.20 . 2.87 percent 2 CaO.SiO₂
This first approximation to the value of 2 CaO.SiO₂ is sub-
tracted from the sio₂ (s) + CaO (c), which gives the CaO (c₄)
available to combine with 2 CaO*SiO₂ to form 3 CaO*SiO₂. Each
percent of CaO (04) combines with 2 CaO·SiO₂ to form 4.07 per-
cent 3 CaO.SiO₂:
3
CaO.SiO₂ CaO - 228.27 56.07 = 4.07 percent 3 CaO*SiO₂.
The 3 CaO*SiO₂ subtracted from the total 8i0₂ (s) + CaO (c)
gives the true amount of 2 CaO-SiO₂ present.
(b) Graphical application of the method of calculation.--De-
termination of the theoretical compounds may be materially facili-
tated by the use of the nomographs on plate 1. By careful read-
ing, these graphs will give results comparable with those ob-
tained by numerical computation and may be used: Provided, That,
where compound percentages obtained with the graphs exceed the
limits specified, the results shall be checked mumerically.
41. Fineness. The specific surface shall be determined in
accordance with the method described in Federal spocification
SS-C-158.
42. Soundness. The necossary apparatus and accessories,
mothod of preparation and storage of specimens, and procedure
for testing are described as follows:
(a) Molds.--Molds may be the single-, double-, or gang-mold
type that will provide 1- by 1-inch test bars of 10-inch effective
gage length. The effective gage length shall be considered as
that length between the innermost points of the metal inserts
used as reference points. The parts of the mold shell be tight-
fitting and firmly held together when assombled. The molds shall
Regraded Unclassified
46
be mado of hard metal not roadily attacked by the cemont paste.
There shall be sufficient material in the sides of the molds to
prevent spreading or warping. Bach end plato of the mold shall
bo equipped to hold rigidly in place, during the setting period,
a stainless-steel or noncorroding-motal reference point having
fl. diameter of ono-quarter of nn inch. The reforonce points shall
be sot 50 that their principal axos coincide with the principal
axis of the test specimen and shall extend into the specimen
five-eighths of an inch. These requirements fix the length of
the specimen at 11-1/4 inches. The distance between opposite
faces shall be 1.00 ± 0.03 inches. The height of the molds,
measured separately for each bar compartment, shall be 1.00 ±
0.03 inches. The distance between the inner ends of the ref-
arence points shall be 10.00 ± 0.10 inches. Prior to use, the
molds shall be covered thinly with petroloum jolly or stearic-acid
paste and the stainless-stool or noncorroding-netal reforence
points set, caro boing takon to koop them clean. Stoaric-acld
paste is mado by adding stoaric-acid powder to heated keroseno
until n. mushy consistoncy is obtained after cooling. When coolod,
this pasto is appliod with e stiff brush.
(b)
Autoclave The autoclave shall consist of B. high-pressure
steam boiler equipped with an automatic pressure control and a
safety valve. The capacity of the heating unit shall be such that
the pressure of the saturated steam in the autoclave may be
raised in one to one and one-quarter hours, with maximum load,
from atmospheric pressure to & gage pressure of 295 pounds per
square inch (absolute pressure about 310 pounds per square inch).
The automatic pressure control shall be capable of maintaining a
pressure of 295 ± + 5 pounds per square inch for at least three
hours, which gage pressure corresponds to & temperature of 215°
C. ± + 1° C. (420° F. + 2° F.). There shall be used, in the auto-
clave, such B. quantity of water as will maintain saturated steam
vapor for the entire time of tost. The autoclave shall be de-
signed to permit the pressure to drop from 295 to less than 10
pounds per square inch in one hour after the heat supply has been
shut off. The autoclave shall be equipped with 8. vent valve for
allowing the oscape of air during the early part of the heating
period and for reloasing any stoam pressure remaining at the end
of the 1-hour cooling poriod.
(o) Longth comparator. Changos in length shall be measured
by a dial Eago or micromoter comparator having a rango of at
loast 0.25 inch- The instrument shall be graduated to 0.0001
inch and shall be accurate to this amount in each 0.01 inch of
travel of the spindle.
Regraded Inclassified
47
(d) Preparation of test specimen neat-cement paste of
normal consistency shall be prepared in accordance with Federal
specification 88-0-158, except that the mixing shall be continued
for three minutes instead of one and one-half minutes. Immediate-
ly following completion of mixing, a test bar shall be molded, in
two equal layers, each layer being compacted with the forefinger
by pressing the paste into the corners, around the reference in-
serts, and along the surfaces of the mold. A total of 100 strokes
of the forefinger shall be applied to each layer, moving from one
end of the bar to the other and back two times, applying 25 strokes
each trip over the length of the ber, After the top layer has been
compacted, the specimen shall be smoothed off with n. few strokes
of the trowel, leaving the paste slightly above the sides of the
mold. During the operation of mixing and placing, the hands shall
be protected by rubber gloves.
(e) Storuge of test specimens, After the mold has been filled,
the paste shall be out off flush with the top of the mold and the
surface smoothed with a few strokos of the trowel and immodiately
placed in a moist closot or moist room at a temporature of 21° C.
± 1.7° C. (70° F. ± 30 F.) and B. relative humidity of at least
90 percent. Specimens shall remain in the molds for at least 20
hours. If removed from the molds before 24 hours, they shall be
kept in the moist closet or moist room until tested.
(f) Procedure for testing At 24 hours ± 1/2 hour after be-
ing molded, the specimens shall be removed from the moist closet,
one at B. time, measured for length, and placed in the autoclave
in a rack so that the four sides of each bar are exposed to sat-
urated steam in the same manner. The temperature of the auto-
clave shall be raised at such B. rate as will bring the pressure
of the steam from atmospheric pressure to 8. pressure of 295 pounds
per square inch in 1 hour = 5 minutes. To permit air to escape
from the autoclave at the beginning of the test period, the vent
valve shall be left open until steam begins to escape and shall
then be closed. The pressure of 295 + 5 pounds per square inch
shall be maintained for three hours. At the end of the 3-hour
period at 295 pounds pressure, the heat supply shall be shut off
and the autoclave allowed to cool at a rate such that the pres-
sure will gradually fall to less than 10 pounds per square inch
in one hour. At the end of the 1-hour cooling period, any small
pressure remaining shall be released slowly (in about 2 to 5
minutes) by opening the vent valve until atmospheric pressure
is attained, The autoclave shall then be opened and the bars im-
mediately placed in boiling water. The water surrounding the
bars shall then be slowly tempered with cool water at B. rate such
that the temperature of the water and bare will be lowered to 21°
C. (70° F.) in 15 minutes. The water surrounding the bare shall
Regraded Unat
48
be maintained at 21° C. (70° F.) for on additional 15 minutes,
when the spocimens shall be surface-dried end measured for length.
(g) Calculation of autoclave expansion.--The difference in
length of the test bars before and after autoclaving shall be ex-
pressed as a percentage of the effective gage length and shall
be reported to the nearest 0.01 percent. If the expansion on any
composite sample of cement representing each 2,000 barrels of
cement exceeds the allowable limit, tests for soundness shall then
be made on every sample representing each 400 barrels of coment in
the bin.
43. Time of setting. The method for the determination of
the time of setting shall be as described in Federal specifica-
tion SS-C-158, except that the paste shall be mixed three minutes
instead of one and one-half minutes.
44. Premature stiffening. Five hundred grams of the 06-
ment to be tested shall be kneaded into a paste with 26.0 percent
mixing water 8.8 described in paragraph F-4h of Federal specifica-
tion SS-C-158, except that the mixing time shall be continued for
three minutes instead of one and one-half minutes. The paste shall
be quickly formed into n. ball with the gloved hands, completing
the operation by tossing it six times from one hand to the other
with the hands maintained about six inches apart. The ball rest-
ing in the palm of one hand shall bo pressed into the largor end
of the conicul ring, G (described in paragraph F-41 of Federal
specification SS-C-158), held in the other hand, completely filling
the ring with paste. The excess at the lurger end shall then be
removed by a single movement of the palm of the hand. The ring
shall then be placed on ita larger end on a glass plate, and the
excess paste at the smaller end sliced off at the top of the
ring by B. single oblique stroke of a sharp-edged trowel held at
a slight angle with the top of the ring, and the top smoothed,
if necessary, with B. f'ew light touches of the pointed end of the
trowel. During these operations, care shall be taken not to com-
press the paste. The paste confined in the ring, resting on the
plate, shall be centered under the rod, B, of the Vicat apparatus
described in paragraph F-41 of Federal specification SS-C-168,
the plunger end, C, of which shall be brought in contact with the
surface of the paste and the set screw, E, tightened. Then the
movable indicator, F, shall be set to the upper zero mark of the
scale or an initial reading taken, and the rod shall be released
exactly two and one-half minutes after completion of the initial
mixing period. The apparatus shall be free from all vibration
during the tost. The cement shall be considered B.5 evidencing
premature stiffening whon the needlo fails to settlo more than
two millimeters bolow the original surfaco 30 scconds after be-
ing roleased. For each test sample showing evidence of premature
stiffening, a repeat test shall be made for verification.
Regraded Ur classified
49
45. Compression tests. Comprossive-strength tests shall
be made in accordance with the method described in Fodoral spoci-
fication SS-C-158, excopt that no dotormination for consistoncy
of mortar shall be mado and that 53 percent water, by weight, of
comont shall be used.
46. Number of tests. Unless otherwise directed by the con-
tracting officer, the number of tosts shall be as follows:
(a) Tosts for timo of setting and finenoss Tosts shall bo
made on oach tost samplo (normally oach 400 barrols of comont).
(b) Tosts for chemical composition, soundnoss, uncombined
lime, compound composition, premature stiffoning, and compressive
strength. Tests shall be mado on samplos of conent (and clinker
when tested for uncombined lime) representing each 2,000 barrels
of cement, but samples shall not be combined from different bins.
The samples of cement to be used shall be obtained by combining
equal anounts, whenever practicable, of the unused portions of 00-
ment from the regular 5-pound test samples, except that, if the
cement is sampled just previous to loading for shipment, for tost-
ing for premature stiffoning, the size of such samples and number
of tests will be as directed by the contracting officer.
Regraded t aclassified
50
DETERMINATION OF COMPOUNDS IN PORTLAND CEMENT
Fe203
A1203
7
20
II
SO₃
20
10
15
5
3 3
?
6
9
0
4
45
CaO (in C4AF and C₃A)
15
8
C3A
Ca CaSO4
22
3
5
7
10
2
6
1 I
10
CaO (in cas04)
5
4
5
I
C4AF
4
5
0
00
0
10
10
3
3
SO₃
5
2
o
GRAPH No. I
2
I
15
5
0
0
Al2O3
70
I
20
GRAPH No. 2
0
0
Fe₂O₃
SiO2
60
CaO
27
25
56
26
55
50
30
25
54
24
35
53
40
C3S
23
CaO (in C3S and C2S)
C2S
40
52
22
30
51
45
21
50
20
20
50
49
GRAPH No. 3
19
48
SiO₂
55
10
EXAMPLE:
47
Graph No. % Oxides %CaO
% Compounds
I
SO₃ = 1.5
1.0
Ca504 = 2.5
60
46
2
Fe₂O₃ = 4.9
}
8.8
C4AF = 15.0
o
CaO
A12O3 =4.3
C3A = 3.0
CaO(Free)= = 1.0
1.0
CaO (Free)= 1.0
65
CaO = 61.8 - 10.8=51.0
{
C₂S = 50.0
3
SiO₂ =24.0
C3S = 25.0
Total = 96.5
Total = 96.5
45-D-2293
PLATE I
Regraded Unclassified
51
300
100 260
248
250
CEMENT - 1000 BBLS. UNITS
205
210
200
186
196
193
as
180
180
ITEM 5
150
150
575,000 BBL'S
TEM 4 - 2,700,000 BBL'S
100
100
100
95
96
ITEM 3- 3,100,000 BBL'S
so
50
20
15
5.
o
MAMJJASON
5
o
N
D
JFMAMJJASOND
J
FMANJJASOND
J
F
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
SCHEDULE No. 3
300
and
290
ESA 260
250
848
CEMENT CEMENT - 1000 1000 BBL5. UNITS
EOS
tio
200
155
199
195
180
180
ISO
150
100
100
100
95
95
/
ITEM 2-5,800,000 BBL'S
50
so
26
10
5
o
MAMJJASON
S
o
N
o
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
o
N
D
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
$
o
N
D
J
F
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
SCHEDULE No. 2
300
250
NOTE
CEMENT 1000 BBLS. UNITS
Figures indicate monthly requirements
200
195
in 1000 bbls. units
195
150
100
100
DE
ITEM I
1,400,000 BBL'S
50
25
UNITED STAT 19
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
o
BUREAU OF RECLAMATION
CENTRAL VALLEY PROJECT- CALIFORNIA
MAMJJASON
KENNETT DIVISION
1940
SHASTA DAM
SCHEDULE No. I
ESTIMATED DISTRIBUTION BY MONTHS
OF CEMENT REQUIRED UNDER THE SCHEDULES
DRAWN G.E.R.
SUBMITTED R.F. Blanks
RECOMMENDED. witholder a Halter
CHECKED M.J.E.
APPROVED
DENVER, COLD - WAR 17,1939
214-0-2201
ARD FORM No. 14A
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
52
VED BY THE PRESIDENT
WASHINGTON
MARCH 10, 1925
TELEGRAM
CHARGE TREASURY DEPARTMENT, APPROPRIATION FOR
Official
OFFICIAL BUSINESS-GOVERNMENT RATES
(The appropriation from which payable must be stated on above line)
. a PRINTING -
54117
r. Edward H. Heller
10 Schwabacher & Co.
May 10, 1939.
00 Market Street
an Francisco, California.
ECRETARY MORGENTHAU DELIGHTED TO SEE YOU TUESDAY MORNING
AY SIXTEENTH AT TEN THIRTY
H. S. Klotz
53
Treasury Department
Juesday
TELEGRAPH OFFICE
Collins
W M 201 NL
WUX SAN FRANCISCO CALIF MAY 9 1939
10:30
N HENRY MORGENTHAU JR
1939 MAY 10 AM 8 42
RIVING WASHINGTON MONDAY MORNING. WOULD APPRECIATE APPOINTMENT IN
DER TO DISCUSS WITH YOU THE FOLLOWING MATTER: THE PERMANENTE
RPORATION, OF WHICH I AM A STOCKHOLDER AND ORGANIZER THE OTHER
OCKHOLDERS BEING CONSTRUCTION FIRMS WHICH HAVE IN THE PAST BEEN
MBERS OF THE GROUPS WHICH BUILT BOULDER DAM, BONNEVILLE DAM AND
E NOW BUILDING GRAND COULEE DAM, HAS SUBMITTED A BID TO THE
DCUREMENT DIVISION IN YOUR DEPARTMENT FOR 5,800,000 BARRELS OF
N HEAT CEMENT FOR SHASTA DAM, CENTRAL VALLEY PROJECT CALIF.
Treasury Department
54
TELEGRAPH OFFICE
1w/2
HIS BID IS APPROXIMATELY ONE AND ONE HALF MILLION DOLLARS LOWER THAN
HE NEXT HIGHER BID SUBMITTED JOINTLY BY THE CEMENT COMPANIES OF
ORTHERN CALIFORNIA. SOME LEGAL QUESTIONS HAVE ARISEN IN CONNECTION
ITH THE FORM OF THE BID SUBMITTED BY THE PERMANENTE CORPORATION. IN
EW OF THE VERY SUBSTANTIAL SAVING TO THE GOVERNMENT I WOULD
PRECIATE AN OPPORTUNITY TO DISCUSS THIS MATTER WITH YOU PERSONALLY
[FORE ANY DECISION IS MADE BY THE PROCUREMENT DIVISION so THAT YOU
LL PERSONALLY BE ADVISED CONCERNING ALL THE FACTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES
TENDING OUR BID. WILL YOU BE GOOD ENOUGH TO ADVISE ME CARE SCHWABACHER
D CO 600 MARKET STREET SANFRANCISCO, IF YOU CAN SEE ME MONDAY
Regraded Unclassified
55
Treasury Department
TELEGRAPH OFFICE
1/3
I AM LEAVING WEDNESDAY NIGHT
EDWARD H HELLER
802A
Regraded Unclassified
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
56
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 16, 1939
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
E. H. Foley, Jr.
The Helium Conservation Act provides in part that no
helium gas shall be exported from the United States until a
license authorizing the exportation has been obtained on the
joint recommendation of all the members of the National
Munitions Control Board and the Secretary of Interior. The
Act further provides that, under regulations approved by the
National Munitions Control Board and the Secretary of Interior,
export shipments of quantities of helium that are not of
military importance as defined in the regulations, and which
do not exceed a maximum to be specified therein, may be made
under license granted by the Secretary of State without such
specific recommendation.
We have before us for approval regulations authorizing
the export of helium, upon licenses to be issued by the
Secretary of State, in quantities not to exceed during any
one year to the ultimate consignees or purchasers within any
one country 500,000 cubic feet.
Mr. Rowe has requested Treasury action with respect to
the proposed regulations, and stated that the President has
been advised that a request of the Polish Ambassador for an
allotment of helium to be used in a stratosphere flight was
being held up pending the approval of the regulations.
On February 4. 1939. you advised the Department of
State that you had no objection to granting the request of
the Polish Ambassador for an allotment of helium in the amount
set forth in his request. Secretary Ickes and Secretary Hopkins
gave their approval to this request yesterday.
It is my view that the proposed regulations should not
be approved. I was advised yesterday that this is also Secretary
Hopkins' E.Nth view.
Regraded classified
57
May 16, 1939
3 p. m.
Present:
Mr. Jean Monnet
Mr. Hanes
Mrs. Klotz
HM,Jr: I don't know whether you want to make
notes. I have an answer for you from the President
and I am reading from here. On this, of course, you
will have to use your judgment, but I am quoting from
the President.
I told him about our talks; also told him about
your doubts about raising it at this time. See?
Mr. Monnet: Yes.
HM.Jr: So he says this: that the formula which
you and I discussed -- in my note to him I called it the
Monnet formula -- was the money we loaned you during the
war, to forgive; the money we loaned you to buy our war
supplies, to trade on a barter basis; and then the money
we loaned you after the War, you were going to pay cash.
Mr. Monnet: That's right.
HM,Jr: But having covered that, "it's an inter-
esting basis for future discussion," and then, he said,
"to be kept in our safe ready to take out (this plan)
at a time that looks more propitious." In other words,
he agrees with you and me that this is not & good time.
And then he says he does not want to take money out of
France at this time. He thinks it's a mistake.
Now, I could enlarge on that for an hour, but
that is -- doesn't that boil it down, Mr. Monnet?
Mr. Monnet: Yes. Surely.
58
-2-
HM,Jr: I don't know whether you see the Gallup
poll or anything so mundane as that. They asked two
questions in case of war.
Mr. Monnet: I saw that one.
HM,Jr: And 69% were against lending money to
England or France in case of war.
Mr. Monnet: I saw that. I saw that.
HM,Jr: But I have written my letter to him. I
think we wrote it the next day.
Mr. Hanes: The day after you were here.
HM,Jr: So, as we say, "that's that!". You being
a business man, I don't go through the usual palaver of
talking about the weather and the late spring and how
beautiful the French building is at the World's Fair and
how are your children, but I do want to say we don't
brush a thing like this aside lightly. The President
is very much interested and, in diplomatic language, we
thank your Government for bringing this thing up at this
time, but really, more for your sake than ours, we think
it 1s a poor time to do it and I personally feel -- I
don't see how France could be regarded more highly than
it is at this time in this country and I think raising
this thing at this time can only do one thing and that
is hurt you -- talking for Hanes and myself.
Mr. Hanes: We were all unanimous, of the same
opinion, that it would be injurious. In this country
public sentiment, we think, would turn right against
France at this time on this thing.
Mr. Monnet: At this moment.
HM,Jr: Public opinion towards France could not
be higher; could not be better. Here I am, showing
my confidence in you, saying as Secretary of the Treas-
ury that I don't want to be paid at this time, because
I know I can't get it through Congress with this formula.
Mr. Monnet: Through Congress?
Regraded classified
59
-3-
HM,Jr: Impossible. Out of the question. And
all you would have is you would make it -- you would get
your publicity -- France would get turned down and leave
a bad, sour taste in everybody's mouth and everybody would
say, Uh-huh; that's all they are after.
Mr. Hanes: Especially the press in the interior.
HM,Jr: I did not wait for you to express your
sentiment on this point. You were very frank. You
remember I said, "You are a hell of an Ambassador."
Mr. Monnet: I do think this: that this question
should be settled one day and I think that's very essen-
tial. That day 18 a matter of choosing.
HM,Jr: Choosing the day?
Mr. Monnet: Choosing the day.
Now, whether or not time would be gained by elab-
orating a little more clearly what we mentioned the other
day or not, is a matter for you to say.
HM,Jr: The President said, "Put it in the safe
and leave it there for the time being." Mr. Bell, Hanes
and I went over the whole things afterwards. We are all
in accord. When I wrote this letter, I thought it was
important. I wanted to put it down on paper. The three
of us went over it together and we sent it up. Aside
from everything else, if we applied the Monnet formula
to England, England would only owe us $5,000,000, which
is impossible.
Mr. Monnet: I know.
HM,Jr: And ewen you, as a good Frenchman, don't
want us to give you better treatment than England. You
wouldn't sleep nights!
Mr. Monnet: I don't know about that.
(Both the Secretary and Mr. Monnet got a good laugh
out of their remarks.)
Mr. Monnet: I appreciate fully your position and
80
-4-
you also understand I appreciate that irrespective of
any settlement, Mr. Paul Reynaud was willing to pay a
few million dollars cash as a gesture to make American
public opinion feel that at least France was doing what
they could, irrespective of their remaining or not re-
maining in default.
HM,Jr: He wants to do that?
Mr. Monnet: He was suggesting that.
HM,Jr: I did not get that. Did you, John?
Mr. Hanes: No. I understood that was a part of
the deal: that if these other things could be done, the
$300,000,000 would be forthcoming.
Mr. Monnet: I thought I had made this clear when
I tried to recite. I think the President understood that,
because he made a remark to me. He said, "I don't want
let me say again, that irrespective of the consequences,
this was a suggestion of Reynaud that France might pay,
give $300,000,000 or BO as a gesture to recognize that
while they haven't paid, it isn't that they don't intend
or will not pay, and in view of circumstances they want to
make that gesture 80 as to convince and satisfy public
opinion of America of the intentions of France. To that
the President said to me, "I don't want that because it
would not solve anything and you would remain, France would
remain Just as much in default as if you had paid nothing
and I don't know that France, under present circumstances,
would gain very much from it." So he
HM,Jr: I did not know it.
Mr. Monnet: But I want you to know that.
HM,Jr: If Mr. Paul Reynaud thinks that by doing that
maybe it would be possible to come over and borrow some
money
Mr. Monnet: No. No. Again I make the point clear
that it was irrespective of any consequences.
HM,Jr: I think it was a sort of useless gesture.
If things continue to get better, which they have over the
Regraded nclassified
61
-5-
week-end
Mr. Hanes: Less worse.
HM,Jr: ... and France should continue to gain money;
money returns to France, there is always a time and if I
ever thought it was a good time, I would initiate it, but
I haven't because I just don't think it's the right time.
How long are you going to be in this country?
Mr. Monnet: I think another ten days or two weeks.
HM,Jr: Well, before you go back, drop in. I would
like to gee you.
Mr. Monnet: I would like to very much.
HM,Jr: Just before you go.
Mr. Monnet: Yes. I will ring up Mrs. Klotz, if I
may.
I want to leave with you, in strict confidence, on
account of what 1s said at the end of the telegram about
transportation in FrenchIndia.
I wish you would keep it strictly between us, because
naturally our friends, the Chinese, must not know. The
Governor is being changed and they are going to send a new
man.
HM,Jr: Between us, we did something.
Mr. Monnet: I think it 1s moving.
HM,Jr: Now, can you Bee what I can do for you? I
can send some ships there with merchandise. We can direct
ships there, because it 1s the rainy season, and we can re-
direct ships there, and you people gain the business.
Mr. Monnet: But this changing the Governor is natur-
ally very confidential because he does not know anything
about it. He's now in Indo-China and he's returning the
beginning of June and then he will know that he is going
Regraded assified
62
-6-
to be changed, 80 naturally nobody knows 80 the Chinese
should not know about that.
HM,Jr: But the first part? Except for the Pres-
ident, there 18 no sense my telling anybody.
Things are a little bit better financially in
England.
Mr. Monnet: In England? They are ?
HM,Jr: Just over the weekend.
Mr. Monnet: I don't know how you feel, but this
speech of Mussolini does not affect me.
HM,Jr: But this is very interesting and you might
ask among your friends -- the Bourse which has gone up
more than anything -- Italian stocks for 30 days have
gone up and up and up, in Rome. Stocks have been climb-
ing in Rome steadily for a month. What does that mean?
For a month, on the Rome stock exchange. In Germany
stocks are about the same or a little off, but in Rome
for over a month they have been going up very sharply.
When I say stocks I mean issues.
Mr. Monnet: I don't understand the Italian situ-
ation at all.
HM,Jr: Ask some of your friends for an explanation.
Mr. Monnet: I will, but I am sure I will get a bad
explanation.
HM,Jr: I am asking why should stocks on the stock
exchange in Rome be going up 80 fast.
Mr. Monnet: You hear the most strange rumors about
Italy. My wife was born in Italy. She was Italian originally.
HM,Jr: Wasn't her maiden name Giannini?
Mr. Monnet: Not of the same family. She is d1-
vorced. She married a man in Italy, but he had nothing
to do with this family.
C3
-7-
HM,Jr: Not my Giannini? Her maiden name was
Giannini?
Mr. Monnet: No. Biondini and she was married
to a man in Milan who was called Giannini, but no more
relation to your man than I am.
HM,Jr: Just see how you have been slandered!
Mr. Monnet: She has, naturally, relatives and
friends. You hear the most extraordinary things. For
instance, friendsof hers told her several instances
which show that the police, German police, Gustafo, is
actually established with the Italians. She cited
this example for a lady, very well known in Italy, friend
of her mother, who W&B an Admiral's wife. She had three
maids. One was a Jewess -- no, went to a Jewish doctor
who 1s a very good doctor, and after she had been to him
three or four times two Germans appeared at this lady's
house -- it's not gossip 00 and said, Well, now, this
maid must not go any more to this Jewish doctor. And
they were Germans!
Now another lady who recently came to this country,
a friend of my wife, said to her the other day that she
had three maids, one of whom was Jewish. You have to
declare the number of maids you have.
She went to --
this lady went to the Police Commissioner of the district,
Fascist of course. She goes in and she is badly treated
by the Italian officers, the police. Finally she said
she resents it, naturally, and goes away in a bad temper.
This officer runs after her, catches her at the door and
in a whispering voice said, "Don't mind that. Come back
this afternoon, because this morning the German superin-
tendent is here. il
They are emall things, but a friend of mine the
other day in Milan had to have his passport visa-ed.
When he went into the Milan office, there was an Italian
Fascist and there was a German.
Those are small stories. I am not drawing any
conclusion from them, but they are true.
HM,Jr: That's amazing. There 18 all this talk
Regraded Unclassified
64
-8-
that keeps coming up about German troops in Italy.
Mr. Monnet: I can't understand the situation.
You put those things together-- at the same time there
is great antagonism on the part of the Italians against
Germans. I can't make it out.
HM.Jr: Did you read Matthews' story yesterday
in the New York Times explaining five hours, what hap-
pens after Mussolini comes to Turin? Amazing picture!
Beautifully written.
Anything you want to ask, John?
Mr. Hanes: No.
HM,Jr: This is very encouraging and I will hand
it to the President, but nobody else.
Mr. Monnet: I am sure Bullitt will communicate
with you, too, because I know they are keeping posted
with all these things because Loren had a talk with him
the other day.
HM,Jr: Tell me something about Mannheimer in
Holland. What sort of a fellow.
Mr. Monnet: What do you want me to say?
HM,Jr: The truth. I keep hearing about him.
I hear about Mendelssohn's firm and I Just wondered what
kind of people they were. That's all. I have no ul-
terior motive other than I see their name mentioned all
the time. I have never been to Holland. If you ask
me what kind of a firm is XYZ in New York, I will tell
you.
Mr. Monnet: I will tell you about him. I have
known him for many years.
HM,Jr: The question is up -- there is some talk
about his making a loan to Franco.
(Mr. Monnet requested that his remarks be off the
record.)
Mr. Monnet: He's a very extraordinary fellow, I
Regraded Unclassified
65
-9-
should say about 50. Some people hate him; others
swear by him. Very curious. Certainly extremely
competent. Certain genius for business. Ruthless.
No doubt. he has achieved one thing and that 18 this:
that he has achieved the leadership of financing any
loan in Switzerland or Holland which 1s really financed
in greatest part by the very deposits
HM,Jr:
that have sought refuge.
Mr. Monnet:
sought refuge in Holland and
Switzerland, reservoir of money which has sought refuge
there and which lends on short terms, sometimes on long,
mostly to the French Government. Mannheimer has es-
tablished an authority, unquestioned authority, over
the Swiss Bank, with the Dutch Bank, and in Paris he
works with the Bank of Paris and Lazard, 80 he is really
head of that syndicate. Certainly more capable than
anybody else in Europe to mobilize whatever free money
there 1s to be mobilized outside of England.
o0o-o0o
88
May 16, 1939.
MEMORANDUM
TO: Secretary Morgenthau
New
FROM: Mr. Gaston
SUBJECT: President's Press Conference, Tuesday, May 16, 4:00 P.M.
BEEF - The President was told that there seemed to be some
feeling about the country that in his statement on Friday about Argen-
tine canned beef he had impugned the virtue of the American cow. The
President said he hadn't intended to cast any aspersions on the character
of the American cow or the valor of the American bull. He said he would
be among the first to rise to the defense of American cattle, but then
he went on to explain - much as Arthur Krook did - that the South Ameri-
cans canned the whole cow but that American cattle were used mostly
for fresh beef and that the American canneries didn't make canned corned
beef any more except on Government orders. The President added that
this was not a canned corned beef country and asked if anybody in the
room had eaten canned beef in the last year. There WEB a general chorus
of "Yes" and the President joined in the laugh.
TAXES - The President said that he expected the conferences with
the representatives of the Committees to continue. The date of the next
conference is uncertain but will probably be held as soon as the two
gentlemen from the House have talked it over with members of the Committee
on Ways and Means, where all tax legislation must originate. The confer-
ences are making progress he said. Asked whether the next conference
would be limited to the Ways and Means representatives he said he supposed
Pat Harrison would come. He was asked about the situation of the un-
distributed profits tax. He said the situation WD.B still about the same.
Any substitute would have to have safeguards against tax avoidance and
provision for making up lost revenue. Asked if Section 102 wasn't a
sufficient safeguard, he said we didn't know yet because it had only been
in effect for one year. There were two opinions about it, one WAS that
it was working all right and the other WE.5 that it wouldn't work at all.
He added "We are talking it over in a perfectly friendly way. If we can
find some safeguard, that will be perfectly fine." Asked if he thought
the next tax conference would produce anything concrete, be said: "We
have been talking over fifteen or twenty different things and I suppose
we will continue to discuss them." He added that the three men from
the Hill who were present yesterday were going to talk things over and
let him know the result. Asked by Pete Brandt "Is this B. filibuster*"
the President replied: "No, not a bit."
Regraded Unclassified
RS.
87
- 2 -
(Cecil Dickson outlined the tax situation to me after the
conference. He said we were right back where we were several weeks
ago, He added that talk among the "New Dealers" on the Hill 1a that
the program is to stall off any tax action at this session and give
the President an opportunity to present a tax reform program of his
own next year, for which he can get the credit and on which he can go
to the country. He added that Pat Harrison seemed to have the bit
in his teeth, but that Bob Doughton was being pulled and hauled in
several directions and besides that was old and tired. He said that
Jerry Cooper is B. thousand per cont Roosevelt supporter and was trying
to prevent Doughton from doing anything while John McCormack was be-
laboring him on the other hand to take command and pass a real tax bill.
He added that of course it put Secretary Morgenthau and John Hanes in
an uncomfortable position and wanted to know if Hanes wouldn't resign.)
FARM PARITY - Asked if consideration was being given to any
taxes for making up the farm parity deficiency, the President said "NO."
PEACE - The President threw down the New York Times story about
his having plans for a. new peace conference. He said he had read it
in the press but that WELS the first intimation that he had had of it.
DIRIGIBLE - The President has consulted with the Secretary of
the Navy and the Chief of Operations and decided not to build any
dirigible with the three million dollar appropriation voted by Congress.
Their original idea WAS to build a small dirigible, to cost about a
million dollars, for coast patrol work, but one of the companies which
submitted bids submitted an alternative bid for a big ship with the
statement that they didn't consider the small ship as safe. Since doubt
had thus been cast on the practicability of the smaller ship, the de-
cision was not to build any.
MINE STRIKE - The President said the use of the National Guard
in Kentucky is a matter that is wholly up to the Governor and declined
any other comment. He said he hadn't received any telagram from John
Lewis.
VIRGINIA - Harry Byrd issued a. statement this morning that he
and Senator Glass had both been consulted about the nomination of Dean
Dobie of the University of Virginia Law School to the Federal bench
and that both had given their approval. The President was asked if the
Senators had been notified before the appointment was made and he saids
"Yes, Steve notified both offices this morning about 11:30."
-=000==
Regraded Inclassified
Prepared by Tanley Lindon
NT
83
IN
DATE May 16, 1939.
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Haas CA
Subject: Recent behavior of banks with respect to
Government bonds
1. In the three months ended April 26, New York City
banks have been heavy purchasers of direct and guaranteed
Government securities, increasing their holdings by more
than $500 millions. On the other hand, weekly reporting
member banks outside of New York City have decreased their
holdings in the last two months by about $250 millions.
2. The increase in the holdings of New York City
banks represents & partial replacement of the large reduc-
tions in their holdings made by these banks subsequent to
the all-time peak in holdings established in June 1936.
Between that date and September 1937, the amount of Gov-
ernment and Government-guaranteed securities held by New
York banks decreased by $1.4 billions. This liquidation
accompanied an increase in loans of $700 millions, a de-
crease in excess reserves of $700 millions, and & reduo-
tion in outstanding Treasury notes and bills of $750 mil-
lions. From the low point in holdings reached in September
1937, there were irregular increases until the end of
January 1939, by which time less than $400 millions of the
reduction from the June 1936 high had been made up, al-
though excess reserves had meanwhile increased by $1.8
billions and loans had decreased by more than $1 billion.
At the present time, New York City banks still hold about
$500 millions less of Government and Government-guaranteed
securities than at the peak of June 1936.
3. The behavior of weekly reporting member banks out-
side of New York City has been considerably different, In
February of this year, these banks held direct and guaran-
teed Government obligations in a larger amount than ever
before, slightly surpassing the previous peak established
in January 1937. Subsequent to the January 1937 peak,
there had been & liquidation of $800 millions running to
March 1938, a much smaller absolute and proportional de-
crease than the corresponding one experienced by the New
Regraded Unclassified
70
Secretary Morgenthau - 2
York City banks, which may be explained by the fact that
excess reserves of member banks outside of New York City
declined by only $400 millions and loans increased by only
$200 millions. Moreover, the decrease in bills and notes
outstanding did not affect these banks as much as the New
York banks, inasmuch as the preference for short-term seou-
rities is less pronounced on the part of banks outside of
New York.
4. In the year ended December 31, 1938, New York banks
purchased $1 billion of Treasury bonds and guaranteed obli-
gations, and reduced their holdings of Treasury bills and
notes by about $700 millions. The acquisition of Treasury
bonds and guaranteed obligations may be attributed largely
to the fact that the outstanding supply of Treasury bills
and notes was reduced during the year by $2.7 billions.
5. In the case of member banks outside of New York
City, a reduction of $500 millions in the holdings of Treas-
ury bills and notes, between December 31, 1937 and December 31,
1938, was more than offset by an increase of $600 millions
in the holdings of Treasury bonds and guaranteed obligations.
6. Mutual savings banks have been steadily increasing
their holdings of Government securities. During the last
half of 1938, these banks bought almost $200 millions of
direct and guaranteed Government securities, raising their
holdings to $2.9 billions.
Regraded Un classified
71
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 16, 1939
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Haas HH
Subject: Wheat export sales and other wheat market
information, as reported by Federal Surplus
Commodities Corporation.
May 9: World demand for cash wheat slow; no figures on
export sales.
Domestic crop conditions not satisfactory. Con-
tinued dryness reported from Southwest and Pacific
Northwest, and more complaints from Dakotas and
Minnesota.
Wheat crops in Russia, Germany and France expected
considerably under last year.
May 10: Demand for cash wheat abroad is the slowest in a
long time. It appears that, at least for the time
being, all countries have purchased enough cash
wheat to take care of them for some time.
May 11: Demand for cash wheat abroad has fallen to almost
nothing, due to more settled political si tuation
and to the fact that all countries are now well
supplied with wheat and flour.
To date Australia has sold about 50 per cent of her
estimated 90,000,000 bushel surplus. Of the
Argentine surplus of about 230,000,000 bushels,
approximately 90,000,000 bushels have been shipped
and an additional 30,000,000 bushels sold but not
yet shipped.
May 12: Export sales: Australia to England 500,000 bushels
Australia to China
250,000 bushels
Liverpool prices lower because of lower offers by
Canada and Argentina, and prospect of large purchases
of Rumanian wheat.
May 13: No export sales reported.
Regraded U Inclassified
72
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 16, 1939
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. O'Connell
For your information.
The Securities and Exchange Commission today commenced the presentation
of a public hearing before the Temporary National Economic Committee on the
problems involved in the savings and investment fields. Today's presentation
consisted of testimony by Dr. Alvin H. Hansen, of Harvard University, and
Dr. Lauchlin Currie, Assistant Director, Division of Research and Statistics of
the Federal Reserve Board, and involved in the main an analysis of the problem
in & say calculated to form a background for the future more detailed testimony.
Dr. Hansen developed, in general terms, his thesis that recovery can not
00 attained until some means is found for creating 8. volume of expenditures for
capital outlays in an amount at least equal to new savings for the same period,
ind developed to some extent his belief that this can only be brought about by a
combination of public and private spending in this field.
Be also took occasion to recommend extensive reforms in our tax structure,
loth Federal and State, and in 80 doing recommended revision of our Social Security
axes along the lines heretofore suggested to Congress by you. He also suggested
the advisability of reducing the proportion of what he calls "consumption taxes",
pointing out that the percentage of such taxes has increased from about 33 1/3%
in 1929 to about 50% in 1938. In this connection, he suggested maintaining the
ecessary revenues by an increase in income taxes in the so-called middle brackets.
He further intimated a need for reform in the corporate tax structure,
ut merely suggested the need for a study of this problem as one of the things
to consider in solving the general problem he was discussing, namely, the
mcouragement of the investment of savings for capital outlay.
He adverted generally to the question of business confidence, and pointed
jut that our economy now operates under what he calls "a high risk factor" and
last business should recognise that fact, as well as the fact that substantially
11 of the reform measures such as Social Security legislation, labor legislation
ind the like are here to stay, though they can and should be improved.
Se urged the necessity of public expenditures for projects which are
elf liquidating in character as well as public expenditures for projects not
irectly self liquidating but beneficial to our economy through the conservation
C human and natural resources. In this latter connection he adverted specifically
o hospitalization, public low cost housing and expenditures for the conservation
natural resources. He also urged a change in what he termed "obsolete accounting
ractices" by taking government expenditures for capital outlays of the types above
Regraded Unclassified
73
-2-
referred to out of the regular budget.
Dr. Hansen and Dr. Currie were both very good witnesses, although
the subject under discussion was obviously quite controversial and brought
forth a number of searching questions, particularly from Chairman O'Mahoney.
It is expected that this hearing will continue for at least two
weeks, with representatives of investment bankers, insurance companies and
other large reservoirs of investment capital, as well as representatives of
industry being given an opportunity to be heard. It is expected that
Mr. Stettinius, President, U. S. Steel Corporation, will testify tomorrow
afternoon.
For your information I attach a copy of a letter sent by the
President to Chairman O'Mahoney today relative to the importance of the
present inquiry.
74
THE WHITE HOUSE
RASHINGTON
May 18, 1959
Dear Joe:
In ny message to the Congress initiating the work of the Temporary
lotional Economic Committee, I had occasion to say that "Idle factories and
12's workers profit no man." It may equally be said that idle dollars profit
a ma. The present phase of the hearings before the Committee bear directly
1920 this problem.
It is a matter of common knowledge that the dollars which the Ameri-
can people give each year are not yet finding their way back into productive
enterprise in sufficient volume to keep our economic mechine turning over at
the rate required to bring about full employment. We have nastered the tech-
alque of creating necessary credit; we have now to deal with the problem of
assuring its full use.
In the serios of hearings which the Securities and Exchange Commis-
nion lo to hold before your Committee, I take it that to major problem of your
Committee will be to ascertain why e large part of our vest reservoir of money
and savings have renained idle in stegnant pools.
In it because our economy is leavin en era of rapid expansion and enter-
ing on ora of stendier growth, calling for relatively loss investment in
capital goods?
in it because of Ing, leak and friction in the operation of Invest-
sent markets which pervert the normal flow of cavings into non-productive
enterprise?
These are questions for your Committee to answer.
I know of no more urgent ones in the country today.
The hearings before your Committee, 1 hope, will issume the task
of analyzing the financial eachine in Its relation to the creation of more
needed wealth. We know that the mechanism con be improved. Improvement can
only be mude on R bacis of clear analysis. Boving mode that analysis, I hope
that your Committee will then be able to indicate ways by which the machine
any be code to function more efficiently.
Re have in inconse amount of wealth which needs to be created in
this country. Much of it can be created through private enterprise. Some
of it orr, properly be created through quesi-public agencies. The problem is
to use our udded sevings and increased credit to get this wealth moving,
that 15, to get it non in productive enterprise; and, at the some time, to
nike enving available for use in all extegories of private enterprise, as
well ID for the great and recognized enterprises which can command capital,
but bi Ve lete Actual need of capital than any moller but equally deserving
enterprises. There is also the problem of determining how credit can best be
mode cycliable for instrumentalitico of local government and for those quasi-
public interprises which must do the work which connet be done by private
enterprise.
the have developen several methods of connecting money with men
ned DI terials so na to get useful wrk done. We shall need to use all of
these opportunities, or, If you choose to put it differently, we must meet
all of the desands aude on our gystes, if DE are to have losting prosperity.
It 16 our task to find and enorgetically adopt those specific naisires which
will bring together iale sen, machines and money. An proportion as we suc-
coed, DO shall strangthen the structure of democratic economy.
Very sincerely yours,
(Signed) Franklin D. Roosevelt
Benorable Joseph C. O'Muhoney,
Chairman, Temporary National Economic Conmittee,
United States Sensite
Washington, D. C.
Regraded Unclassified
75
May 16, 1939
Decretary Morgenthau
B. H. Foley, Jr.
The Holium Conservation Act provides in part that no
belium gas shall be exported from the United States until a
license authorizing the exportation has been obtained on the
joint recomsendation of all the members of the National
Munitions Control Bourd and the Secretary of Interior. The
Act further provides that, under regulations approved by the
National Munitions Control Board and the Secretary of Interior,
export shipments of quantities of helium that are not of
military importance as defined in the regulations, and which
do not exceed a saximus to be specified therein, may be made
under license granted by the Secretary of State without such
specific recomendation.
We have before us for approval regulations authorizing
the export of holium, upon licenses to be issued by the
Secretary of State, in quantities not to exceed during any
me year to the ultimate consignees or purchasers within any
one country 500,000 cubic feet.
Mr. Howe has requested Treasury action with respect to
the proposed regulations, and stated that the President has
been advised that a request of the Polish Ambassador for an
allotment of belium to be used in a stratosphere flight was
being held up pending the approval of the regulations.
On February 4. 1939, you advised the Department of
State that you had no objection to granting the request of
the Polish Ambassador for an allotment of belium in the amount
set forth in his request. Secretary Ickes and Secretary Hopkins
gave their approval to this request yesterday.
It is my view that the proposed regulations should not
be approved. I was advised yesterday that this 10 also Secretary
Hopkina' view.
(Initfaled) 2. a. 1., 3r.
original taken to Group muting 5-1639
HE/op 5/15/39
Regraded Unclassified
76
May 16, 1939
10:48 a.m.
HMJr:
Hello.
Operator: Mr. Sproul.
HMJr:
Hello.
Allan
Sproul:
Hello, Mr. Secretary.
HMJr:
How are you?
S:
Fine.
HMJr:
Say, Sproul, Bell is riding me awful hard on these
H.O.L.C. bonds, see?
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
To do something. I don't know whether you're riding
him or what.
S:
No, we haven't been recently. We did for a while.
HMJr:
Well, now, Bell is going to be back tomorrow, I think,
and he was talking of the possibility of calling these
things as of Monday. I mean, calling them right away,
see, and doing the financing Monday, on the 22nd.
Hello?
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Bell said to date the new bonds as of the 15th, but my
inclination, if we were going to do it, I'd rather date
them June 1.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
Now, what would you think if we announced on Thursday --
I mean, wait until the last minute that we were going to
do some financing next Monday?
S:
And date them June 1?
HMJr:
Well, either June 1 or May 15th -- either way.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I hate to sort of date them back. I don't know why
Bell wants to do that.
- 2 -
77
S:
Neither do I. My preference would be to date them
June 1.
HMJr:
That's the first call date, isn't it?
S:
Yes, it 1s.
HMJr:
Yeah.
S:
Announce on Thursday and do it on Monday?
HMJr:
Yeah. Well, I don't expect an answer. I wish you'd
talk it over with George Harrison and call me back this
afternoon.
S:
Well, he's not here today.
HMJr:
Well, then, you think it over.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I'm going to ask you not to talk about it outside of the
Fed. though.
S:
All right.
HMJr:
Which means outside of your own office.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
See?
S:
I won't.
HMJr:
Now
S:
But your idea -- his idea -- Dan's idea would be to
announce on Thursday that you were going to make the
terms of the offering known on Monday?
HMJr:
Monday, and -- and offer the exchange on Monday.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
And get it behind us.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
I mean, things seem moderately quite now, and Dan says
why not do it and get it over with.
78
- 3 -
S:
Well, there's something to that. The -- the market 18
quiet and firm.
HMJr:
And then have it out of the way and that gives us
another two weeks before our own stuff comes up.
S:
Yeah.
HMJr:
He liked the idea the way we did last time -- we waited
until the last minute and then did it.
S:
Yeah. Well, I'll think it over and call you back this
afternoon.
HMJr:
But I don't see this May 15 stuff.
S:
No, I'd rather do it for June lst.
HMJr:
Have you any idea what we'd offer these people?
S:
Well, I think something around seven nine or seven
ten-year bond would go all right.
HMJr:
Well, with what coupon?
S:
Well, if it's a seven ten-year, something around one
and three-quarter.
HMJr:
I see. I see. Well, will you call me back this
afternoon?
S:
Yes, I will.
HMJr:
And turn it over.
S:
All right.
HMJr:
I'd appreciate it.
S:
All right.
R
31116
ple Man foless $
one
80
Miss Chauncey->
Mr. Foley carried this to the Secretary
at the Secretary's house around noontime on
Wednesday, May 17.
8
81
MAY 16 1939
Secretary Morgenthau
E. H. Foley, Jr.
You recently asked ne whether it would be proper for your children
to purchase United States Savings Bonds. For your information, I am
attaching 6 copy of a memorandum prepared by Mr. Oliphant for Mr. Magill,
when he was Under Secretary, on the question whether Mr. Hagill's wife
could lawfully purchase Savings Bonds. The conclusion reached vas that
there vas no legal restriction which would prevent the wife of the
Under Secretary of the Treasury from purchasing these bonds.
The reasoning employed in the memorandum would, in general, apply
to the question you have raised concerning your children. In my opinion,
there would be no legal reason which would prevent the children themselves
from purchasing Savings Bonds.
Of course, you could not purchase Savings Bonds for your own account
nor should you purchase them for the account of your children.
(Signed) D. s. Feley, Jr,
Attachment
NOT/EHF:s Retyped 5/16/39
may 16 the 1939.
82
During the past five years I have appeared seven
times before the Committee on Ways and Means to discuss
taxation. On none of these occasions have I made
specific tax recommendations to Congress. As Secretary
of the Treasury I have tried to follow 8. policy
consistent with the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921
which says that "no recommendation as to how the revenue
needs of the Government should be met shall be submitted
to Congress or any Committee thereof by any officer or
employee of any Department or establishment unless at
the request of either House of Congress." Today, as on
previous occasions when I appeared here, I should like
to discuss with you certain broad fiscal problems and
certain specific tax questions without presenting
tatled recommendations for their solution.
Tax proposals can not be discussed comprehensively
except in relationship to our broad national and fiscal
position. We are now in the midst of a world situation
which imposes on this Government a special responsibility.
We must demonstrate that a democratic government has the
power and the flexibility to survive a prolonged crisis
and chaotic world conditions and yet emerge with the
strength of its free institutions unimpaired.
Preservation of our democratic form of government over
83
- 2 -
a long period of years requires, in my opinion, a fiscal
program which has a fourfold objective: (1) promotion of
free enterprise and private investment; (2) attainment of
full business recovery; (3) maintenance of our public
finances in a sound and unassailable position, and (4)
a just distribution of tax burdens and a more equitable
distribution of national income.
Successful operation of democracy demands that all
four objectives be solidly linked together. When we
consider any specific change in our fiscal program we must
satisfy ourselves that the change makes for a better and
not a worse distribution of tax burdens and of national
income, that the change promotes and does not retard busi-
ness recovery, and that the change makes easier and not
more difficult establishment of a balanced relationship
between revenues and expenditures.
Full attainment of these objectives is difficult at
best. It is made more difficult by a new and ominous
development in world affairs the armament race now
gripping the important nations of the world. Great Britain
in the present fiscal year is spending $3 billion on
armaments, or almost 50 percent of its national budget;
France is devoting over 40 percent of its national govern-
mental expenditures to the same purpose; Italy, 50 percent;
Germany, probably 60 percent; Japan over 70 percent.
84
- 3 -
These huge expenditures are being financed largely by
borrowing. The race 18 becoming more intense and there is
no end in sight.
For us the danger is that these developments may mean
8. necessarily increased cost for national defense here,
together with monetary instability abroad, disruption of
our foreign commerce, and perhaps other unsettlements, the
consequences of which we can not fully predict. In this
connection, it is interesting to note that in our budget
for this fiscal year expenditures for past wars and
national defense are almost one-fourth of total expenditures.
No major problem facing this government today can be
solved properly without full consideration of the position
of this country in relation to the present international
crisis. The unmistakable implication of the international
situation is that we should look ahead to our future fiscal
position and redouble our efforts to attain full recovery.
High national income and & sound fiscal position are
essential to adequate national defense. It is against
this background that we reexamine our fiscal program.
A fundamental ob jective of sound finance clearly is
a balanced budget. There is, of course, no good reason
why taxes must exactly balance expenditures each year any
more than each month, each week or each day. There are
periods during which sound fiscal policy calls for an
- 4 -
85
excess of outgo over income, and others when it calls for
an excess of income over outgo. In a depression it is in-
evitable that there will be deficits. Revenues decline at
the same time that the Federal Government 18 called upon to
undertake inescapable social and economic burdens. If,
however, deficits are too long continued, the depressive
effects of uncertainty tend to make recovery more difficult.
The sequel to deficits in emergencies should be surpluses
during years of prosperity. That was and is one of the
broad purposes of seeking to raise the national income to
B high level, thus assuring revenue great enough not only
to end the deficits which began in 1931, but also to reduce
the public debt.
In carrying out our fiscal policy it would be helpful
to have machinery which would more fully coordinate our
efforts. It is not the prerogative of any administrative
Department to make suggestions to the legislative branch
of the Government for the conduct of its work, but I am
sure that you would wish me to be frank in suggesting ways
of surmounting difficulties which I believe now attend the
joint efforts of the Ways and Means and Finance Committees
and the Treasury Department.
If, for instance, the Ways and Means and Appropriations
Committees of this House and the Finance and Appropriations
Committees of the Senate could meet each session ae one
Regraded Unclassified
- 5 -
86
Joint Committee on Fiscal Policy, to consider the over-all
aspects of the expenditure and revenue programs, simplifi-
cation and greater effectiveness would result. The Budget
Act of 1921 set up a procedure for the orderly formulation
by the Executive of fiscal proposals and for their submis-
sion to the Congress as a unified budget. No comparable
procedure has been set up in Congress for considering
revenues and expenditures together as two interrelated
aspects of a single problem. I hope this Committee will
agree with me that some such innovation would improve the
efficiency of the Government. By providing for a preliminary
legislative consideration of the over-all picture of
appropriation and revenue measures it would give Congress
a broad perspective of the management of the Government's
finances and permit B. better ordered coordination between
the executive and the legislative branches in this field.
This Joint Committee would in effect be & lens through
which all' appropriation and revenue measures could be
viewed in relationship to both what the nation needs and
the nation can afford.
In my opinion the fundamental fiscal question raised
by the pending Department of Agriculture appropriation bill
is precisely the type of question with which this Joint
Committee should concern itself. This bill proposes to
increase budgeted expenditures for farm parity payments
87
- 6 -
by $372,000,000 with no compensating increase in revenue
indicated although we already face a deficit of
$3,426,000,000 in the coming fiscal year. The bill 1a
typical of scores of others which seem to me to present
questions appropriate for consideration by 8. Joint Committee
which looks at each proposed expenditure and each proposed
revenue measure as a part of an integrated budget policy.
This Committee could have continuous life for the
purpose of actively studying fiscal problems between as
well as during sessions of Congress. The Treasury Department
would, of course, cooperate fully in this work to the extent
that the Committee desired.
Thus far I have dealt with the financial problems of
the Federal Government alone. We must remember, however,
that even if we had in operation the best conceivable
Federal fiscal plan, we still would have touched less than
half of the tax problem which confronts the nation. Almost
60 percent of the total tax revenues of the country are
collected by state and local governments.
In the last five years we have given serious study
to the problems created by Federal-State tax conflicts.
The same problems had been recognized by our predecessors.
It is my belief that we ought not delay taking steps to
make these studies effective. I suggest that Congress
create a small temporary national commission to report to
Congress as soon as feasible on the various aspects of
88
- 7 -
intergovernmental fiscal policy. Such a commission should
be made up of men of ability who enjoy the highest possible
public confidence, who are familiar with the fiscal problems
of Federal, state and local governments, but who will
represent the public at large rather than particular govern-
mental units.
Overlapping taxes have grown in number and size as both
Federal and state governments have sought new revenue.
Grants-in-aid are being demanded of the Federal Government
in increasing amounts. The results of our fiscal situation
are increasingly unsatisfactory to both the state govern-
ments and the Federal Government, and more and more burden-
some to many taxpayers. The findings of such a commission
should assist us in achieving a more orderly relationship
between the Federal, state and local fiscal systems.
Thus far I have talked about two broad fiscal matters
of great importance to the Treasury. Let me turn now to
questions of taxation.
I desire first to reiterate a number of recommendations
for tax changes which have previously been presented to you.
1. In his Budget Message of January 3, 1939, the
President recommended that Congress extend the miscellaneous
internal revenue taxes which under existing law will expire
next June and July, and to maintain the current rates of
those taxes which otherwise would be reduced in June.
89
- 8 -
2. In his message of January 19, 1939, the President
recommended legislation making all government salaries here-
after earned and all interest on government securities here-
after issued subject to Federal and state income tax laws.
That part of this recomuendation dealing with government
salaries, I am pleased to note, has already been incorporated
into law.
3. In my statement of March 24, 1939, I presented for
your consideration four alternative rate plans for old-age
insurance contributions during the next three years.
4. The Treasury Department has pointed out from time
to time that the present law allows excessive deductions for
depletion of oil and gas wells and certain mines. Removing
this inequitable special privilege would produce a substantial
amount of revenue.
It seems physically impossible at this session of Congress
to rewrite the tax laws before the special study committee
has conferred with states and municipalities and brought in
a report. That fact, however, should not, in my opinion,
restrain your Committee from giving serious attention at
this time to removing from the tax laws any manifest in-
equities or defects which may be hampering business. On
another occasion I made the statement that, "We want to
adjust inequalities and remedy defects in the tax laws."
90
- 9 -
It seems to me that we should have this purpose in
mind at all times. Therefore, I should like to bring to
your attention certain features of the tax system which
merit your consideration. Before indicating them, however,
I wish to emphasize the importance of maintaining the
present revenue in any tax revisions which may be made.
We must not forget that one of the important objectives of
our fiscal program is to approach a balance between revenues
and expenditures. For this reason any tax reductions must
of necessity be offset by tax increases elsewhere. In my
opinion we should under no circumstances weaken the revenue-
producing capacity of our tax structure. I regard this
as the keystone of any program of tax revision that may be
undertaken at this session. If tax revision were confined
to tax reductions the resulting uncertainty over our fiscal
program would injure and not help business. We must take
no step which the public may interpret as moving away from
the objective of a balanced budget.
The elements or features of the tax system which you
may wish to re-examine fall roughly into three groups.
The first group comprises features which have been
characterized as substantial deterrents to business in that
31
- 10 -
they impose tax burdens at points where they are especially
likely to hinder business expansion and investment.
One example of an element 80 characterized 18 the
absence of provision in our income tax laws for carrying over
net business losses to be deducted from business profits of
future years. The profits or losses of each year are con-
sidered wi thout reference to those of any other year with the
result that businesses with alternating income and loss now
pay higher taxes over 8. period of several years than do those
with stable incomes. New enterprises and the capital goods
industries are especially subject to wide fluctuations in
earnings.
The second example is the schedule of surtax rates in
the top brackets of the individual income tax. Under the
present law B. taxpayer with $500,000 of surtaxable net income
would have left only 266 from an additional dollar of income,
746 being taken in Federal income taxes. His share may be
further reduced by State taxes. The rate may be BO high as
to have passed the point of maximum revenue return.
Furthermore, it may encourage the shifting of funds from
risky to safe investments and from taxable to tax-exempt
securities.
It is important that we fully appreciate the effect of
a large and growing volume of tax-exempt securities as
a major deterrent to business and for this reason I introduce
Regraded Unclassified
82
- 11 -
the subject again even though I have already reiterated the
recommendations previously made. Tax exemption of securities
is a magnet which pulls persons subject to high income taxes
away from investments in private business and not to tax-
exempt securities. Lowering surtax rates in the high brackets
will have a relatively minor effect in encouraging investment
in venturesome enterprise unless at the same time you take
away the attraction of tax-exempt interest. If, however,
we eliminate tax exemption from future issues of government
securities we can then reduce the surtax rates with the
feeling that investment in new and venturesome enterprise
will be encouraged.
There are a number of features in our tax system which
have been described as major tax irritants although they are
probably not important deterrents. In this class undoubtedly
belongs the conflicting tax situation which I have previously
mentioned and with regard to which I have suggested the
establishment of a commission to make recommendations to
Congress.
As another example of a tax which has been considered
an irritant I would mention the undistributed profits tax.
In its present form, it is quite unimportant and does not
accomplish the objectives which the original proposal was
intended to accomplish. The tax produces little revenue
and has little effect on business. It has acquired prominence
Regraded Unclassified
93
- 12 -
as a psychological irritant, largely because of the wide-
spread and emotional criticism which has been directed against
it. The end which the law sought to attain was to prevent
the avoidance of the personal income tax through the reten-
tion and accumulation of earnings by corporations. This is
still an important, and to my mind, a sound objective. The
law in its present form does not attain it. Since the income
tax on corporations, of which the undistributed profits tax
18 a minor segment, expires by its own terms at the end of
this year, the solution of this problem is B. necessary part
of the task of your Committee. The Treasury stands ready
to work with you on it.
A third example is found in the capital stock tax and
the related excess profits tax, enacted in 1932. Under the
present law the capital stock tax is based upon a declared
capital stock value which the taxpayer may revise every
three years. The declared value may be any figure that the
taxpayer desires to submit regardless of the actual value of
the stock. The excess profits tax applies to profits in
excess of 10 percent of such a declared value. The taxes are
thus not really taxes on the value of capital stock or on
excessive profits. Their major defect 16 that they operate
very erratically. The tax liability they impose depends on
the taxpayer's ability to forecast profits for the next
three years as well a.B upon the amount of profits actually
94
- 13 -
realized during each of the three years. Forecasts of
earnings are particularly difficult to make in the case of
new businesses and those with unstable incomes such as the
capital goods industries with the result that taxes imposed
on such businesses are at times inordinately high.
A third class of provisions are features of the law
which should be studied from the standpoint of equity,
possibly with a view to action at a later session. An
example 18 the double taxation of corporate dividends paid
to individuals. Under the present law corporations pay the
normal corporate tax on their earnings. When these earnings
are distributed to the individual stockholder they are sub-
ject to both the individual normal tax and to the surtax.
Eliminating the normal tax on dividends received by individual
stockholders would not nearly equalize taxes paid on income
earned through corporate business and income earned through
individual business but it would be a step in that direction.
Another example in the same class is the limitation
now placed on the deduction of corporation capital losses.
Under the present law an excess of corporate capital losses
over capital gains can be deducted from ordinary income only
to the extent of $2,000. As a result a corporation may be
obliged to pay an income tax in a year when its income from
other sources was wiped out or more than wiped out by capital
losses. Allowing the deduction of corporate net capital
losses from other income might encourage investment in capital
assets by corporations.
Regraded Unclassified
95
- 14 -
Another tax provision which I think merits your
consideration because of differences of opinion over its
equity is the present treatment of consolidated returns and
intercorporate dividends. At the present time consolidated
returns are permitted only in the case of railroad corporations.
This results in hardship to corporations which are obliged
by the provisions of state laws to operate as holding com-
panies with subsidiaries. There are, of course, many other
types of holding company systems which we should be careful
not to encourage.
The taxation of intercorporate dividends likewise
burdens socially beneficial holding company arrangements
as well as the socially harmful. Congress may desire to
examine the possibility of imposing the tax more precisely
on the types of corporations which it wishes to burden.
There are, of course, numerous minor provisions of the
tax laws which are found through experience to work in an
inequitable manner or to be unnecessarily complicated.
The Treasury at practically every session of Congress has
brought to the attention of Congress items of this kind
which have become of major importance during the recent
past. I shall not endeavor to discuss detailed measures of
this kind but suggestions will be made later by the Treasury
Legislative Counsel.
Many of the tax measures previously discussed would,
if adopted, result in a reduction in the revenue-producing
- 15 -
96
capacity of the tax system. I have already emphasized the
importance of not permitting the revenue-producing power
of the tax system to be reduced. Accordingly, the adoption
of any of the above measures involving loss of revenue must
be coupled with revenue-producing revisions elsewhere.
This is a very difficult problem for Congress to face.
The taxes resorted to for replacing any lost revenue should
have the least harmful effects on business and should
contribute to greater equity. I suggest the following
three possibilities:
1. The corporation income tax rate could be
increased. Such increase would not destroy the beneficial
effects of removing tax deterrent features since the taxes
would be removed at points where they are particularly
harmful and would be increased to a lesser extent over the
whole corporate structure.
2. Individual income taxes could be increased.
There is merit to the suggestion that the rates on taxable
income brackets between $5,000 and $75,000 are relatively
low compared with the rates on other incomes. Furthermore,
to promote wholesome tax consciousness and good citizen-
ship the personal and family exemptions should be decreased.
The exemption for an individual could be decreased from
$1,000 to $800 or even below, while the exemption for
married couples could be decreased from $2,500 to $2,000
- 16 -
97
or below. The tax imposed on small incomes could be at
e low rate and still constitute 8. valuable instrument for
making a larger group of our citizens directly aware of our
Federal tax problem.
3. Estate and gift taxes could be increased.
Although high rates are applied to extremely large estates
the great majority of the estates pay little or no tax.
The exemption could be reduced, the insurance allowance
could be eliminated and rates in the lower and middle
brackets could be increased. Furthermore, consideration
might well be given to the possibility of combining the
estate and gift taxes into one consolidated tax. At the
present time a person with 2. large volume of property who
16 in position to give much of it away during life can reduce
his total tax far below that which must be paid on the
estate of a person who is not in position to give away his
property during life.
In connection with all of the matters I have mentioned
the Treasury is prepared to furnish further information
and will be happy to work with you to the extent that you
desire.
In conclusion, permit me to eay that the most
important task we have before us 18 to do everything we
can to promote lasting business recovery. As I said in
November 1937, "The basic need today 18 to foster the full
- 17 -
98
application of the driving force of private capital.
We want to see capital go into the productive channels of
private industry. We want to see private business expand."
Our consideration of tax changes must have that necessity
in mind 8.8 well as revenue needs.
99
$ 1a
MAY 16 1939
During the past five years I have appeared seven
times before the Committee on Ways and Means to discuss
taxation. On none of these occasions have I made
specific tax recommendations to Congress. As Secretary
of the Treasury I have tried to follow a policy
consistent with the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921
which says that "no recommendation as to how the revenue
needs of the Government should be met shall be submitted
to Congress or any Committee thereof by any officer or
employee of any Department or establishment unless at
the request of either House of Congress." Today, as on
previous occasions when I appeared here, I should like
to discuss with you certain broad fiscal problems and
certain specific tax questions without presenting de-
tailed recommendations for their solution.
Tax proposals can not be discussed comprehensively
except in relationship to our broad national and fiscal
position. We are now in the midst of a world situation
which imposes on this Government a special responsibility.
We must demonstrate that a democratic government has the
power and the flexibility to survive a prolonged crisis
and chaotic world conditions and yet emerge with the
strength of its free institutions unimpaired.
Preservation of our democratic form of government over
Regraded Unclassified
100
- 2 -
a long period of years requires, in my opinion, a fiscal
program which has a fourfold objective: (1) promotion of
free entorprise and private investment; (2) attainment of
full business recovery; (3) maintonance of our public
finances in a sound and unassailable position, and (4)
a Just distribution of tax burdens and a more equitable
distribution of national income.
Successful operation of democracy demands that all
four objectives be solidly linked together. When we
consider any specific change in our fiscal program we must
satisfy ourselves that the change makes for a better and
not a worse distribution of tax burdens and of national
income, that the change promotes and does not retard busi-
ness recovery, and that the change makes easier and not
more difficult establishment of a balanced relationship
between revenues and expenditures.
Full attainment of these objectives is difficult at
best. It is made more difficult by & new and ominous
development in world affairs -- the armament race now
gripping the important nations of the world. Great Britain
in the present fiscal year is spending $3 billion on
armaments, or almost 50 percent of its national budget;
France is devoting over 40 percent of its national govern-
mental expenditures to the same purpose; Italy, 50 percent;
Germany, probably 60 percent; Japan over 70 percent.
Regraded Unclassified
101
- 3 -
These huge expenditures are being financed largely by
borrowing. The race is becoming more intense and there is
no end in sight.
For us the danger is that these developments may mean
a necessarily increased cost for national defense here,
together with monetary instability abroad, disruption of
our foreign commerce, and perhaps other unsettlements, the
consequences of which we can not fully predict. In this
connection, it is interesting to note that in our budget
for this fiscal year expenditures for past ware and
national defense are almost one-fourth of total expenditures.
No major problem facing this government today can be
solved properly without fall consideration of the position
of this country in relation to the present international
crisis. The unmistakable implication of the international
situation is that we should look shead to our future fiscal
position and redouble our efforts to attain full recovery.
High national income and 8. sound fiscal position are
essential to adequate national defense. It is against
this background that we reexamine our fiscal program.
A fundamental objective of sound finance clearly is
a balanced budget. There 1s, of course, no good reason
why taxes must exactly balance expenditures each year any
more than each month, each week or each day. There are
periods during which sound fiscal policy calls for an
102
" -
excess of outgo over income, and others when it calls for
an excess of income over outgo. In a depression it is in-
evitable that there will be deficits. Revenues decline at
the same time that the Federal Government is called upon to
undertake inescapable social and economic burdens. If,
however, deficits are too long continued, the depressive
effects of uncertainty tend to make recovery more difficult.
The sequel to deficits in emergencies should be surpluses
during years of presperity. That was and is one of the
broad purposes of seeking to raise the national income to
a high level, thus assuring revenue great enough not only
to end the deficits which began in 1931, but also to reduce
the public debt.
In carrying out our fiscal policy it would be helpful
to have machinery which would more fully coordinate our
efforts. It is not the preregative of any administrative
Department to make suggestions to the legislative branch
of the Government for the conduct of its work, but I all
sure that you would wish no to be frank in suggesting ways
of surmounting difficulties which I believe now attend the
joint efforts of the Ways and Means and Finance Committees
and the Treasury Department.
If, for instance, the Ways and Means and Appropriations
Committees of this House and the Finance and Appropriations
Committees of the Senate could meet each session as one
Regraded Unclassified
103
- 5 -
Joint Committee on Fiscal Policy, to consider the over-all
aspects of the expenditure and revenue programs, simplifi-
cation and greater effectiveness would result. The Budget
Act of 1921 set up a procedure for the orderly formulation
by the Executive of fiscal proposals and for their submie-
sion to the Congress as a unified budget. No comparable
procedure has been set up in Congress for considering
revenues and expenditures together as two interrelated
aspects of a single problem. I hope this Committee will
agree with me that some such innovation would improve the
efficiency of the Government. By providing for a preliminary
legislative consideration of the over-all picture of
appropriation and revenue measures it would give Congress
a broad perspective of the namagement of the Government's
finances and permit a better ordered coordination between
the executive and the legislative branches in this field.
This Joint Committee would in effect be a lens through
which all appropriation and revenue measures could be
viewed in relationship to both what the nation needs and
the nation can afford.
In my opinion the fundamental fiscal question raised
by the pending Department of Agriculture appropriation bill
is precisely the type of question with which this Joint
Committee should concern itself. This bill proposes to
increase budgeted expenditures for farm parity payments
Regraded Unclassified
104
- 6 -
by $372,000,000 with no compensating increase in revenue
indicated although we already face a deficit of
$3,426,000,000 in the coming fiscal year. The bill is
typical of scores of others which seem to me to present
questions appropriate for consideration by a Joint Committee
which looks at each proposed expenditure and each proposed
revenue measure as a part of an integrated budget policy.
This Committee could have continuous life for the
purpose of actively studying fiscal problems between as
well as during sessions of Congress. The Treasury Department
would, of course, cooperate fully in this work to the extent
that the Committee desired.
Thus far I have dealt with the financial problems of
the Federal Government alone. We must remember, however,
that even if we had in operation the best conceivable
Federal fiscal plan, we still would have touched less than
half of the tax problem which confronts the nation. Almost
60 percent of the total tax revenues of the country are
collected by state and local governments.
In the last five years we have given serious study
to the problems created by Federal-State tax conflicts.
The same problems had been recognized by our predecessors.
It is By belief that we ought not delay taking steps to
make these studies effective. I suggest that Congress
create a small temporary national commission to report to
Congress as soon as feasible on the various aspects of
Regraded Unclassified
105
- 7 -
intergovernmental fiscal policy. Such a commission should
be made up of men of ability who enjoy the highest possible
public confidence, who are familiar with the fiscal problems
of Federal, state and local governments, but who will
represent the public at large rather than particular govern-
mental units.
Overlapping taxes have grown in number and size as both
Federal and state governments have sought new revenue.
Grants-in-aid are being demanded of the Federal Government
in increasing amounts. The results of our fiscal situation
are increasingly unsatisfactory to both the state govern-
ments and the Federal Government, and more and more burden-
some to many taxpayers. The findings of such a commission
should assist us in achieving a more orderly relationship
between the Federal, state and local fiscal systems.
Thus far I have talked about two broad fiscal matters
of great importance to the Treasury. Let me turn now to
questions of taxation.
I desire first to reiterate a number of recommendations
for tax changes which have previously been presented to you.
1. In his Budget Message of January 3, 1939, the
President recommended that Congress extend the miscellaneous
internal revenue taxes which under existing law will expire
next June and July, and to maintain the current rates of
those taxes which otherwise would be reduced in June.
Regraded Unclassified
1
106
- 8 -
2. In his message of January 19, 1939, the President
recommended legislation making all government salaries here-
after earned and all interest on government securities here-
after issued subject to Federal and state income tax laws.
That part of this recommendation dealing with government
salaries, I am pleased to note, has already been incorporated
into law.
3. In ay statement of March 24, 1939, I presented for
your consideration four alternative rate plans for old-age
insurance contributions during the sext three years.
4. The Treasury Department has pointed out from time
to time that the present law allows excessive deductions for
depletion of oil and gas wells and certain mines. Removing
this inequitable special privilege would produce a substantial
amount of revenue.
It seems physically impossible at this session of Congress
to rewrite the tax laws before the special study committee
has conferred with states and municipalities and brought in
a report. That fact, however, should not, in ay opinion,
restrain your Committee from giving serious attention at
this time to removing from the tax laws any manifest in-
equities or defects which may be hampering business. On
another occasion I made the statement that, "We want to
adjust inequalities and remedy defects in the tax laws."
Regraded Unclassified
107
- 9 -
It seems to me that we should have this purpose in
mind at all times. Therefore, I should like to bring to
your attention certain features of the tax system which
merit your consideration. Before indicating them, however,
I wish to emphasize the importance of maintaining the
present revenue in any tax revisions which may be made.
We must not forget that one of the important objectives of
our fiscal program is to approach a balance between revenues
and expenditures. For this reason any tax reductions must
of necessity be offset by tax increases elsewhere. In my
opinion we should under no circumstances weaken the revenue-
producing capacity of our tax structure. I regard this
as the keystone of any program of tax revision that may be
undertaken at this session. If tax revision were confined
to tax reductions the resulting uncertainty over our fiscal
program would injure and not help business. We must take
no step which the public may interpret as moving away from
the objective of a balanced budget.
The elements or features of the tax system which you
may wish to re-examine fall roughly into three groups.
The first group comprises features which have been
characterized as substantial deterrents to business in that
Regraded Unclassified
108
- 10 -
they impose tax burdens at points where they are especially
likely to hinder business expansion and investment.
One example of an element 60 characterized is the
absence of provision in our income tax laws for carrying over
net business losses to be deducted from business profits of
future years. The profits or losses of each year are con-
sidered will thout reference to those of any other year with the
result that businesses with alternating income and loss now
pay higher taxes over a period of several years than do those
with stable incomes. New enterprises and the capital goods
industries are especially subject to wide fluctuations in
earnings.
The second example is the schedule of surtax rates in
the top brackets of the individual income tax. Under the
present law a taxpayer with $500,000 of surtaxable net income
would have left only 266 from an additional dollar of income,
746 being taken in Federal income taxes. His share may be
further reduced by State taxes. The rate may be 80 high as
to have passed the point of maximum revenue return.
Furthermore, it may encourage the shifting of funds from
risky to safe investments and from taxable to tax-exempt
securities.
It is important that we fully appreciate the effect of
a large and growing volume of tax-exempt securities as
a major deterrent to business and for this reason I introduce
Regraded Unclassified
109
- 11 -
the subject again even though I have already reiterated the
recommendations previously made. Tax exemption of securities
is a magnet which pulls persons subject to high income taxes
away from investments in private business and not to tax-
exempt securities. Lowering surtex rates in the high brackets
will have a relatively minor effect in encouraging investment
in venturesome enterprise unless at the same time you take
away the attraction of tax-exempt interest. If, however,
we eliminate tax exemption from future issues of government
securities we om then reduce the surtex rates with the
feeling that investment in new and venturesome enterprise
will be encouraged.
There are a number of features in our tax system which
have been described as major tax irritants although they are
probably not important deterrents. In this class undoubtedly
belongs the conflicting tax situation which I have previously
mentioned and with regard to which I have suggested the
establishment of a commission to make recommendations to
Congress.
As another example of a tax which has been considered
an irritant I would mention the undistributed profits tax.
In its present form, it is quite unimportant and does not
accomplish the objectives which the original proposal was
intended to accomplish. The tax produces little revenue
and has little effect on business. It has acquired promisence
Regraded Unclassified
110
- 12 -
as a psychological irritant, largely because of the wide-
spread and emotional criticism which has been directed against
it. The end which the law sought to attain was to prevent
the avoidance of the personal income tax through the reten-
tion and accumulation of earnings by corporations. This is
still an important, and to my mind, a sound objective. The
law in its present form does not attain it. Since the income
tax on corporations, of which the undistributed profits tax
is a minor segment, expires by its own terms at the end of
this year, the solution of this problem is a necessary part
of the task of your Committee. The Treasury stands ready
to work with you on it.
A third example is found in the capital stock tax and
the related excess profits tax, enacted in 1932. Under the
present law the capital stock tax is based upon a declared
capital stock value which the taxpayer any revise every
three years. The declared value may be any figure that the
taxpayer desires to submit regardless of the actual value of
the stock. The excess profits tax applies to profits in
excess of 10 percent of such a declared value. The taxes are
thus not really taxes on the value of capital stock or on
excessive profite. Their major defect is that they operate
very erratically. The tax liability they impose depends on
the taxpayer's ability to forecast profits for the next
three years as well as upon the amount of profits actually
Regraded Unclassified
111
- 13 -
realized during each of the three years. Forecasts of
earnings are particularly difficult to make in the case of
new businesses end those with unstable incomes such as the
capital goods industries with the result that taxes imposed
on such businesses are at times inordinately high.
A third class of provisions are features of the law
which should be studied from the standpoint of equity,
possibly with & view to action at & later session. An
example is the double taxation of corporate dividends paid
to individuals. Under the present law corporations pay the
normal corporate tax on their earnings. When these earnings
are distributed to the individual stockholder they are sub-
jeet to both the individual normal tax and to the surtax.
Eliminating the normal tax on dividends received by individual
stockholders would not nearly equalize taxes paid on income
earned through corporate business and income earned through
individual business but it would be a step in that direction.
Another example in the same class is the limitation
now placed on the deduction of corporation capital losses.
Under the present law an excess of corporate dapital losses
over capital gains can be deducted from ordinary income only
to the extent of $2,000. As a result a corporation may be
obliged to pay an income tax is a year when its income from
other sources was wiped out or more than wiped out by capital
losses. Allowing the deduction of corporate net capital
losses from other income might encourage investment in capital
assets by corporations.
Regraded Unclassified
112
- 14 -
Another tax provision which I think merits your
consideration because of differences of opinion over its
equity is the present treatment of consolidated returns and
intercorporate dividends. at the present time consolidated
returns are permitted only in the case of railroad corporations.
This results in hardship to corporations which are obliged
by the provisions of state laws to operate as holding com-
panies with subsidiaries. There are, of course, many other
types of holding company systems which we should be careful
not to encourage.
The taxation of intercorporate dividends likewise
burdens socially beneficial holding company arrangements
as well as the socially harmful. Congress may desire to
examine the possibility of imposing the tax more precisely
on the types of corporations which it wishes to burden.
There are, of course, numerous minor provisions of the
tax laws which are found through experience to work in an
inequitable manner or to be unnecessarily complicated.
The Treasury at practically every session of Congress has
brought to the attention of Congress items of this kind
which have become of major importance during the recent
past. I shall not endeavor to discuss detailed measures of
this kind but suggestions will be made later by the Treasury
Legislative Counsel.
Many of the tax measures previously discussed would,
if adopted, result in a reduction in the revenue-producing
113
- 15 -
capacity of the tax aystem. I have already emphasized the
importance of not permitting the revenue-producing power
of the tax system to be reduced. Accordingly, the adeption
of any of the above neasures involving loss of revenue must
be coupled with revenme-producing revisions olsowhere.
This 10 & very difficult problem for Congress to face.
The taxes resorted to for replacing any lest revenue should
have the least harmful effects on business and should
contribute to greater equity. I suggest the following
three possibilities:
1. The corporation income tax rate could be
increased. Such increase would not destroy the beneficial
effects of removing tax deterrent features since the taxes
would be removed at points where they are particularly
harmful and would be increased to a lesser extent over the
whole corporate structure.
2. Individual income taxes could be increased.
There is merit to the suggestion that the rates on taxable
income brackets between $5,000 and $75,000 are relatively
low compared with the rates on other incomes. Furthermore,
to promote wholesome tax consciousness and good citizen-
ship the personal and family exemptions should be decreased.
The exemption for all individual could be decreased from
$1,000 to $800 or even below, while the exemption for
married couples could be decreased from $2,500 to $2,000
114
- 16 -
or below. The tax imposed on small incomes could be at
a low rate and still constitute a valuable instrument for
making a larger group of our citizens directly aware of our
Federal tax problem.
3. Estate and gift taxes could be increased.
Although high rates are applied to extremely large estates
the great majority of the estates pay little or no tax.
The exemption could be reduced, the insurance allowance
could be eliminated and rates in the lower and middle
brackets could be increased. Furthermore, consideration
might well be given to the possibility of combining the
estate and gift taxes into one consolidated tax. At the
present time a person with 8 large volume of property who
is in position to give such of it away during life can reduce
his total tax far below that which must be paid on the
estate of a person who is not in position to give away his
property during life.
In connection with all of the matters I have mentioned
the Treasury is prepared to furnish further information
and will be happy to work with you to the extent that you
desire.
In conclusion, permit no to say that the most
important task we have before us is to do everything we
can to promote lasting business recovery. As I said in
November 1937, "The basic need today is to foster the full
Regraded Unclassified
115
- 17 -
application of the driving force of private capital.
We want to ... capital go into the productive channels of
private industry. We want to see private business expand."
Our consideration of tax changes must have that mecessity
in mind as well as revenue needs.
given me by Have May/6. 1939,
7m
116
MEMORANDUM PREPARED BY MR. STAM OF JOINT COMMITTEE FOR SENATOR HARRISON
No. 1. Substitute for the corporation income tax applicable to
corporations with net incomes of over $25,000. a flat rate of 18%.
Leave corporations with net incomes of under $25,000. subject to
the rates provided for in existing law.
No. 2. Allow corporations a three year carry-over of net losses,
excluding capital losses.
No. 3. Repeal the $2,000. limitation on the deduction by corpora-
tions of capital net losses from other income, insofar as such losses
result from assets held over 18 months.
No. 4. Allow a corporation to increase its declared value for
capital stock tax purposes for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1939,
and June 30, 1940, but do not permit them to decrease such value for
such years.
Estimates of revenue for the calendar year 1939 under such a plan.
Gaine from (1)
$59,000,000.
Losses from (2) and (3)
53,000,000.
Losses from (4)
3,500,000.
Net gain
2,500,000.
1. Under the first suggestion the little corporations will be left
alone and the larger corporations will be subject to the flat rate of
18% This will result in a slight increase for banks and insurance
companies which now pay a flat rate of 163%.
2. The second suggestion will allow corporations to carry over
operating net losses to be applied against their net income for the
succeeding year. And if in excess of the net income of the succeeding
year to be applied against the net income for the second year. And if
in excess of the net income for the second year to be applied against
the net income for the third year.
3. This suggestion permits corporations which have capital net
losses from assets held over 18 months to apply such losses against
their other income for the same year. In this respect these corpora-
tions will be treated like individuals who are permitted to offset
their capital net losses to a certain extent against their other income.
117
- 2 -
The $2,000. limitation will still apply as to capital net losses
from the sale or exchange of capital assets held 18 months or less.
This will prevent corporations from using these speculative losses
to reduce their ordinary income. Unless this safeguard should be put
in, the limitation on short-term capital losses applied to individuals
might be evaded by the formation of personal holding companies and the
elimination of investment income by speculative losses.
4. If we allowed a corporation to declare a value for capital
stock tax purposes each year, it might be that loss in revenue would
result, especially with those corporations having fiscal years ending
shortly after the close of the capital stock tax year, which ends
June 30 of each year. Therefore, to avoid any loss of revenue from
this source, it is suggested that for the fiscal years ending June 30,
1939, and June 30, 1940, the corporations be permitted to increase
their capital stock value but not to decrease such value. This will
only result in a slight loss of revenue from the excess profits tax,
and because of the additional capital stock tax to be paid, it is not
believed that it will exceed two and 8. half million dollars.
118 41(e)
MING/12 and U.S.
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE May 18, 1939.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT:
TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
to
L. W. Knoke
BANK OF ENGLAND.
FROM.
I called Mr. Hawker at 11:80 this morning. Things were very
quiet now. The Anglo-Turkish pact and Mussolini's speech of last
Saturday had made people in England 8 little less pessimistic, the
Continent was more confident and the general atmosphere there was
better. How far it was justified he could not say but the effect had
been to cause the dollar to be Just a shade more offered instead of
being bid as heretofore. Offers, however, were not in large scounts.
They had come from Paris against French francs and, against guilders,
from the holders of (he thought guilders 50 million) French railroad
credits maturing almost immediately which had attached to them 8 dollar
clause giving the holder the option to insist on payment in dollars 07
in guilders. In view of the present low guilder rate, holders had, of
course, opted for payment in dollars with which they were then buying
guilders in the market at present low rates. These transactions he
thought were in part at least responsible for the recent sudden strength
of guilders. He also understood, Hawker continued, that French rail-
roads had arranged with Mendolssohn a new guilder credit (he thought
guilders 150 million) to be used in consolidating three railroad credits
maturing in June, July and October. This new loan was in the form of
three months bills with the railroads having the option of 23 renewals.
In other words the transaction was 8 six year loan. It also had the
same dollar clause as above. Strange to say Cariguel did not seen to
know anything about this loan, the railroads not having approached
the Bank of France.
Regraded Unclassified
MMG U die ICM
119
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE May 16, 1939.
To CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
L.W. Knoke
BANK OF ENGLAND.
ROM
2
The French franc continued firm and the French fund even
though not gaining as much as in recent weeks, nevertheless was still
gaining.
The Belgians were doing fairly well having managed by means
of an embargo on the import of gold to squeeze the shorts rather badly.
the
As a result the belga rate had gone way above parity and Belgians were
gaining sterling at & rate at which they could afford to buy gold in
London and ship it to New York. But naturally by allowing the rate to
go this high they had reduced the volume of their gold gains. Now the
scount on forward belgas had nerrowed so considerably that the shorts
rather than cover their belge short position at the present high belga
figure were tempted to buy spot and simultaneously sell forward belgas
st comperatively small cost. Hawker did not altogether seem to approve
of what the Belgians had done and thought that the whole story was not
finished yet.
I referred to the number of cables received last week from
the Bank of England asking us to transfer certain specified bars from
their gold under earmark to the Belgians. I explained that we had been
able to comply with these requests because the bars were all part ofone
shipment and we had been able, on arrival of that shipment, immedistely
to set it aside. We might, however, have serious difficulties in the
future, I explained, because as 8 resultof the recent enormous inflow
of gold into our vaults, in order to save time and particularly space,
we have been compelled to discontinue stacking earmarked gold on shelves
Regraded Unclassified
MRC. and
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
120
OF NEW YORK
FFICE CORRESPONDENCE
DATE May 16, 1939.
CONFIDENTIAL FILES
SUBJECT: TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH
L. W. Knoke
BANK OF ENGLAND.
DM
8
but instead stack it on the floor of our vaults in piles with the
result that if any special bar were needed we might have to move tons
of gold if that particular bar did not happen to be right on top.
Under the circumstances would it be asking too much that they consider
in future instructing us to deliver a certain amount of ounces giving
us the maximum amount not to be exceeded and leaving it to us to pick
out from their holdings those bars most conveniently situated for us.
Hawker replied that he could appreciate our difficulties and that they
would hereafter make it 8 point to send us instructions as suggested.
I thanked him.
As regards the dollar market Hawker stated that recently
they had been in the forward market on a rather substantial basis as
they had wanted future sterling to be a bit stronger and since there
was no reason why the rate for the dollar for forward delivery should
stay up as high as it had. In addition they were rather anxious to
build up a dollar balance in New York which would technically place
them in a strong position to cope with sudden spasms of weakness of
the poundsterling. Accordingly their main operations recently seen
to have been the purchase of spot and the simultaneous sale of forward
dollars. As a result they had built up a short position for forward
delivery of roughly $80,000,000. Against this they were holding in
New York in gold or dollar balances an amount exceeding $100,000,000.
oral YEAL
LWK:KW
Regraded Unclassified
121
JR
GRAY
M
Paris
Dated May 16, 1939
Rec'd 12:30 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
949, May 16, 5 pam. (SECTION ONE).
FOR THE TREASURY.
It was officially announced last Evening that the
limit of cash subscriptions of six billion francs to the
new loan issue had been reached early in the afternoon
and that as provided under the decree of May 3 subscriptions
to the conversion portion of the issue will bE received
up to May 25. The closing of cash subscriptions to this
issue was announced in the Journal Official of today,
It is learned from banking circles that while substantial
subscriptions were received from the public the banks
as usual absorbed a large part of the issue to bE passed
on to the public.
BULLITT
HPD
122
CJ
GRAY
PARIS
Dated May 16, 1939
RECEIVED 1:15 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
949, May 16, 5 p.m. (SECTION TWO).
A joint communique issued last evening by the
Ministriss of Foreign Affairs and Finance reads as
follows:
"Contrary to certain reports it is entirely in-
accurate that there is any question at the present
time of a Spanish loan to bE issued on the French
market and that French and foreign bankers have con-
ferred on the subject at the Quai d'Orsay."
Trading on both the exchange and security markets
today was very restricted and without important
changes EXCEPT that the florin showed some weakness.
(END OF MESSAGE.)
BULLITT
HPD
0
123
REB
GRAY
London
Dated May 16, 1939
Rec'd 3:50 P.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
""""
694, Pay 16, 9 p. m.
CONPIDENTIAL FOR TREASURY FROM BUTTERWORTH.
1. The British Treasury gave me the following
summarized account regarding the press report that Van
Zeeland will act on behalf of Dutch, French, and Swiss
banking interests in the matter of a twenty million pounds
loan to the Spanish Government about which an official
communique were issued in Paris last evening. The
instigator of the idea is said to bE Fritz Mendellheim.
Bonnet was favorably disposed to the project regarding
it desirable to keep such a prospect before Franco's
EYES without necessarily doing much about it. To this
End hE attempted to commit the British in the matter with,
they feel, the intention of leaving them to hold the bag.
Accordingly they instructed the British Ambassador in
Spain to make clear to Franco that they were not party
to this project at all.
Ky own VIEW is that (A) the British have not yet made
up
124
REB
2-#694, From London, May 16, 9 p.m.
up their mind whether or to what extent the present
Franco regime will bE hostile to Great Britain and
(3) whether or how long the present Spanish personalities
and set up vill endure and therefore (c) whether the time
is ripe for real action on their part. Furthermore,
they would prefer to make an individual and more subtle
approach. The loan negotiations referred to in paragraph
two my 253, February 20, 6 P. m., have never been con-
summeted. Although the British Treasury points to this
as indicative of the fact that Sritish banks would be un-
willing to loan money to Franco the British Treasury
admits that Franco has obtained from his nationals con-
siderable quantities of British securities including
British Government bonds. If and when the word "30" is
officially given the British banks will no doubt bE quite
prepared to consider these and perhaps other assets as good
collateral.
2. The British Treasury states that three German
officials, one from the Reichsbank, one from the Ministry
of Finance, and one from the Foreign Office are coming to
London to begin discussions on Thursday regarding the
financial problems arising out of the seizure of
Czschoslovakia,
Regraded Unclassifie
125
REB
3-#694, From London, May 16,9p.m.
Czachoslovakia. The British Treasury EXPECTS a critical
press when this becomes known and is aware of its
anomalous position in negotiating with the German
authorities on the question of Czach assets and
liabilities when it has not yet legally recognized the
incorporation. I gathered that the Czach liabilities to
Great Britain are greater than the impounded Czech
assets which are furthermore dwindling as refugees are
permitted to draw on their balances here.
(END SECTION ONE)
KENNEDY
HPD
126
FS
PLAIN
London
Dated May 16, 1939
Rec'd 4:05 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
694, May 16, 9 p.m. (SECTION TWO).
3. The Bank of England has asked the so-called
outside houses which circulate price lists of dollar
bonds to discontinue this practice in view of the
Chancellor of the Exchequer's "request prohibition"
relating to purchases of foreign securities. No
special request has yet been addressed to the American
brokerage houses. One of their number called on the
Bank of England and was told that this action had been
taken because such price lists tended to incite buying.
The American broker Expressed the view to the Bank of
England that the American brokerage houses WETE prepared
to cooperate but saw no objection to facilitating switches
or the purchasing of American securities by British in-
vestors having dollar balances already in NEW York. The
Bank of England official did not take EXCEPTION to this
view but was rather noncommittal. Accordingly the Ameri-
can broker has called a private meeting for Friday of
the
FS
2-No. 694, May 16, 9 p.m. from London
127
the American brokerage houses operating here which
number about thirty in an attempt to formulate pro-
posals for submission to the Bank of England with a
view to clarifying the position.
The fact that Stock Exchange jobbing firms have
discontinued circulating dollar security price lists
has no doubt played & part in the Bank of England's
action with respect to the outside houses.
4. Supplementary estimates for the building up
of war reserves of merchant shipping and agricultural
machinery WERE circulated today in the House of Commons
the Prime Minister stating that the necessary legisla-
tion would bE introduced in due course but that meanwhile
he would ask Parliament for the required authority be-
fore commitments are Entered into and hoped this would
bE obtained before the End of this WEEK. No figures of
the amounts involved have yet been made public.
5. Sterling was slightly weaker today but the Bri-
tish fund apparently found no need to operate in either
spot or forward dealings, and the market closed around
4.68 3/16. Gold was fixed at a half penny premium and
of the 156 bars dealt in 6 were married and about 50
supplied by the British fund. Samuel Montagu. was the
03/11018
only buyer. (END MESSAGE).
HPD
KENNEDY
128
MA
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Berlin, Germany
DATE: May 16, 1939, 6 p.m.
NO.: 377
Reference is made to telegram No. 278 of April 24,
11 a.m., from the Embassy.
Susskind, who is in charge of British relations in
the Reich Ministry of Economics, is the head of a German
delegation which left for London today for the purpose
of negotiating the question of payments between Great
Britain and Memel. They will also try to lay the founda-
tion for a trade and payments agreement between Great
Britain and Bohemia-Moravia, and to have the Czech funds
now blocked in England released.
The British Embassy here in Berlin has said that
since the acquisition of Memel has been recognized by
Great Britain, there will be no difficulty on that ques-
tion. An extension of the existing payments agreement
between Germany and Great Britain will govern the trade
and payments between Memel and Great Britain.
Great Britain has, however, not recognized the pro-
tectorate of Bohemia-Moravia, and therefore my informant
says no formal agreement will be concluded at this meeting
with regard to Bohemia-Moravia; it is probable that they
will reach a preliminary understanding. It is understood
that there has been a relaxation of the blockage of
Czech
129
- 3 -
Cyech funds by the British and restrictions on payments
to Ozechoslovakia to the extent that British firms are
permitted to make payments to Czech exporters, and
Czech firms can use their London balances to buy things
in England and other countries. Germany, on the other
hand has been providing exchange for payment of commer-
cial debts which Czech firms owe to suppliers in Great
Britain. Germany has provided exchange for debts for
essential raw materials on the date they are due, but
sterling
there has been delay on/exchange for purchase of non-
essential goods. According to my informant, before
very long the British would permit the return of the
gold and would free the Ozech Central Bank's impounded
balances.
One of the members of the German delegation, prior
to his departure, said that he believed that no attempt
would be made to have the present Anglo-German trade
and payments agreement cover the trade between England
and the protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia. The actual
negotiation would be taken care of by officials of the
Reich since it has assumed charge of the control of
foreign relations of the protectorate, but a separate
agreement would be entered into as regards trade and
payments
Regraded Unclassified
130
- 3 -
payments between England and the protectorate.
Repeat to Treasury as No. 30, from Heath.
END OF MESSAGE.
KIRK.
BECEINED
0001 STYAM
your HT
la will
MO - - include
EA:LWW
131
May 17. 1939.
Dear Dr. Feis:
On behalf of the Secretary I am ac-
knowledging your letter of May 16th,
which enclosed for his confidential
information a copy of paraphrase of
telegram No. 946 of May 15th, from the
American Embassy. Paris, reporting on a
conversation which Ambassador Bullitt had
with Mr. Van %eeland.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. S. Klotz
H. S. Klots,
Private Secretary.
Dr. Herbert Feis,
Adviser on International
Moonomic Affairs,
Department of State,
Washington, D. c.
GEF/dbs
Regraded Unclassified
132
May 17, 1939,
Dear Dr. Feis:
On behalf of the Secretary I am no-
knowledging your letter of May 16th,
which enclosed for his confidential
information a copy of paraphrace of
telegram No. 946 of May 15th, from the
American Embassy. Paris, reporting on &
conversation which Ambassador Bullitt had
with Mr. Van Zeeland.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H.S. Klotz
H.S.Klots,
Private Secretary.
Dr. Herbert Feis,
Adviser on International
Meenomic Affairs,
Department of State,
Washington, D. c.
GEF/dbs
133
May 17, 1939.
Dear Dr. Feis:
On behalf of the Secretary I - no-
knowledging your letter of May 16th,
which enclosed for his confidential
information a copy of paraphrase of
telegram No. 946 of May 15th, from the
American Paris, reporting on a
conversation which Ambassador Bullitt had
with Mr. Van Seeland.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. S. Klotz
H. S. Klots,
Private Secretary.
Dr. Herbert Feis,
Adviser on International
Moonomic Affairs,
Department of State,
Washington, n. 0.
GEF/dbs
Regraded Unclassified
OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO
134
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON, D.C.
pls act
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
for
WASHINGTON
May 16, 1939.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
I enclose for your confidential information one
copy of paraphrase of telegram No. 946 of May 15
not broad
from the American Embassy, Paris, reporting a con-
4.26.40 x.s
versation which Ambassador Bullitt had with Mr. Van
Zeeland.
Sincerely yours,
Herbert Feis
Herbert Feis,
Adviser on International
Economic Affairs.
Enclosure:
No. 946 from
Paris, May 15.
The Honorable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
135
JR
GRAY
Paris
Dated May 17, 1939
Rec'd 1:10 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
958, May 17, 5 p.m.
FOR THE TREASURY.
The Government published today a "balance sheet of
the first five months of the three year plan", the
contents of which in the main have already been reported
to the Department.
The statement reveals notably that the Exchange
fund at the End of October held 2,067 million gold
(not including 1700 millions with the rentes fund),
and at the End of January, 14,321 millions. It ceded
207,000 to the Bank of France in November; purchased
1700 millions from the rentes fund in November; and
ceded 385,000 to the bank in December and January.
Between November 30 and March 31 savings deposits
had grown by about 4,250,000,000 francs. The Treasury
was in a satisfactory position, thanks to the return of
Expatriated capital and its investment in Treasury bonds.
Interest rates were now more favorable to the Treasury
than
Regraded Unclassified
136
-2- #958, May 17, 5 p.m., from Paris.
than at any time since 1936. In the first WEEK of
April 1939 there were 3,300 fewer unemployed during the
corresponding period of 1937. Index of retail prices
had risen 1.76% between November and March. Cost of
living had risen 1.50% during the same period. The
general index of production had moved up from 81 in
October to 92 in March. Receipts from indirect taxation
during the first quarter of 1939 were 21.4% higher than
for same period of last year. During the same period
state had collected 65% more in direct taxation.
BULLITT
KLP:DDM
03913078
0991 21 Y&M
INSURANCE
137
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Paris, France
DATE: May 17, 1939, noon
NO.: 955
FOR THE TREASURY.
In unofficial trading between banks this morning,
sterling and dollars were more offered and a fair amount
of both currencies was obtained by the fund. This
afternoon, because of Ascension Day holiday tomorrow,
the exchange market will be closed; both the exchange and
security markets will be closed tomorrow.
According to an official of the Ministry of Finance,
the negotiations between the French Government and a
banking syndicate in Amsterdam for a new guilder credit
for the repayment of outstanding guilder bills were
progressing satisfactorily. However, he stated that
contrary to reports in the press they had not yet def-
initely fixed the exact terms and the amount of the
credit.
BULLITT.
EA:LWW
NEVEISED
Deg
111M
notice
I
IN E I =
Regraded Unclassified
138
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Legation, Bern, Switzerland
DATE: May 17, 1939, 4 p.m.
#
NO.: 44
Reference is made to telegram No. 7 of January 28, 1938
from the Legation.
From the same source I have learned in strict con-
fidence that several days ago the Japanese Legation in
Bern again approached the Swiss National Bank concerning
the possibility of getting a. large loan in Switzerland
for alleged non-military purposes, the amount not being
stated. Various Swiss export interests are backing the
proposal. I was told that the reaction of the Swies
authorities is even less favorable than it was last
year, partly due to the fact that recent withdrawals
of refugee French capital have been felt by the money
market here.
HARRISON.
03013537
EA:LWW
Regraded Unclassified
139
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy, Paris, France
DATE: May 17, 1939, 6 p.m.
NO.: 961
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL.
This morning the Polish Ambassador told me that
the expense of keeping the Polish army mobilized was
so great that financial assistance was needed by Poland.
Therefore, he had asked the French to grant them an
immediate loan of approximately two billion francs.
One billion of this amount would be spent for war
material in France.
The Polish Ambassador in London had at the same
time asked for a loan of sixty million pounds from the
British Government.
These loans, the Polish Ambassador stressed, would
be for protection of the stability of the Polish zloty,
and for prevention of inflation in Poland, and essential
instruments of war and raw materials would be provided
at the same time.
As for the raw material question, the Polish Ambas-
sador said that instructions had been given to Roman,
the Polish Minister of Commerce, who was now on his way
to the New York Exposition to open the Polish pavilion,
to ask the Government of the United States to extend
as long term credits as possible so that the Polish
Government could establish in Poland depote of American
cotton
140
- 2 -
cotton and copper. It was the Polish Government's idea
that in time of war these raw materials would be very
difficult to obtain, and that a supply sufficient to
cover the peacetime needs of Poland for one year should
be kept on hand in Poland.
It is planned that in the case of cotton, future
supplies would be used to replace any bales taken from
the supply depots, 80 that the same amount would remain
in them at all times.
The Polish Ambassador told me that it was the pro-
found hope of his Government that this proposal would be
looked on with approval by the American Government.
The Polish Ambassador concluded by saying that
his Government did not expect an immediate (Omission)
by Germany at the moment.
BULLITT.
Regraded Unclassified
This 5/17/39 draft was considered at the
Secretary's home on 5/23.
See later 141
(5/24) revision.
Ell
st
142
May 17, 1939
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
The attached draft of the statement incorporates the sugges-
tions of Dr. Viner made yesterday and this morning.
The most significant change, which he discussed with you this
morning, is the addition of the paragraph at the bottom of page 16
and the top of page 17 relating to the general lines along which
tax revision should proceed.
May 17, 1939.
143
I appreciate this opportunity to appear before your
Committee to discuss with you certain broad fiscal problems
and certain specific tax questions.
Tax proposals cannot be discussed comprehensively
except in relationship to our whole national and fiscal
position. We are now in the midst of a world situation
which imposes on this Government a special responsibility.
We must demonstrate that a democratic government has the
power and the flexibility to survive a prolonged crisis
and chaotic world conditions with the strength of its free
institutions unimpaired. Preservation of our democratic
form of government over a long period of years requires,
in my opinion, a fiscal program which has a fourfold
objective: (1) promotion of free enterprise and private
investment; (2) attainment of full business recovery;
(3) maintenance of our public finances in a sound and
unassailable position, and (4) a just distribution of tax
burdens and a more equitable distribution of national
income.
Successful operation of democracy demands that all
four objectives be solidly linked together. When we
consider any specific change in our fiscal program we must
satisfy ourselves that the change makes for a better and
not a worse distribution of tax burdens and of national
- 2 -
income, that the change promotes and does not retard busi
ness recovery, and that the change makes easier and not
144
more difficult progress toward the establishment of a
balanced relationship between revenues and expenditures.
Full attainment of these objectives is difficult at
best. It is made more difficult by a new and ominous
development in world affairs -- the armament race now
gripping the important nations of the world. Great Britain
in the present fiscal year is spending $3 billion on
military expenditures, or almost 50 percent of its national
budget; France 18 devoting over 40 percent of its national
governmental expenditures to the same purpose; Italy,
50 percent; Germany, probably 60 percent; Japan over
70 percent. These huge expenditures are being financed
largely by borrowing. The race 1s becoming more intense
and there is no end in sight.
For us these developments present the danger that
they may involve us in increased cost for national defense
here and and that they may result in monetary instability
abroad, disruption of our foreign commerce, and perhaps
other unsettlements, the consequences of which we cannot
fully predict. In this connection, it is interesting to
note that in our budget for this fiscal year expenditures
for past wars and national defense are almost one-fourth
of total expenditures.
145
- 3 -
No proper solution of any major problem facing this
government today can be achieved without full consideration
of the impact on our country of the present international
crisis. The unmistakable implication of the international
situation is that we should give serious attention to our future
fiscal position and redouble our efforts to attain full
recovery. High national income and & sound fiscal position
are essential to adequate national defense. It is against
this background that we reexamine our fiscal program.
A fundamental objective of sound finance clearly is
a balanced budget. There 18, of course, no good reason
why taxes must exactly balance expenditures in each
specific year any more than each month, each week or each
day. There are periods during which sound fiscal policy
calls for an excess of outgo over income, and others when
it calls for an excess of income over outgo. In a
depression it 18 inevitable that there will be deficits.
Revenues decline at the same time that the Federal
Government 18 called upon to assume inescapable social
and economic burdens. If, however, deficits are too long
continued, the depressive effects of uncertainty tend to
make recovery more difficult. The sequel to deficits
in emergencies should be surpluses during years of
prosperity. That was and is one of the broad purposes
of seeking to raise the national income to a high level,
146
- 14 -
thus assuring revenue great enough not only to end the
deficits which began in 1931, but also to reduce the
public debt.
In carrying out our fiscal policy it would be helpful
to have machinery which would more fully coordinate our
efforts. It is not the prerogative of any administrative
Department to make suggestions to the legislative branch
of the Government for the conduct of its work, but I am
sure that you would wish me to be frank in suggesting ways
of surmounting difficulties which I believe now attend the
joint efforts of the Ways and Means and Finance Committees
and the Treasury Department.
If, for instance, the Ways and Means and Appropriations
Committees of this House and the Finance and Appropriations
Committees of the Senate could meet each session as one
Joint Committee on Fiscal Policy, to consider the over-all
aspects of the expenditure and revenue programs, simplifica-
tion and greater effectiveness would result. The Budget
Act of 1921 set up a procedure for the orderly formulation
by the Executive of fiscal proposals and for their submis-
sion to the Congress as a unified budget. No comparable
procedure has been set up in Congress for considering
revenues and expenditures together as two interrelated
aspects of a single problem. I hope this Committee will
agree with me that some such innovation would improve the
Regraded Unclassified
147
- 5 -
efficiency of the Government. By providing for 8 preliminary
legislative consideration of the over-all picture of
appropriation and revenue measures it would give Congress
8 broad perspective of the state of the Government's
finances and permit 8 better ordered coordination between
the executive and the legislative branches in this field.
This joint committee would in effect be B lens through
which all appropriation and revenue measures could be
viewed in relationship to both to what the nation needs and to what
the nation can afford.
In my opinion the fundamental fiscal question raised
by the pending Department of Agriculture appropriation bill
is precisely the type of question with which this joint
committee should concern itself. This bill proposes to
increase budgeted expenditures for farm parity payments
by $372,000,000 but no provision has been made for
compensating increase in revenue indicated although we
already face a deficit of $3,426,000,000 in the coming
fiscal year. The bill, upon the merits of which I am not
commenting, 18 typical of scores of others which seem to
me to present questions appropriate for consideration by
a joint committee which looks at each proposed expenditure
and each proposed revenue measure as a part of an integrated
budget policy.
- 6 -
148
should
This committee could have continuous life for the
pupose of actively studying fiscal problems between as
well as during sessions of Congress. The Treasury Department
would, of course, cooperate in this work to the full extent
that the Committee desired.
Thus far I have dealt with the financial problems of
the Federal Government alone. We must remember, however,
that even if we had in operation the best conceivable
Federal fiscal plan, we still would have touched less than
half of the tax problem which confronts the nation. Almost
60 percent of the total tax revenues of the country are
collected by state and local governments.
In the last five years we have given serious study
to the problems created by Federal-State tax conflicts.
The same problems had been recognized by our predecessors.
It 1s my belief that we should take steps without delay
to make these studies effective. I suggest that Congress
create a small temporary national commission to report to
Congress a8 soon a8 feasible on the various aspects of
intergovernmental fiscal policy. Such a commission should
be made up of men of ability who command the highest possible
public confidence, who are familiar with fiscal problems,
but who will represent the public at large rather than
particular governmental units.
149
- 7 -
Overlapping taxes have grown in number and size as
both Federal and state governments have sought new revenue.
Grants-in-aid are being demanded of the Federal Government
in increasing amounts. The results of this fiscal situation
are increasingly unsatisfactory to both the state govern-
ments and the Federal Government, and more and more burden-
some to - taxpayers. The findings of such a commission
should assist us in achiving a more orderly relationship
between the Federal, state and local fiscal systems.
Thus far I have talked about two fiscal matters of
great importance. Let me turn now to more specific
questions of taxation.
I desire first to reiterate two tax recommendations
which the President has already made and two suggestions
which the Treasury previously presented:
1. In his Budget Message of January 3, 1939, the
President recommended that Congress extend the miscellaneous
internal revenue taxes which under existing law will expire
next June and July, and to maintain the current rates of
those taxes which otherwise would be reduced in June.
2. In his message of January 19, 1939, the President
recommended legislation making all government salaries here-
after earned and all interest on government securities
- 8 -
150
hereafter issued subject to Federal and state income tax
laws. That part of this recommendation dealing with
government salaries, I am pleased to note, has already
been incorporated into law.
3. In my statement of March 24, 1939, I presented
for your consideration four alternative rate plans for
old-age insurance contributions during the next three
years.
4. The Treasury Department has pointed out from time
to time that the present law allows excessive deductions
for depletion of oil and gas wells and certain mines.
Removing this inequitable special privilege would produce
a substantial amount of revenue.
A comprehensive revision of the tax structure as a
whole at this session of Congress scarcely seems feasible,
especially in the absence of an adequate study of over-
lapping taxes. That fact, however, should not, in my
opinion, restrain your Committee from giving serious
attention at this time to removing from the tax laws
any manifest inequities or other defects. In November
1937, I said that, "We want to adjust inequalities
and remedy defects in the tax laws.
151
- 9 -
It seems to me that we should have this purpose in
mind at all times. Therefore, I should like to bring to
your attention certain features of the tax system which may
warrant reexamination. I will refrain from presenting
specific tax recommendations because, as on my four previous
appearances before your Committee, I wishto conform with
the intent of Congress as expressed in that section of the
Budget and Accounting Act which says, "No recommendation as
to how the revenue needs of the Government should be met
shall be submitted to Congress or any Committee thereof by
any officer or employee of any Department or establishment
unless at the request of either House of Congress."
Before specifying the tax provisions which I believe
deserve your special attention at this time, I wish to
emphasize the importance of maintaining the present revenue
in any tax revisions which may be made. We must not forget
that one of the important objectives of our fiscal program
is to approach a balance between revenues and expenditures.
For this reason any tax reductions must be offset by tax
increases elsewhere.
(In In my opinion we should under no
circumstances weaken the revenue-producing capacity of our
tax structure at this time. I regard this as an essential
requirement to which any program of tax revision that may be
undertaken at this session must conform. If tax revision
were confined to tax reductions the resulting uro ertainty
Regraded Unclassified
152
- 10 -
as to our future should fiscal position would injure and not help
business. We must take no step which the public may interpret
as moving away from the objective of a balanced budget.
In discussing the elements or features of the tax
system which you may wish to reexamine, I should like to
classify them roughly into three includes groups.
The first group comprises features which have been
characterized 1 as substantial deterrents to business in that
they impose tax burdens at points where they are especially
likely to hinder business expansion and investment.
One such feature 18 the absence of provision in our
income tax laws for carrying over net business losses to
be deducted from business profits of future years. The
profits or losses of each year are considered without
reference to those of any other year. In consequence
8 business with alternating profit and loss now pays higher
taxes over a period of years than does a business with
stable profits although the average income of the two
firms may be equal. New enterprises and the capital goods
industries are especially subject to wide fluctuations in
earnings.
As 8 second example, I should also like to mention the
questions of tax-exempt securities and surtax rates in the
higher brackets. These two questions should be considered
together. Tax exemption of securities is highly inequitable
Regraded Unclassified
153
- 11 -
and tends to nullify our progressive surtax rates. Most
persons subject to the high surtaxes have sizable holdings
of governmental securities which yield them an income
free from Federal income taxation, while other persons
entirely escape the high surtaxes in this manner. Tax
exemption also operates as a magnet which pulls persons
subject to high income taxes away from investments in
private business. We should by all means pass legislation
to make it impossible in the future to issue any more
tax-exempt securities.
This having been accomplished first, it would then
be fair and logical to reexamine the question of whether
the present surtax rates on very large incomes may not
be 80 high that they discourage the limited number of
individuals subject to them from taking normal business
risks.
There are a number of features in our tax system
which have been described as major tax irritants although
they are probably not important deterrents to business
activity.
As an example of a tax which has been considered an
irritant I would mention the undistributed profits tax.
154
- 12 -
In its present form, it is - unimportant and does not
accomplish the objective of the original proposal. The tax
produces little revenue and has little effect on business.
It has acquired prominence as a psychological irritant,
largely because of the widespread and emotional criticism
which has been directed against it. The end which the law
sought to attain was to prevent the retention and accumula-
tion of earnings by corporations from being used to avoid
the personal income tax. This is still an important, and
to my mind, a sound objective. The law in ite present form
does not attain it. Since the income tax on corporations,
of which the undistributed profits tax is a minor segment,
expires by its should own terms at the end of this year, your
Committee must deal with this problem. The Treasury, of
course, stands ready to work with you on it.
Another example of tax irritant 18 found in the
capital stock tax and the related excess profits tax, enacted
in 1932. Under the present law the capital stock tax 1s
based upon a declared capital stock value which the taxpayer
may revise every three years. The declared value may be any
figure that the taxpayer desires to submit regardless of the
actual value of the stock. The excess profits tax applies
to profits in excess of 10 percent of such a declared value.
The taxes are thus not really taxes on the value of capital
stock or on excessive profits. Their major defect 18 that
they operate very erratically. The tax liability they impose
Regraded Unclassified
155
- 13 -
depends on the taxpayer's ability to forecast profits for
the next three years as well as upon the amount of profits
actually realized during each of the three years. Fore-
casts of earnings are particularly difficult to make in the
case of new businesses and those with unstable incomes such
as the capital goods industries with the result that taxes
imposed on such businesses are at times inordinately high.
There is a third category of tax problems now being
widely discussed which raises questions of tax equity.
The Treasury has already worked on these problems and,
if your Committee desires, our staff could continue these
studies in collaboration with the Committee, possibly with
a view to action at a later session.
An example 1s the double taxation of corporate
dividends paid to individuals. Under the present law
corporations pay the normal corporate tax on their earnings.
When these earnings are distributed to the individual stock-
holder they are subject to both the individual normal tax
and to the surtax. 1 Eliminating the normal tax on dividends
received by individual stockholders would be a partial step
toward equalizing taxes paid on dividend income as compared
to taxes paid on interest and on income earned through un-
incorporated business.
Another example in the same cless is the limitation
now placed on the deduction of corporation capital losses.
Regraded Unclassified
358
- 14 -
Under the present law an excess of corporate capital losses
over capital gains can be deducted from ordinary income only
to the extent of $2,000. Mis & result a corporation may be
obliged to pay an income tax in a year when its ordinary
income is offset by capital losses. Allowing the deduction
of corporate net capital losses from other income might en-
courage investment in capital assets by corporations.
Another tax provision which I think merits your
consideration because of differences of opinion over its
equity 1s the present treatment of consolidated returns and
intercorporate dividends, especially in connection with
corporations which are obliged by state laws to operate as
holding companies with subsidiaries.
There are, of course, numerous minor provisions of the
tax laws which have been found through experience to produce
inequities or to be unnecessarily complicated. Such provi-
sions are discovered and brought to the attention of Congress
from time to time as they become of importance. While no
one of them may be of great significance AB a business
irritant or deterrent, in combination their effects may be
substantial. I shall not endeavor to disouss detailed
measures of this kind but suggestions will be made later by
the Treasury staff if you wish.
An important factor in the consideration of many of the
possible tax changes previously discussed is that in the case
Regraded Unclassified
157
- 15 -
of most of them adoption would result in & reduction in the
revenue-producing capacity of the tax system. I have already
emphasized the importance of not permitting the revenue-
producing power of the tax system to be reduced at this time.
Accordingly, with the adoption of any of the above measures
involving loss of revenue there should be associated revenue-
producing revisions. Although this problem is difficult,
Congress must face it. The taxes resorted to for replacing
any lost revenue should have the least harmful effects on
business and should contribute to greater equity. I suggest
the following three possibilities:
1. The corporation income tax rate could be increased,
with some allowance for corporations with small incomes.
2. A second possible source of additional revenue is
the individual income tax. There is merit to the suggestion
that the rates on incomes between the #7500 and $75,000
levels could be increased without inequity or material
deterrent effects. Furthermore, to promote wholesome tax
consciousness and good citizenship, the personal and family
exemptions might well be decreased. At the present time
only about 3,000,000 persons pay income taxes. If the
exemption for individuals were decreased from $1,000 to $800
and the exemption for married couples decreased from $2,500
to $2,000, it 1s estimated that a total of 4,500,000 persons
would be subject to the income tax. The rates imposed on
small incomes could be low with perhaps a small minimum tax.
Regraded Unclassified
158
- 16 -
Even though the tax imposed on small incomes were of little
importance from the revenue point of view, the tax would
constitute a valuable instrument for making & larger group
of our citizens directly aware of the Federal tax problem.
3. Estate and gift taxes could be increased. Although
high rates are applied to extremely large estates the great
majority of the estates pay little or no tax. The exemption
could be reduced, the insurance allowance could be eliminated
and rates in the lower and middle brackets could be increased.
Furthermore, consideration might well be given to the possi-
bility of combining the estate and gift taxes into one con-
solidated tax. At the present time B. person with a large
volume of property who 18 in position to give much of it away
during life can reduce his total tax far below that which must
be paid on the estate of a person who 18 not in position to
give away his property during life.
In connection with all of the matters I have mentioned
the Treasury 1s prepared to furnish further information and
will be happy to work with you to the extent that you desire.
The matters I have discussed are for the most part con-
fined to a limited segment of the tax system. I do not con-
sider them as constituting an adequate program of tax revision.
Such a program can be developed only through long continued
study and it cannot be static but must be adapted to changing
conditions. But the general lines along which Federal taxation
Regraded Unclassified
159
- 17 -
should develop in the future appear to be quite clear. We
ought to increase the part played by direct taxes that can
be made to take account of differences in the abilities of
individuals to support Government. This means that we
should endeavor eventually to minimize the use of manu-
facturers' excises and other commodity taxes which tend to
be shifted directly to consumers and also should reduce the
importance of taxes on corporations, shifting the burden 88
far as practical to the individual income tax and the estate
and gift taxes. Such revisions would facilitate coordination
of Federal with State and local taxation. The Treasury is
continuously studying the tax structure to develop a program
along these lines and I hope will have the opportunity of
presenting its findings to your Committee as the studies
proceed and as your convenience permits.
In conclusion, permit me to say that one of the major
tasks we have before us 1s to do everything we can to promote
lasting business recovery. I must repeat now with the same
deep conviction with which I said in November, 1937, that
"The basic need today 1s to foster the full application of
the driving force of private capital. We want to see capital
go into the productive channels of private industry. We want to
see private business expand." Our consideration of tax changes
must have that necessity in mind as well as revenue needs.
Regraded Unclassified
160
7n
INDEX
Page
The President
January 5
Budget Message
1
If
17
Press Conference
3
February 17
Press Conference
(enroute to Key West)
4
March 8
Press Conference
6
If 14
If
#
6 - 7
# 17
"
If
7
If 21
If
If
7 - 8 - 9
April 18
If
=
9
May 2
If
If
(enroute from Hyde Park)
10
If 9
Press Conference
10
If 12
BI
If
11
If 16
II
If
12 - 13
Secretary Morgenthau
January 16
Press Conference
2 - 3
February 23
If
If
4 - 5
If
27
If
If
5 - 6
March
4
Letters to Chairmen
Harrison & Doughton
6
If
9
Before entering White
House conference on taxes
6
If
23
Press Conference
9
April
10
11
If
9
If
24
If
"
10
May
4
If
If
10
If
8
#
If
10
If
11
If
If
11
Under Secretary Hanes
January 20
Before Winston-Salem
(N.C.) Chamber of Com-
merce
3
Secretary Harry Hopkins January 11
Before Senate Committee
considering his nomina-
tion as Secy. of Commerce 1
February 24
Before Economic Club of
Des Moines, Iowa.
5
March
Press Conference
6
8
Wall Street Journal
January 17
3
STATEMENTS ON TAXES BY MEMBERS OF THE ADMINISTRATION IN 1939
January 5 - The President's Budget Message:
***** I believe I am expressing the thought of the most far-sighted
students of our economic system in saying that it would be unwise either
to curtail expenditures sharply or to impose drastic new taxes at this
stago of recovery. But in view of the addition to our public expenditures
involved in the proposed enlarged national defense program and the program
for agricultural parity payments, for which no revenue provision has yet
been made, I think we might safely consider moderate tax increases which
would approximately meet the increased expenditures on these accounts.
It should be added, however, that it is my firm conviction that such new
taxes 6.5 may be imposed should be most carefully selected from the stand=
point of avoiding repressive effects upon purchasing power.
Sound progress toward a budget that ie formally balanced is not to
be made by heavily slashing expenditures or drastically increasing taxes.
On the contrary, it is to be sought by employing every effective device
- may have at our command for promoting a steady recovery, which means
steady progress toward the goal of full utilization of our resources. We
can contribute very materially toward that end by a wise tax program.
I earn recommending the reenactment of the excise taxes which will expire
in June and July of this year, not because I regard them as ideal components
of our tax structure, but because their collection has been perfected, our
economy is adjusted to them, and we cannot afford at this time to sacrifice
the revenue they represent. If the Congress should at this session adopt
new taxes more scientifically planned to care for the defense and agrioul-
tural programs, it is quite possible that the existence of these new taxes
will enable us in a. later year to give consideration to abolishing some of
the present excise lavies. ***
January 11 - Harry Hopkins before Senate Committee considering his nomi-
nation as Secretary of Commarce: (By UP)
Harry L. Hopkins today told Senators considering his nomination as
Secretary of Commerce that he has started a study of tax questions with
leading business men.
Mr. Hopkins made the statement under questioning by the Senate Com-
mores Committee, which is considering the fitness of the former Works
Progress Administrator for his new Presidential appointment B.E Commerce
Secretary.
Mr. Hopkins said he had held three or four meetings with members of
the Business Advisory Council to obtain business opinions on tax policies
and plans several more sessions on the same subject. Es declined, however,
to express any opinion on tax policies. ....
Regraded Unclassified
162
- 2 -
Mr. Hopkins said he believed taxes should be studied in relation
to national income. Congress, he suggested, should determine whether
imposition of new taxes at this time would halt the present upward
movement of national income.
January 16 - Secretary Morgenthau at his press conference:
Q. Mr. Secretary, have you been asked for your opinion on pro-
cessing taxes?
A. Not very recently.
Q. Do you favor processing taxes?
A. Do If No.
Q. Would you say why, sir?
A. Oh, why get into the whole business, but I think the percentage
of taxes on consumers is sufficiently high.
Q. Mr. Secretary, the Social Security Council recommended that
means other than payroll taxes be provided for carrying forward at least
part of the Social Security old-age program.
&. I am going to have to beg off on that whole thing. I haven't
had 8. chance to read the report or the President's message, 80 I'm not up
to date on it.
Q. Could we go back to this processing tax business, Mr. Secretary?
It's obvious from what you say as chief fiscal officer of the government
that you are not going to recommend that processing taxes be enacted to
finance these farm benefit payments.
1. I think I've gone far enough.
Q. It's 8. protty safe assumption, isn't it?
A. Well, I mean, somebody asked me whether I was for 'em - I'm agin
'em.
Q. You won't recommend 'em?
4. Right.
Q. Mr. Secretary, on this Social Security matter, I had in mind
partly what he had also, you have Social Security, you have farm relief
and you have national defense taxes under these various recommendations and
I was just wondering whether you had any thought on the thing.
A. Yes, but the Treasury will withhold its thoughts until we appear
before the proper committees.
Q. Your statement would indicate, Mr. Secretary, that you are opposed
to any further increase in what might be termed nuisance taxes or savings
taxes upon consumers.
A. I think you are going a. little bit too far. I was asked 6. simple
question about processing taxes and we here in the Treasury feel that that
particular form of taxes is the least desirable and if and when Congress
asks us to recommend what kind of taxes TWO do want to recommend, if they
want additional taxes to carry out the President's suggestions in the
Budget Message, the Treasury will be ready to appear before the proper oom-
mittee end malce its recommendations as to kinds of taxes if Congress asks
us. No will carry out our usual policy here of waiting until Congress
sends for us.
Regraded Unclassified
263
- 3 -
Q. Mr. Secretary, is that comment along the line of that speech
of yours in November, 1937, in which you favored outting out direct taxes
on the consumers and broadening the tax base?
A. I think I've gons a little bit farther than I usually do and I
will let it ride.
Q. The President said the other day he wes against nuisance taxes.
À. Well, I don't know what be means or you mean but I think I've
gone far enough.
Q. Sales taxes?
A. I think I've gone far enough.
Q. Mr. Secretary, your speech of 1937 has already been mentioned;
what do you think about the Budget message? Would you restate your
position on that at this time? The President abandoned all hope of a
balanced budget - -- never even mentioned it in his last message -- and we
just wondered how you fool.
A. I simply say the budget message is all right. I'm not going
to say anything more than that.
Q. The budget message is all right?
A. It's all right.
January 17 - The President's Press Conference:
The President was asked whether he was in favor of processing taxes.
He said it was not a pending question; that they were one of many forms of
taxes that might be considered by Congress. He added that they do fall in
the general category of taxes on the consuming public. Asked if he would
not consider them, therefore, as having a depressant effect on consumption,
he said undoubtedly they should be considered as a depressant. Asked if
he had not said in his budget message that that kind of taxes should be
avoided, he answered: "Yes, that's right."
January 17 - The Wall Street Journal:
"---- While Secretary Wallace could not be reached for comment, a
high Agricultural Adjustment Administration official last night described
the department's attitude thus:
'Our position on processing taxes has been made very clear in
speeches made by department officials over the past several months. If
benefit payments are to continue, some source of funds for them must be
provided. We think the processing tax is a good source. (Secretary
Wallace recently said: 'If a better source can be found, I want you to
show it to me.') of course the Treasury will have its own recommendations
to make on how to get the money, but we will continue to advocate pro-
cessing taxes as our idea of how the money should be raised.*****
January 20 - Under Secretary Hanes before the Winston-Salem (N.C.) Chamber
of Commerce:
"**** I do not believe it is possible, as a practical matter, suddenly
Regraded Unclassified
184
to reduce expenditures to the six billion dollar level. Nor do I believe
that it is possible to increase tax rates or to lavy new taxes that will
raise Federal revenue by fifty per cont, or that it is expedient to under-
take to do BO. I believe that if WD undertook to do this, and if we
increased our schedules and rates by fifty per cent, we would find that
this very action would tend toward diminishing returns. I mean that 8.
fifty per cent increase in schedules would not produce fifty per cent
increase in revenue. Furthermore, the very act of such an increase in the
rate structure now would tend to destroy the promise of cooperation be-
tween business and government which I am convinced 18 alone capable of
bringing about in the reasonable future a situation under which income
and outgo may be brought into approximate balance.
Large increases in rates and schedules now would produce progressively
less and less. Increasing national income now would produce progressively
more and more in dollar revenue,
February 17 - The President's Press Conference enroute to Key Wost,
Plorida: (Felix Belair, New York Times)
"President Roosevelt assured business and industry today that they
would not be called upon to shoulder new or higher taxes for financing
New Doal programs and that they could look forward without any misgivings
as to the Administration's objectives in the months ahead. 'Some
business men have suggested increased taxation as the answer to currently
heavier expenditures for relief and for financing New Deal reforms,' the
President was reminded.
His answer was that business men need not worry about new or heavier
taxes. There WBS no prospect of any such legislation, he added, unless
present temporary taxes were not renewed at their expiration date, or
Congress authorized expenditures outside the budget. He indicated that he
saw no prospect of either.
February 23 - Secretary Morgenthau at his press conference:
"No are studying taxes continuously. We have B. large staff at work.
I an very glad that the President made that statement. Speaking only for
myself the thing that bothers me is that business men I see have what I
would call á 'what's the use' attitude about going ahead. I feel that
that attitude is holding back normal business, that it is preventing busi-
ness mon from expanding their businesses and teking normal business risks.
I sincerely hope that Congress will take B. careful look at the tax law and
see whether there are any deterrents that are holding back business and
holding back business mon from making future commitments. Business men
ought to feel that the administration wante them to go ahead and take
risks and that the administration wants them to make money. Tax legislation
should be of 6. nature that 1a not B. deterrent to business men. We want then
to make profits. After all the President's masage and his recent state-
ment speak for themselves. I am merely saying how I feel personally. of
course NO must have additional revenue, but in my opinion the way to make
it is for business nen to make more money."
Regraded Unclassified
285
- 6 -
Asked whether he had any definite ideas for changes in the tax laws,
the Secretary said he didn't want to be more explicit at thi 5 time. He
added, "If Congress decides it will take a look we shall be glad to put
our studies at their disposal. I hope they will."
February 24 - Secretary Hopkins before The Economic Club of Des Moines,
Iowa:
"While I feel that there should be no general rise in Federal taxes
this year, I believe any federal taxes which tend to freeze the necessary
flow of capital should be amended. If necessary, such taxes can be re-
placed by increasing other taxes which do not have the same deterring effect."
February 27 - Secretary Morgenthau at his press conference:
Q. Mr. Secretary, did you see the statement made by Representative
Doughton inviting the Treasury to cooperate with them?
A. Eh-huh.
Q. Have you prepared to go up?
A. Yes.
Q. Are you ready to go up?
A. If they ask us to go up tomorrow I don't think the people in the
Treasury will be ready, but if they give us a res sonable notice we will be
ready.
Q. Do you think you will be asked to go up before the March 16 income
tax date?
1. I have seen both Mr. Doughton and Mr. Harrison and the understand-
ing anong ourselves is we won't do anything until after the 15th of March.
Q. When did you see them?
A. Weren't you watching the hate?
Q. Not this week.
A. I saw one Friday and the other Saturday.
Q. Doughton, Friday?
A. Harrison, Friday, Doughton, Saturday.
Q. Why did you agree not to do mything until after the 15th of March?
A. No like to see how much the returns are going to be - get an idea.
Q. Have any estimate as yet?
A. Well, they may have but it hasn't come to me.
Q. But after the 15th it's pretty safe to assume that you are going
to go ahoad and start reexamining the entire -
A. Well, as you may know, I made 6. statement that I hoped Congress
would do this and we are ready to cooperate. Now the next move is up to
Congress.
A. Well, I mean, our discussions have been very friendly and there
Q. Have they invited you up?
has been a. complete meeting of minde 0.0 to procedure. We couldn't go into
details because we weren't ready.
Q. Mr. Secretary, could you say again, for the record, and for busi-
ness, or give & statement of reassurance; ironically they seem to be, well,
Regraded Unclassified
286
- 6 -
0.6 believing as they want to be about this appeasement to business. So
I wonder if you would say anything more like you said last week.
A. No, I've got nothing to add. I said it for news reols for next
Thursday.
Q. Under Secretary Hanes has been quoted as saying that he favora e.
tax program or bill drawn up for at least five years to remove any uncer-
tainties about the future. What is your attitude?
A. Well, all I can say is that Mr. Hanes and I are working in the
closest of harmony, and I am sure we will underwrite each other's individual
statements and joint statements,
March 4 - Secretary Morgenthau in letters to Chairmen Harrison and Doughton:
"I hasten to reply that we shall be very glad to prepare the informa-
tion you desire, and to present it to your respective committees at your
convenience."
March 8 - The President at his press conference:
The President was asked whether he favored changes in the undistributed
profits and capital gains taxes. He said that before answering that he
would have to find out how much money they brought in.
March 8 - Secretary Hopkins at his press conference:
Hopkine said that he and Under Secretary Hanos of the Treasury were in
agreement on what ought to be done on tax revision.
March 9 - Secretary Morgenthau before entering a White House conference on
taxes: (AP)
The Secretary indicated to newspapermen that progress was being made in
conversations of Treasury officials with President Roosevelt on tax revision,
aimed at increasing business confidence.
March 14 - President Roosevelt at his press conference:
President Roosevelt today said that total corporation income tax yield
should be kept at its present level regardless of any changes that might be
made in the various forms of taxes on corporations.
Be said that Senator Harrison and Representative Cooper would call at
the White House tomorrow to discuss the tax situation and that he would have
for the Senate Finance Committee Chairman & report with tax figures Harrison
had suggested, but that he did not know what discussions might result from
the figures.
Asked about statements by Senate Leader Barkley and Speeker Bankhead
that they expected no general tax revision at the current session of Congress,
the President said, "I don't think 'I've taken that up at all."
The President said he thought recent discussions of possible tax changes
had overlooked the sentiment in favor of retaining the present volume of
Regraded Unclassified
087
corporation taxes. "Nobody in the majority party," he said, "wants the
total reduced. The question is how to distribute the burden through the
various forms of taxes." He pointed out that one of the first statements
made by Chairman Harrison this year on the tax problem was to the effect
that the total amount from corporations as e. whole should not be reduced.
Asked specifically about Speaker Bankhead's assertion that consoli-
dation of all the taxes on corporations might be injurious to small busi-
nessmon, the President said he would illustrate; If you repeal three or
four taxes which today yield 15 por cent of the corporate tax revenue,
you must add 15 per cont to the remaining 85 per cont to make up the whole.
"If you don't increase the burden on the little corporation," he explained,
"you have to add it on the big one. If you make it pro rata instead of
graduated, you automatically make the burden greater on the little fellow."
Asked directly if he favored consolidation of the taxes on corporations,
he said the subject was still in the "study stage."
In response to B. question 6,0 to whether he would recommend tax legis-
lation at this session, the President said he had in his budget message
recommended continuation of all expiring taxes. "Have you changed your
mind on the undistributed profite tax?" he was asked. "No," the President
replied, "that would be a readjustment within the corporate structure and
that is still in the study stage."
Asked if there were any doubt that the so-called nuisance taxes would be
extended, the President said, "I hope not. We've got to have the revenue."
As to revenue for parity price payments, the President pointed out
that Congress already had promised that legislation would be provided at
this session to pick up in taxes whatever is expended for parity expendi-
tures.
March 17 - President Roosevelt at his press conference:
The President said "wo" are still working on the problem. 80 far the
discussion has been confined to the corporation tax schedules. Senator
Earrison asked for some information. The President has shown it to him
but has not actually sent it up to him in written form. This information
was prepared by the Treasury Department. It is predicated on Harrison's
statement that the total corporation tax yield should not be decreased.
Senator Harrison, the President said, made that very clear. There are many
ways in which it could be done. What the Treasury has done is not being
submitted in the form of a recommendation either of any particular method
or of policy. It is simply B. statement of what would happen in certain
contingencies. "So far" the President said, "we have got only to the point
of answering requests for factual information." There will probably be some
information available within the next four or five days, but the President
didn't think anything would be done until about two weeks after March 15.
March 21 - President Roosevelt at his press conference:
President Roosevelt said today that curtailment of Government spending
would be "well worth considering" if there were some guarantee that it would
Regraded Unclassified
8 -
automatically improve business conditions. Re doubted that such a program
would meet popular approval if it were tried and the results sought were
not obtained.
He had been asked to give his opinion of n. proposed long-range program
of tax revision in which total revenues would decline for two or three years
and then purportedly would increase to compensate for the earlier loss
through accelerated business activity. "I'd suggest you read my last annual
message to the Congress," the President told his questioner. "In that I
pointed out that we are faced with BL dilemma when we consider expenditures.
No either have to continue our present program or, if we wish to cut down
expenditures materially, the outs must come from certain obvious items that
can be readily reduced, such as relief, public works, slum clearance and
old-age assistance. That would all be predicated on the guese of many
well-meaning people that thereby business would automatically take up the
entire slack, plus the large number of other people who are out of work
but are not in any may being helped by the Government. If there were some
guarantee that this result would follow, it would be well worth considering,
but I doubt that it would meet with popular approval if it were tried and
the result not obtained." The President then volunteered that if the cor-
respondents wanted to quote that statement, he would have Kannee copy it
off and have it mimeographed. "It wes purely extemporaneous, in answer to
the question," he explained, "but I think I said B. mouthful." Asked if his
(WII appraisal of the statement could be quoted, too, the President said it
could.
The President said he was sending this afternoon to Senator Harrison
the tax figures he had asked for. He added that he thought Harrison and
Jere Cooper would be back next week for further discussions on taxes,
Clarence Linz asked if the decline of 30% in March collections would halt
the discussions of possible revisions and the President pointed out that
the collections were substantially above estimates. Felix Cotton wanted
to know why and the President said he didn't yet know. Asked later in the
conference if there would be any change in policy with collections running
ahoad of estimates, the President said, "No, it will simply reduce the
deficit."
To EL question as to whether anyone had yet shown how corporation taxes
could be revised without outting the total dollar volume of revenue, the
President repeated previous preas conference statements that one suggestion
was to eliminate two or three of the types of taxes on corporations and in-
croase the straight percentage levy. If we increase this tax on the small
corporations, he said, we will have protests from 153,000 of the 200,000
corporations which earn more than $10,000 & year. And if we favor them,
be pointed out, we must put the whole burden of additional revenue, on ac-
count of repeal of some of the minor types, on the big corporations, prin-
sipelly those earning more than $1,000,000 a year. "And, they are the ones
1. saile, "I doubt if that would be extremely popular with the advocates."
that are making the present requeste for revisions," the President said with
Regraded Unclassified
_CS
- 9 -
The President said he wanted to repeat that Senator Harrison had
agreed with him that the corporations should still pay the same total
in taxes to the Government and added that the papers of the United States
had not printed that fact. Many of the boys, however, chirped up with
the information that they had used such information and the President
smended to say, "Well, it hasn't been emphasized, then."
Pete Brandt brought up the undistributed profits tax and the President
explained why it had been originally enacted. Pete asked if the objectives
had now been reached and the President was willing to let it 80. "I don't
think the provisions that prevented tax avoidance should be eliminated from
the tax laws of the United States," the President answered, "any more than
we should again allow the incorporation of yachts."
Felix Cotton asked if the President favored a new corporation tax law
st this session of Congréss and the President said, "I'm not favoring any-
thing. It's all still in the study stage."
March 23 - Secretary Morgenthau at his Press Conference:
Well, Senator Harrison, last night, following the President's press
conference the night before, detailed incident after incident and represented
the Hill as accepting the idea of the Treasury to take the business deterrents
out of the tax bill -- out of the tax legislation.
A. All I can say is this; as between Senator Harrison, Congressman
Doughton or Congressman Cooper and the Treasury, we stand just where we
stood when wa exchanged letters and the Treasury is ready and anxious to
have an opportunity to lay our tax studies before the proper committees.
The Conferences which Mr. Hanes and I attended at the White Rouse with
Senator Harrison and Congressman Cooper, I felt were constructive and that
We made progress.
/pril 10 - Secretary Morgenthau at his press conference:
Q. Are you still working, Mr. Secretary, on 6. proposal to consolidate
all corporate taxes?
A. That's wonderful. Gentlemen, to make it easy for me and you, I
don't think anybody will be making a statement, on or off the record, in
the Treasury as to what I will say when I receive my invitation from the
Bill, and I think you gentlemen will have to wait until I make my appearance
on the Hill just as you did in the case of Social Security.
April 18 - President Roosevelt at his press conference:
The President was asked whether he W&D to have any more conferences on
taxes with Senator Harrison and Representative Doughton. He replied that
30 dato had been set, but he imagined that he would telk to them next week.
Regraded Unclassified
170
- 10 -
April 24 - Secretary Morgenthau at his press conference:
The Secretary said he would give careful study to the suggestions
for tax modifications in the Brookings Institution report. Pressed to
any whether any Treasury program would deal primarily with small or large
business, the Secretary said his questioners would have to wait until he
goes up to the Hill to testify.
May 2 - President Roosevelt at his press conference: (en route to Washing-
ton from Hyde Park).
The President indicated that the administration would remain officially
neutral on proposals of congressional and Treasury spokesmen for limitation
of levies called "business deterrents".
May 4 - Secretary Morgenthau at his press conference:
The Secretary repeated that he will be ready to testify when the Ways
and Means Committee is ready.
May 8 - Secretary Morgenthau at his press conference:
The Secretary said that the proposed farm bill would complicate the
tax situation.
May 9 - President Roosevelt at his press conference:
Told that Secretary Morgenthau was "greatly disturbed"by the Senate's
action in voting farm parity payments beyond budget recommendations,
President Roosevelt today said, "So am I," Asked to comment further, the
President said that Congress knows his position well. In the first place,
he said, the bill hasn't gone through yet and therefore we don't want to
talk about it too much; in the second place, he added, "all I need to do
is to reiterate that 225 millions in revenue was promised last year after
parity payments were voted and that amount has not been delivered." Asked
who made the promise, the President said, "The leaders. It was in & joint
resolution."
Asked if additional farm expenditures would not be a factor in oon-
sideration of any general tax revision program, the President answered,
"Of course it would." Asked if he would veto the agricultural appropri-
ation, the President said, "W are talking principles now. No are not
talking about what I might do."
Then be was asked how the money for the parity payments might be raised.
The President said, "I've told you what the situation 18. I didn't get the
225 millions. Now they've made the situation worse. Go and ask them."
Regraded Unclassified
171
- 11 -
May 11 - Secretary Morgenthau at his pross conference:
The Secretary ridiculed reports that he had been forbidden to present
a tax revision program to Congress. He gave out copies of the letter he
had received early in March from Chairmen Harrison and Doughton.
May 12 - President Roosevelt at his press conference:
President Roosevelt today said that the Treasury is going to present
to Congress various methods of recasting the corporate tax structure to
eliminate so-called deterrant taxes and replacing them with other forms
of revenue from business organizations. He said the moat commonly accepted
substitute appeared to be increases in the straight percentage tax.
Asked whother he favored any revision of the corporation income tax
this session, the President said there has been a lot of loose talk about
deterrent taxes. He asked whether his questioner smoked cigarettes and,
answered in the affirmative, said taxes on cigarettes might be considered
a deterrent. "Every tax is a deterrent," he declared. "If the farmer pays
less taxes on his farm, he will have more money with which to buy a dress
for his wife."
The President complained that much of the tax discussion in the news-
papers had revolved around half of a sentence in which he had talked about
tax revisions and had omitted the balance in which he pointed to the need
for replacements.
"If we repeal certain parte of the present corporation taxes," he said,
"everyone on the Hill is agreed--I'm agreed--that we've got to make up the
revenue in corporation taxes as a whole. That raises the question whether
some people are not deliberately omitting that part of the sentence with the
hope that some taxes will be repealed and no substitutes provided to replace
them."
The President said he would "just as soon" have the undistributed
profits tax repealed, provided other means could be found to prevent what
he called "legal tax evasion."
Many of those who are advocating repeal of so-called deterrents want
repeal of certain restrictions in the tax laws, he said. A simple example,
the President explained, is "this question of eliminating entirely the un-
distributed profits tax." He said there had been & very definite reason
behind that tax, that it was to prevent the use of closely-held corporations
owned by comparatively rich mon to accumulate income instead of paying taxes
on it annually. The President took a crack at publishers by saying, "If
they leave their wealth in the paper--I mean in the corporation-until they
die, the Government will get some inheritance tax but not near what would
Regraded Unclassified
172
- 12 -
be due it from taxes on upper bracket income." If there is no undis-
tributed profits tax, he said, there ought to be some other way to pro-
vent this form of legal tax evasion.
The President said that the so-called deterrant taxes provided 25
to 30 percent of the total corporation tax yield. For the sake of
argument, he said, suppose we repeal them and try to make up that 250
millions of dollars of revenue.
"If we adopt the theory of adding that amount to the percentage tax
on B. straight rate basis," he said, "there will be a most awful squawk--
there'll be a revolution--by the small corporations."
The President said that of 200,000 corporations, 160,000 were making
less than $10,000 B year. As B. matter of practical polition, he asked,
"do you think Congress is going to put an increase on them?" He asked if
the correspondents thought Congress would dare to put B. very large increase
on the medium-sized corporations that had from $10,000 to $50,000 income.
And then he asked what the not result would be. Answering his own question,
he said the result would be that the 250 millions would have to come out of
the pockets of the small number of very large corporations and from these,
too, he said, there would be an awful aquawk. All this, he said, must be
considered by the committees and by the Congress.
The possible methods of making changes, the President said, will simply
be placed before the committees, not necessarily B.6 recommendations. That
means, he explained, that the Treasury will have to say, "If you go shead,
gentlemen, and repeal some of the corporation taxes, you will have to add
taxes on all of the small corporations or on all of the big ones."
Asked earlier about his meeting with Chairmen Doughton and Represents-
tive Cooper, the President said it was primarily explorative, that the
Congressmen planned to talk over the situation in their committee and with
the Senate. He said he did not know what will happen.
May 16 - President Roosevelt at his press conference:
The President said that he expected the conferences with the represent-
atives of the Committees to continue. The date of the next conference is
uncertain but will probably be held as soon as the two gentlemen from the
House have talked it over with members of the Committee on Ways and Means,
where all tax legislation must originate. The conferences are making pro-
gress he said. Asked whether the next conference would be limited to the
Ways and Means representatives he said he supposed Pat Harrison would come.
Be WELD asked about the situation of the undistributed profits tax. Be said
the situation was still about the sane. Any substitute would have to have
safeguards against tax avoidance and provision for making up lost revenue.
Asked if Section 102 wasn't a. sufficient safeguard, he said we didn't know yet
Regraded Unclassified
- 13 -
because it had only been in effect for one year. There were two opinions
about it, one was that it was working all right and the other was that it
wouldn't work at all. He added "We are talking it over in a perfectly
friendly way. If we can find some safeguard, that will be perfectly fine."
Asked if he thought the next tax conference would produce anything concrete,
he said: "We have been talking over fifteen or twenty different things
and I suppose we will continue to discuss them." He added that the three
men from the Hill who were present yesterday were going to talk things over
and let him know the result. Asked by Pete Brandt "Is this a filibuster?"
the President replied: "No, not a. bit."
Prepared by
Lawrence H. Seltzer
and
Sidney Tickton
ER
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
73
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 17, 1939
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Hear DOB
11
Subject: Recent Decline in British Bond Market
The attached table (taken from the London Economist of
April 22, 1939, except that the last column has been added
in this Division) 18 interesting in two respects:
(1) It indicates that the rise in interest
rates in Great Britain has transformed the ascend-
ing curve of rates as maturity lengthens, which
characterizes high-grade interest rates in the
United States at this time and which did 80 in
Great Britain until recently, into virtually a
straight horizontal line. Thus, for example,
the 43's of 1940-44 and the 3's of 1959-69 were
selling on April 19 on an identical yield basis --
3.61 percent. Less than six weeks earlier, how-
ever, the former were selling to yield 1.94 per-
cent, and the latter 3.30 percent, a yield
differential in favor of the shorter maturity of
1.36 percent.
(2) In the sharp fall in the British bond
market between March 10 and April 19, 1939, the
shorter maturities fell farther than did the
longer maturities, thereby duplicating the
experience in our own Government market during
the important declines of the last three years
(as reported in our memorandum of November 26,
1938).
Attachment
Regraded Unclassified
174
Yields of British Government Securities
March 10 - April 19, 1939
: Yield
:
Yield
:
:Number of
Rise in
Issue
: March 10,
:
April 19,
:
: months
: 1939
1939
yield
:
:
:yield lost
(Percent)
:
:
:
"Shorts"
:
4-1/2's of 1940-44
1.94
3.61
1.67
:
11
5's
of 1944-64
2.65
3.73
1.08
:
28
2-1/2's of 1944-48
2.69
3.76
1.07
:
29
2-1/2's of 1944-49
2.95
3.69
.74
:
24
:
"Medium"
:
3's
of 1948-53
3.09
3.68
.59
:
23
2-3/4's of 1952-57
3.25
3.68
.43
:
20
3's
of 1954-58
3.25
3.63
.38
:
18
4's from
1957
3.54
3.89
.35
:
15
:
"Longs"
:
4'₈
of 1960-90
3.43
3.79
.36
:
22
.21
:
3-1/2's from 1961
3.59
3.80
18
2-1/2's of 1956-61
3.40
3.76
.36
:
18
3's
of 1959-69
3.30
3.61
.31
:
19
:
2-1/2's
Consols
3.53
3.84
.31
:
19
3-1/2's from 1952
3.57
3.75
.18
:
18
:
Source: Data on market yields from London Economist,
April 22, 1939.
TO:
175
Miss Chauncey
-
Mr. Foley carried this to the
Secretary's house on May 17, 1939
s
MR. FOLEY
176
May 17, 1939
Secretary Morgenthau
E. H. Foley, Jr.
For your information
At your request, I looked into the Dano incident.
It seems that Tyler and Green took Dano to Hains Point in the Pontise
this afternoon for & run. The two men were driving along the speedway and
Dano was running loose on the Washington channel side of Hains Point about
opposite the War College when he spied & small fox terrier owned by Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil V. Hutchinson of 1220 - 5th Street, N. E. Mr. Hutchinson works
in the Government Printing Office. He and Mrs. Hutchinson, who hasn't been
feeling well lately, had taken their small fox terrier to the park for an air-
ing. The dog was on & leash and Mrs. Hutchinson was sitting on one of the
park benches. Dano ran up to the dog and grabbed it by the back of the neck
and started to shake it. Mrs. Hutchinson became hysterical. Her husband,
becoming excited, attempted to separate Dano and the Hutchinson dog. Dano bit
him on the index finger of his right hand. The flesh on the back of the fox
terrier's neck was torn slightly. Mr. Hutchinson asked Tyler and Green to
wait while he summoned I motoreycle park policeman who was on duty in the
vicinity. According to Mr. Hutchinson, Tyler said that it was impossible for
his to wait and returned to the Treasury with Dano, Mr. Hutchinson summoned
motorcycle park policeman Raspberry, shield number 408, who confirmed the above
facts. I have not had an opportunity to talk to Tyler or Green.
I telephoned Mr. Rutchinson and told him how sorry you were about the
matter. I suggested that be have the abrasion on his hand dressed by & doctor
and the fox terrier treated by a veterinary and the bills sent to me. This
seened to satisfy his. Apparently be was disturbed mainly by his wife's
hysteria and the fact that Tyler refused to wait when he went for the officer.
I have talked with the officer and he has promised to telephone se
tomorrow if Mr. Hutchinson is not entirely satisfied. His suggestion is that
the chauffeurs be cautioned, when they take Dano to the park for a run, to stop
the car and get out BO that they will have more control over Dano. Officer
Raspberry said that the chauffeurs make it a practice to remain in the ear and
follow Dano around the speedway. This they consider to be dangerous because of
the number of people and the presence of other dogs in that neighborhood,
I think there is nothing to worry about. I will follow the matter up
end if there are any developments will advise you.
(Initialed) s. 1. for 202
EHF:s Typed 5/17/39
Regraded Unclassified
177
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
fun
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE May 17, 1939.
Mr. Hanes
TO
FROM
Mr. Blough RB
Subject: Accuracy of estimates prepared by Mr. Stam in a memorandum
for Senator Harrison.
The program on which Mr. Stam prepared his estimates included the
following four items:
No. 1. Substitute for the corporation income tax
applicable to corporations with net incomes of over
$25,000, a flat rate of 18%.
Leave corporations with net incomes of under $25,000
subject to the rates provided for in existing law.
No. 2. Allow corporations a three year carry-over
of net losses, excluding capital losses.
No. 3. Repeal the $2,000 limitation on the deduction
by corporations of capital net losses from other income,
insofar as such losses result from assets held over 18
months.
No. 4. Allow a corporation to increase its declared
value for capital stock purposes for the fiscal years
ending June 30. 1939, and June 30, 1940, but do not
permit them to decrease such value for such years.
The estimates of revenue prepared by Mr. Stam "for the calendar
year 1939 under such a plan" were as follows:
Gains from (1)
$59,000,000.
Losses from (2) and (3)
53,000,000.
Losses from (4)
3,500,000.
Net gain
2,500,000.
178
- 2 -
In accordance with your request, preliminary and tentative estimates
have been furnished by the Division of Research and Statistics. Time has
not been sufficient to make estimates of & final or official character.
Furthermore, reliable estimates of the revenue effects of proposals (2)
and (3) are difficult due to lack of adequate basic data.
Subject to these qualifications, the estimates which reflect the
full effect of all proposals at calendar year 1939 levels of business
as compared with the liabilities under the present law are as follows:
Gains from proposal (1)
+ $ 65,000,000
Losses from proposals (2)
and (3)
- 85,000,000
Gains from proposal 4
+ 6,000,000
2
Net loss.. - 14,000,000
COPY
May 17. 1939.
Mr. Hanes
Mr. Blough
Subject: Accuracy of estimates prepared by Mr. Stam in a memorandum
for Senator Harrison.
The program on which Mr. Stam prepared his estimates included the
following four items:
No. 1. Substitute for the corporation income tax
applicable to corporations with net incomes of over
$25.000. a flat rate of 18%.
Leave corporations with net incomes of under $25,000
subject to the rates provided for in existing law.
No. 2. Allow corporations a three year carry-over
of net losses, excluding capital losses.
No. 3. Repeal the $2,000 limitation on the deduction
by corporations of capital net losses from other income,
insofar as such losses result from assets held over 18
months.
No. 4. Allow a corporation to increase its declared
value for capital stock tax purposes for the fiscal years
ending June 30, 1939, and June 30. 1940, but do not
permit them to decrease such value for such years.
The estimates of revenue prepared by Mr. Stam "for the calendar
year 1939 under such a plan" were as follows:
Gains from (1)
$59,000,000.
Losses from (2) and (3)
53,000,000.
Losses from (4)
3,500,000.
Net gnin
2,500,000.
Regraded Unclassified
180
- 2 -
In accordance with your request, preliminary and tentative estimates
have been furnished by the Division of Research and Statistics. Time has
not been sufficient to make estimates of a final or official character.
Furthermore, reliable estimates of the revenue effects of proposals (2)
and (3) are difficult due to lack of adequate basic data.
Subject to these qualifications, the estimates which reflect the
full effect of all proposals at calendar year 1939 levels of business
as compared with the liabilities under the present law are as follows:
Gains from proposal (1)
+ $ 65,000,000
Losses from proposals (2)
and (3)
- 85,000,000
Gains from proposal 4
+ 6,000,000
Net loss.. - 14,000,000
RB:fmb
5/17/39
81
MEMORANDUM PREPARED BY MR. STAM HARRISON OF JOINT COMMITTEE FOR SENATOR
to corporations No. with net incomes of over $25,000. a flat rate 18%.
1. Substitute for the corporation income tax applicable of
Leave corporations with net incomes of under $25,000. subject
to the rates provided for in existing law.
No. 2. Allow corporations a three year carry-over of net
losses, excluding capital losses.
No. 3. Repeal the $2,000. limitation on the deduction by
corporations of capital net losses from other income, insofar 88
such losses result from assets held over 18 months.
No. 4. Allow & corporation to increase its declared value
for capital stock tax purposes for the fiscal years ending June 30,
1939, and June 30, 1940, but do not permit them to decrease such
value for such years.
Estimates of revenue for the oalendar year 1939 under such B.
plan.
Gains from (1)
$59,000,000.
Losses from (2) and (3)
53,000,000.
Losses from (4)
3,500,000.
Net gain
2,500,000.
1. Under the first suggestion the little corporations willbe
left alone and the larger corporations will be subject to the flat
rate of 18%. This will result in a slight increase for banks and
insurance companies which now pay a flat rate of 16%.
2. The second suggestion will allow corporations to carry
over operating net losses to be applied against their net income d'
for the succeeding year. And if in excess of the net income
the succeeding year to be applied against the net income for second the
second year. And if in excess of the net income for the
year to be applied against the net income for the third year.
net losses from suggestion assets held over 18 months to apply such losses
3. This permits corporations which have capital
against their other income for the same year. In this respect
permitted corporations to offset their capital net losses to a certain extent
those will be treated like individuals who are
against their other income.
Regraded Unclassified
182
-2-
The $2,000. limitation will still apply as to capital
net losses from the sale or exchange of capital assets held
18 months or less. This will prevent corporations from
using these speculative losses to reduce their ordinary in-
come. Unless this safeguard should be put in, the limitation
on short-term capital losses applied to individuals might be
evaded by the formation of personal holding companies and the
elimination of investment income by speculative losses.
4. If we allowed a corporation to declare a value for
capital stock tax purposes each year, it might be that loss
in revenue would result, especially with those corporations
having fiscal years ending shortly after the close of the
capital stock tax year, which ends June 30 of each year.
Therefore, to avoid any loss of revenue from this source, it
18 suggested that for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1939,
and June 30, 1940, the corporations be permitted to increase
their capital stock value but not to decrease such value.
This will only result in a slight loss of revenue from the
excess profits tax, and because of the additional capital
stock tax to be paid, it is not believed that it will exceed
two and a half million dollars.
Regraded Unclassified
183
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
OFFICE OF
ESSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
MAY 17 1939
ADDRESS REPLY TO
- of INTERNAL REVENUE
AND REFER TO
Memorandum for
Mr. Hanes:
In response to your request for the names of corporations
from whom additional taxes were collected in consequence of the
application of Section 102 (Surtax on Corporations Improperly
Accumulating Surplus), I list below six cases in which substan-
tial amounts were recovered for the Government:
Fisher & Company,
$ 2,060,739.29
Detroit, Michigan.
Almours Securities, Inc.,
2,736,682.06
Jacksonville, Morida.
Ball Brothers Company,
1,896,200.66
Muncie, Indiana.
Leonard Finance Obrporation,
730,000.00
Chicago, Illinois.
National Grocery Company,
658,705.48
Jersey City, New Jersey.
493,249.56
Lord & Thomas, Inc.,
Chicago, Illinois.
It is, of course, true that these recoveries were made
Act, when the legislation was less favorable to the Government's
under the provisions of Revenue Acts prior to the 1938 Revenue
opportunity to recover, inasmuch as the burden of proof under
more satisfactory results in consequence of the provisions
the prior Acts was upon the Government. There should be even of
the 1938 Act which shifts the burden to the taxpayer.
They Thinking
Commissioner.
504
May 17, 1939
III
261
The Secretary
Proc: Kr. Hanes
An I reported to you yesterday. Congressman Doughton asked no
to be at his office at 9:00 this morning. When I got there I found
that he wanted to discuss with me the proposals of Pat Harrison for
changes in the corporate taxes, copy of which I gave to you yesterday,
I told Mr. Doughton that I could not vouch for the figures con-
tained in the proposals because they had been prepared by the staff
of the Joint Committee, headed by Mr. Stam, and I did not know the
source of the figures. However, in principle, while we have not had
the opportunity to study them carefully, the proposals would seem to
26 to have merit, and might possibly be a basis for a compromise
agreement between all concerned. I told Mr. Doughton that the proposals
the not go as far as we would like because they did not take up the
Tary important question of dealing with the higher surtax rates. nor
with any other provisions concerning the individual tax situation.
Mr. Doughton seemed very much worried over the fact that Jere Cooper
ted remained behind after the meeting at the White House and had B. dis-
cussion with the President, the details of which Jere did not tell.
However, Jere did tell Mr. Doughton that he was strongly in favor of
passing a resolution renewing the excise taxes immediately and sending
that on to the Senate Finance Committee, to be followed by a tax bill
containing all the other component parts. Mr. Doughton seemed to be
fearful that this would involve some delay. He vas quite concerned over
the attitude of the other members of his committee, and had suggested to
Jero that he call a meeting of the Democratic members of the sub-committee
immediately in order that the whole proposition micht be laid before them
and EL decision reached as to procedure.
Mr. Doughton asked me for my opinion and I told him very frankly
that I was in favor of incorporating the excise taxes, and the corporate
and individual tax changes in one bill which we could agree upon in
advance, hold hearings of very short duration, and send to the Senate
710ance Committee a tax bill which had originated in its proper place,
the Ways and Means Committee of the House. Ee said that he was going to
insist on Jere Cooper calling a meeting of the sub-committee immediately
and is the event of his failure to do no he would call together the full
Years and Means Committee for & discussion of this problem.
J.w.H.
Regraded Unclassified
165
May 17. 1939
901
The Secretary
From: Mr. Hanes
At I reported to you yesterday. Congressman Doughten asked no
to be at his office at 9:00 this morning. When I got there I found
that he wanted to discuss with be the proposale of Pat Harrison for
changes in the corporate taxes, copy of which I gave to you yesterday.
I told Mr. Doughton that I could not vouch for the figures 000⑉
tained in the proposale because they had been prepared by the staff
of the Joint Committee, headed by Mr. Stam, and I 41d not know the
source of the figures. However, in principle. while vo have not had
the opportunity to study them carefully. the proposals would ⑉ to
no to have nerit, and wight possibly be a basis for 8 compromise
agreement between all concerned. I told Mr. Doughton that the proposals
41d not & M far as ve would like because they did not take up the
very important question of dealing with the higher surtex rates. nor
with any other provisions concerning the individual tax situation.
Mr. Doughton seemed very such worried over the fact that Jere Cooper
had remained behind after the meeting at the White House and had a dis-
cussion with the President, the details of which Jere did not tell.
Sovever, Jere did tell Mr. Doughter that he was strongly in favor of
passing a resolution renewing the excise taxes imediately and sending
that on to the Senate Finance Committee, to be followed by a tax bill
containing all the other component parts. Mr. Doughton seened to be
fearful that this would involve some delay. He vas quite concerned over
the attitude of the other members of his committee. and had suggested to
Jere that he call a meeting of the Democratic members of the sub-committee
immediately in order that the whole proposition might be laid before them
and a decision reached as to procedure.
Mr. Doughton asked me for my opinion and I told his very frankly
that I vas in favor of incorporating the excise taxes. and the corporate
and individual tax changes in one bill which we could agree upon in
advance. hold heartage of very short duration, and send to the Senate
Finance Committee a tax bill which had originated in its proper place.
the Vays and Hease Committee of the House. Be said that he vas going to
insist on Jere Cooper calling a meeting of the sub-cammites immediately
and in the event of his failure to do no he would call together the full
"ays and Reaso Committee for & discussion of this problem.
2.W.H.
Sent to Secretary by special
messenger - 5-17-39 - 1:00 P.M.
JWE:Jr
Regraded Unclassified
.86
May 17. 1939
is
Mr. Hanes
From:
Mr. Blough
RB
Subject: Penalty taxes on corporations accumulating surpluses
in excess of the reasonable needs of the business
(Section 102 and former Sections 104 and 220).
I.
The imposition of penalties on corporations accumulating
surpluses in excess of actual business needs was introduced in
the Revenue Act of 1921. Prior to that Act the law provided that
when surpluses were thus accumulated, the distributive share was
to be added to and taxed as part of the stockholder's personal
income. The change in the method in 1921 was presumably due to
Supreme Court decisions.
Certain revisions have been made in the section since 1921,
the most important of which was the provision in the Revenue Act
of 1938 placing on the taxpayer the burden of proving that an ac-
cumulation of surplus was not excessive.
II.
Past experience in enforcing the penalty tax on corporations
has not been encouraging. It has been found difficult to prove the
motive of accumulation for the purpose of avoiding the personal
surtax. The Board of Tax Appeals and the courts have in general
insisted on a strong preponderance of evidence to prove such a
motive. Relatively few cases have been raised in the Bureau of
Internal Revenue and very few have been finally adjudicated.
The Bureau of Internal Revenue has furnished information to
this office with respect to cases closed and cases pending, and
tax deficiencies asserted and agreed to under the provisions of
Section 102 and similar provisions in prior revenue acts. This
information shows that no CAB68 involving Section 102 of the
Sevenue Act of 1938 have been considered to date. There exists,
therefore, no administrative experience covering the new provision
which shifts to the taxpayer corporation the burden of proving that
an unreasonable accumulation of surplus was not effected with the
purpose of avoidance of the imposition of the surtax upon its
shareholdere.
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
187
The available data are summarized in the following table. They
cover the assertion of deficiencies in cases involving alleged
improper accumulation of surplus under the 1921 Act through the
1937 Act.
Summary of cases in which Section 102 and similar
provisions in prior revenue acts were asserted
to May 1, 1939
: Number :
Tax
:
Tax
:of cases:
proposed
:
collected
Settled in Income
Tax Unit
483
$ 66,795,655.00
$ 13,275,091.00
Settled after
petition to
B.T.A. or
courts
311
104,519,928.00
27,184,657.00
Total cases settled
794
171,315,583.00
40,459,748.00
Pending in Income
Tax Unit
84
20,001,678.00
-
Pending before
B.T.A. and
courts
168
57,489,243.00
-
Total cases pending
252
77,490,921.00
-
Source: Internal Revenue Bureau data, supplied May 16, 1939.
Regraded Unclassified
188
- 2a -
As of May 1, 1939, as shown in table on page 2, 794 cases have
been closed. The tax proposed in these cases was approximately
$171.3 million, of which $40.4 million, or 23.6 percent, was
agreed to. These 794 closed cases are made up of 483 settled in
the Income Tax Unit and 311 settled after petition to the Board of
Tax Appeals or the courts.
189
-3-
It 16 significant to note that of the 483 cases handled by the
Income Tax Unit, 307 were closed with no tax liability. This may
indicate an initial unwarranted assertion of tax liability on the
part of the audit divisions, or, more likely, an inability to sustain
the asserted deficiencies after conference with the taxpayer corporations.
of the $66.6 million of additional tax proposed in the 483 Cases handled
by the Income Tax Unit, $13.3 million, or 19.9 percent, was agreed to.
With respect to the 311 cases which reached the Board of Tax Appeals,
or the courts, tax liabilities of $27.2 million were agreed to out of a
total asserted of $104.5 million. This amounts to approximately 26 percent
aettlement of deficiencies.
The bulle of the docketed cases were disposed of by stipulation before
the Board or the courts. Only 32 cases have been tried and decided. For
these cases the record shows that 13 were decided favorably to the Govern-
ment, 7 adversely to the Government, and 12 partly in favor of the Govern-
ment. The tried cases yielded additional tax of $3.5 million, out of a
total proposed deficiency of $6.3 million. This indicates a percentage
of 55.6 of the asserted deficiencies.
The Bureau analysis of Section 102 cases shows further that as of
May 1, 1939, there were 252 cases pending, 84 of which are in the Income
Tax Unit and 168 are with the Board of Tax Appeals and the courts. The
54 cases involve deficiencies of $20,001,678. while the 168 cases involve
deficiencies of $57,557,843. or a total of $77,559.521 for the 252 cases.
Assistant Deputy Commissioner Sherwood in his memorandum of May 16
indicates that considerable reservation must be made with respect to
figures given because "under the present plan of decentralization, the
returns are not forwarded to Washington until after closing action;
therefore, the information as to the current action with respect to the
application of Section 102 cannot be furnished." The probability'is that
Section 102 action may have been initiated and is today pending on con-
siderably more cases than the figures indicate. Other questions end
reservations have arisen with regard to the figures submitted by the
Bureau; these will be investigated and any changes found to be necessary
will be submitted in a supplementary report,
III.
The prospects of epplying Section 102 successfully have improved
recently. On May 16, 1938, the United States Supreme Court reversed
the Circuit Court of Appeals, Third Circuit, in the case of Helvering
V. The National Grocery Co. (58 S.Ct. 932). and sustained the Board of
Tax Aspeals decision holding the taxpayer liable under Section 104
(the carlier number of what is now Section 102). This decision will
Regraded Unclassified
190
- 4 -
strengthen the hands of the administrators in prosecuting future
cases.
Furthermore, the Revenue Act of 1938 has, as previously mentioned,
shifted the burden of proof from the Bureau of Internal Revenue to the
taxpayer. While, as previously mentioned, there is as yet no administra-
tive experience under the revised section, the settlement and prosecution
by the Bureau will in all probability be substantially assisted.
IV.
The best that can be hoped from a penalty tax such as that imposed
by Section 102 is to reach deliberate tax avoidance where no business
purpose is served by the accumulation of surplus. Cases where motives
for accumulating surplus are mixed will be very difficult to reach under
the section and cases where tax avoidance is an incidental result of the
accumulation of surplus for business needs will not be reached at all.
Whether B. penalty tax of this kind can be considered a substitute
for the undistributed profits tax will depend on what is considered the
legitimate purpose of an undistributed profits tax. If the purpose is
merely to reach cases where accumulated surpluses are not used legitimately
in business, Section 102 in its present form or in a revised form can
probably be looked on as a solution. If, however, it is desired to
prevent the avoidance of personal surtax which results when corporations
retain earnings and accumulated surplus for business needs, some method
other than Section 102 in its present form or any revised form following
the general lines of the present law will be required.
Regraded Unclassified
191
tt to this
should be
me Blonghis
analysis
of stains
eslemate
11
192
To:
Miss Chauncey
From:
CE
Mr. Hanes had a conference with the Secretary at 4:45 P. M. on
May 17, 1939, and I presume they discussed the following memost
"Accuracy of estimates prepared by Mr. Stam in a memorandum
for Senator Harrison."
"Penalty taxes on corporations accumulating surpluses in excess
of the reasonable needs of the business (Section 102 and former
Sections 104 and 220)."
Copies of these memoranda will be sent to you today, along with
a copy of the "Harrison Proposal," which was discussed at the White
House conference on May 16, 1939.
e
-93
May 17. 1939
To:
Mr. Banes
From:
Mr. Blough
Subject:
Penalty taxes on corporations normulating surplaces
is ...... of the reasonable meeds of the business
(Section 102 and forner Sections 204 and 220).
1.
The imposition of penalties on corporations normulating
surpluses in excess of actual business needs vas introduced in
the Revenue Act of 1921. Prior to that Ast the Lev provided that
when surpluses were the accuminted, the distributive share vas
to be added to and texed as part of the stockholder's personal
income. The change in the mothod in 1921 vas presently due to
Supreme Court decisions.
Certain revisions have been made in the section since 1921.
the most important of which was the provision in the Revenue Act
of 1938 placing on the taxpayer the burden of proving that an se-
sumulation of surplas vas not excessive.
II.
Past experience in enforeing the penalty tax es corporations
has not been ensouraging. 19 has been found difficult to prove the
notive of nocumulation for the purpose of avoiding the personal
surtax. The leard of Tax Appeals and the courte have in general
insisted on a strong prepenterance of evidence to prove such a
notive. Relatively few cases have been raised in the Bureen of
Internal Revenue and very for have been finally adjudicated.
The Dureau of Internal Sevenue has furntshed information to
this office with respect to cases closed and cases pending, and
tax deficiencies asserted and agreed to under the provisions of
Section 102 and sizilar previsions in prior revenue nots. This
information shows that no cases involving section 102 of the
Revenue Act of 1936 have boan considered to date. There exists,
therefore, - administrative exporience covering the nov provision
which shifts to the texpayer corporation the burden of proving that
- unreasemable accumulation of surplus vas not effected with the
purpose of avoidence of the imposition of the ourlex upon its
shareholders.
Regraded Unclassified
- 2 -
194
The available data are cummarized in the fellowing table. They
cover the assertion of deficiencies in cases involving alleged
improper accumulation of surplus under the 1921 Act through the
1937 Act.
Summary of casno in which Section 102 and similar
provisions in prior revenue note were assorted
to May 1, 1939
- -
Tax
-
Tax
lef
proposed
I
collected
Settled in Income
Tax Unit
483
$ 66,795,655.00
8 13,275,091.00
Settled after
petition to
B.F.A. or
courts
312
104.519.928.00
27,184,657.00
Total cases settled
794
171,315,583.00
40,459,748.00
Pending in Income
Tax Unit
84
20,001,678.00
Pending before
B.T.A. and
courts
168
57,489,243.00
Total cases pending
252
77,490,921.00
Source: Internal Revenue Bureau date, supplied May 16, 1939.
Regraded Unclassified
195
2 . I
As of May 1. 1939. as shown in table on page 2, 794 cases have
been closed. the tax proposed in these cases we approximately
0171.3 million, of which $40.4 million, or 23.6 percent, vas
agreed to. These 794 closed - are made up of hay settled in
the Income Tax Unit and 311 nettled after petition to the Beard of
Tax Appeals of the courts.
Regraded Unclassified
196
Regraded Unclassifie
IS Le significant to note that of the 483 cases handled w the
Income Tax Unit. 307 vare closed with be tax lisbility. this my
indicate 5 initial unwarrented assertion of tax liability en the
part of the milt divisions, or, more limily, at insbility to custain
the asserted deficiencies after conference with the texpayer corporations.
of the $66.8 million of additional tax proposed in the 403 CASH handled
by the Income Tax Unit. $13.3 million, or 19.9 percent, vas agreed to.
V1th respect to the 311 cases which reached the Board of fat Appeals,
or the courts, tax Liabilities of $27.2 million vare agreed to out of a
total asserted of $104.5 million. This amounts to approximately 26 persent
settlement of deficiencies.
The bulk of the docksted cases vere disposed of by stipulation before
the Heard or the courts. Only 32 cases have been tried and decided. For
these onses the record shows that 13 vers decided favorably to the Covern-
sent, 7 adversely to the Government, and 12 partly in favor of the Comm-
next. The tried cases yieldad additional tax of $3.5 million, out of a
total proposed deficiency of $6.3 million. This indicates a paremtage
of 55.6 of the asserted deficiansies.
The Bureau analysis of Section 102 cases shows further that M of
May 1, 1939. there were 252 cases pending, a of which Are in the Income
Tax Unit and 168 are with the Board of Tax Appeals and the courts. the
54 cases involve deficiencies of $20,001,678, while the 168 CASES involve
deficiencies of 457.557.843. of a total of 077.559.521 for the 252 00000.
Assistant Deguty Commissioner harved in his of May 16
indicates that considerable recervation must be made with respect to
figures given because "under the present plan of decombrulisation, the
returns are not forwarded to Washington until after closing action;
therefore, the information as to the ourrent action with respect to the
application of Section 102 cannot be furnished." The probability is that
Section 102 notion may have born initiated and 10 today pending on con-
siderably more casse than the figures indicate. Other questions and
reservations have arisen with regard to the figures submitted by the
Juremy: these vill be investigated nad any changes found to be necessary
will be submitted in & supplementary report.
III.
The prospects of epplying Section 102 successfully have improved
recently. On May 16, 1938. the United States Suprems Court reversed
the Circuit Court of Appeals, Third Circuit. in the case of Relvering
V. The National Grocery Do. (58 8.08. 932). and sustained the Board of
Tax Appeals decision holding the texpayer linble under Section 104
(the earlier number of what is nov Section 102). This dectsion vill
197
"
strengthem the hands of the administrators in presenting future
-
Furthermore, the Revenue Jos of 1938 has, as previously nentioned,
shifted the burden of proof from the Bureen of Internal Revenue to the
impayer. while, as previously mentioned, there is as yes be administre-
vive experience under the revised section, the settlement and presecution
by the Bureeu will in all probability be substantially nosisted.
IV.
the beet that enn be hoped from a penalty lat such M that imposed
by Section 10? 10 to reach deliberate tax avoidance where no business
purpose Le served by the accumination of surplus. Cases where notives
for socumulating surplus are nixed will be very difficult to reach under
the section and caser where tax svoidance is an incidental recult of the
accumulation of surplus for business needs will not be reached at all.
thether 8. penalty tax of this kind can be considered 8 substitute
for the undistributed profits tax will depend on what is considered the
legitimate purpose of an unlistributed profits tax. If the purpose to
serely to reach cases where accumulated surpluses are net used legitimately
in business, Section 102 is its present form or in a revised form -
probably be looked on as & solution. If, however, it 10 desired to
prevent the avoidance of personal surtex which results when corporations
retain earnings anduscoumilated earplas for business needs. - method
other than Section 102 in its present form or may revised form following
the (eneral lines of the present Law will be required.
-
5-17-39
Regraded Unclassified
(Harrison discussed proposal at wit. 5/16/38) #1
198
MEMORANDUM PREPARED BY m. STAM OF JOINT COMMITTEE FOR STRATOR HABRISON
No. 1. Substitute for the corporation income tax applicable to
corporations with net incomes of over $25,000. a flat rate of 18%
Leave corporations with not incomes of under $25,000. subject to
the rates provided for is existing law.
No. 2. Allow corporations a three year carry-over of net losses,
excluding capital lesses.
No. 3. Repeal the $2,000. limitation on the deduction " corpora-
tions of capital net losses from other income, insefar as sush lesses
result from assets hold over 18 months.
No. 4. Allow a corporation to increase its declared value for
capital stock tax purposes for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1939.
and June 30. 1940, but do not permit them to decrease such value for
such years.
Notimates of revenue for the calendar year 1939 under such a plan.
Gains from (1)
$59,000,000.
Losses from (2) and (3)
53,000,000.
Losses from (h)
3,500,000.
Net gain
2,500,000.
1. Under the first suggestion the little corporations will be left
alone and the larger corporations will be subject to the flat rate of
18%. This will result in & elight increase for banks and insurance
companies which now pay a flat rate of 16th.
2. The second suggestion will allow corporations to carry over
operating net losses to be applied against their net income for the
succeeding year. And if is excess of the net income of the succeeding
year to be applied against the not income for the second year. And if
in excess of the not income for the second year to be applied against
the net income for the third mar.
3. This suggestion permits corporations which have espital not
losses from assets held over 18 months to apply such lesses against
their other income for the same year. In this respect these corpora-
tions will be treated like individuals who are permitted to offset
their capital not loases to a certain extent against their other income.
orig. Jr.H 5/16/39
Regraded Unclassified
199
- 2 -
The $2,000. limitation will still apply as to capital net lesses
from the sale or exchange of capital assets held 18 months OF less.
This will prevent corporations from using these speculative losses
to reduce their ordinary income. Unless this safeguard should be put
in, the limitation on short-term capital lesses applied to individuals
night be evaded by the formation of personal holding companies and the
elimination of investment income w speculative leases.
4. If 16 allowed a corporation to declare & value for capital
stock tax purposes each year, it might be that less in revenue would
result, especially with those corporations having fiscal years ending
shortly after the close of the capital stock tax year, which ends
June 30 of each year. Therefore, to avoid any less of revenue from
this source, it 10 suggested that for the fiscal years ending June 30,
1939, and June 30. 1940, the corporations be permitted to increase
their capital stock value but not to decrease such value. This will
only result in a slight loss of revenue from the excess profits tax,
and because of the additional capital stock tax to be paid, It 10 not
believed that it will exceed too and & half million dollars.
Regraded Unclassified
200
The $2,000. limitation will still apply as to capital
net losses from the sale or exchange of capital assets held
18 months or less. This will prevent corporations from
using these speculative losses to reduce their ordinary in-
come. Unless this safeguard should be put in, the limitation
on short-term capital losses applied to individuals might be
evaded by the formation of personal holding companies and the
elimination of investment income by speculative losses.
4. If we allowed a corporation to declare a value for
capital stock tax purposes each year, it might be that loss
in revenue would result, especially with those corporations
having fiscal years ending shortly after the close of the
capital stock tax year, which ends June 30 of each year.
Therefore, to avoid any loss of revenue from this source, it
is suggested that for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1939,
and June 30, 1940, the corporations be permitted to increase
their capital stock value but not to decrease such value.
This will only result in a slight loss of revenue from the
excess profits tax, and because of the additional capital
stock tax to be paid, it is not believed that it will exceed
two and a half million dollars.
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