Memorandum, "The Problem of the Future Balance of Payments of the United States"
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IDENTIAL
THE PROBLEM OF THE FUTURE
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS OF THE UNITED STATES
1. Two economic facts of international significance have emerged
during the past-war period which stand out above all others. One is the
tremendous increase of production in the United States. The other is the
heavy dependence of the rest of the world on this production. At the
same time, the obligations due the United States from other countries have
increased, their sources of invisible income have diminished; their re-
sources of gold and foreign exchange have been reduced, and the pre-war
pattern of trade has been greatly altered. We have been able to maintain
the flow of our products to meet these foreign needs only in part through
the normal economic processes of international trade, public and private
investment, gold purchases and the like. About one-third of total foreign
requirements has been sustained by huge grants of extraordinary foreign
assistance, in amounts surpassing the total of our annual exports before
the war.
2. Estimates of our international economic transactions in 1949
are as follows:
BILLIONS of Dollars
Recorded U. S. exports of
goods and services
$16.2
Other foreign demands z/
1.3
for dollars
Total requiring payment
$17.5
Means of Financing:
Recorded U. S. imports of
goods and services
9.9
1
This item reflects the fact that recorded exports are
undervalued, that recorded imports are overvalued, and that there are
certain unrecorded capital movements. Some part of this figure might
be included as a negative item under "Means of Financing" but it would
not affect the other items, except to reduce the balancing total.
DECLASSIFIED
STATE DEAT. LTA. 6.12.19
E.O. 10265
By NLI.NC NARS, Date 9-20-79