Images (2)
दस्तावेज़
| id |
id
284838864
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2313
#753-A
July 9, 1946
Winthrop W. Aldrich, Chairman of the Committee for Financing Foreign
Trade, recently appointed by the President made. the following state-
ment today:
In his letter appointing the Committee the President said in
part:
"It is of vital importance to our country and to the
stabilization of the international economy, that we
proceed as rapidly as possible with another of the
major objectives of our reconversion program; namely
to tie in our national productive capacity with the
world's reconstruction requirements.
The conduct and financing of our foreign trade should
be handled by private industry with the cooperation and
such assistance as is necessary from the proper Govern-
ment agencies."
Government loans to other governments are necessary like many
other things done in war or the aftermath of war. They cannot be the
continuing basis of international trade between free countries; they
should be supplemented and eventually replaced by private international
financing.
The Government is doing its part. The President has appointed
this Committee to encourage industry and private capital to do its
part.
The Department of State explained last May to the representa-
tives of foreign governments having purchasing missions in this country
that the policy of the American Government favors the use of private
commercial channels in international trade and proposed that "such
trading agencies should conduct their trade in accordance with usual
commercial considerations."
The Government has done and is doing, through the Export-
Import Bank, its part in making the wheels of trade begin to move. The
Government has further subscribed to the International Bank and the
International Fund set up under the Bretton Woods Agreement. It has
in the Office of International Trade in the Department of Commerce,
which is primarily concerned with foreign trade promotion, a specialized
staff to study the effects of loans on the expansion of foreign trade
and our domestic economy. That office has already pointed out that
while there are less goods of many kinds than our own population demands,
there are already some fields in which surplus capacity is looming up.
Generally speaking, the function of the Committee, as I see
it, will be to devise ways and means, in cooperation with the National
Advisory Council, to accomplish the following purposes:
First: to bring into orderly common effort public and private finance,
through businessmen and bankers, in the foreign field;
Second: to foster the application of the productive capacity of the
United States in the most effective manner possible to the
needs of domestic consumption and foreign reconstruction;
Third: to promote relations between American and Foreign business
enterprise for the purpose of developing and maintaining
foreign trade, both export and import, on a high and expanding
level.
(OVER)
Relations
belongs_to