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DIARY

Book 526

May 8, 1942

--

Book Page

Airplanes

Aircraft despatched, week ending May 5, 1942 - British
Air Commission report - 5/8/42

Aircraft flight delivery as at May 6, 1942 - British

Air Commission report - 5/8/42
Alien Property Custodian
Overlapping to be discussed by Crowley, HMJr, etc. 5/8/42

526

326
328

21

a) Memorandum for FDR, proposed Executive Order,

and explanation of functions prepared by Foley -

5/13/42: See Book 528, page 176
b) Pehle-HMJr conversation concerning progress of

study on overlapping - 5/18/42: Book 529,

page 58

Associated and United Nations
See Post-War Planning

Australia

See Lend-Lease

-BBank for Reconstruction and Development of United and
Associated Nations
See Post-War Planning
Baseball
See Revenue Revision

Bureau of Labor Statistics
See Inflation
-CCampbell, E. Riley

Loaned to Coordinator of Information in connection

with identification of certain French funds 5/8/42

a) Gaston displeased - 5/12/42:
Book 527, page 222

b) Gaston plan as finally agreed upon by HMJr,
Foley, and Pehle: Book 527, page 241
Consumer Expenditures and Savings

See Inflation

-DDe Laval Separator Company

See Foreign Funds Control
Delano, Frederic A.
See Revenue Revision: Gasoline

105

-P-

Book Page

Finance Ministers of United and Associated Nations
See Post-War Planning
Financing, Government

Government securities - recent changes in prices and

526

71

yields: Haas memorandum - 5/8/42
(See also Book 528. page 388 - 5/15/42; Book 530,
page 295 - 5/22/42; Book 534, page 75 - 5/29/42)
War Savings Bonds:

75

Progress report - 5/8/42
Payroll Savings Plan - analysis of as of May 2 -

85

5/8/42

Sales, May 1-7, compared with sales quota for same

88

period - 5/8/42

Foreign Funds Control

Campbell, E. Riley: Loaned to Coordinator of

Information in connection with identification of

certain French funds - 5/8/42
Laval-Patenotre funds in United States: Foley

105
107

memorandum concerning - 5/8/42

De Laval Separator Company: FDR informed of present

109

status - 5/8/42.

-Gasoline
See Revenue Revision

-Inflation
Consumer expenditures and savings - Haas analysis of

Bureau of Labor Statistics preliminary data -

55

5/8/42

a) HMJr thanks Secretary Perkins for tables -

69

5/8/42.

-LLabor Statistics, Bureau of
See Inflation
Latin America
Uruguay: Trade Agreement - Treasury accepts as proposed

by State Department - 5/8/42
Laval, Pierre
See Foreign Funds Control
(De) Laval Separator Company

See Foreign Funds Control

359

- L - (Continued)

Book

Page

526

322-5

Lend-Lease

United Kingdom: Vesting order sales - 5/8/42
Australia and United Kingdom:
Dollar position and proposed terms of reciprocal
aid - White memorandum summarizing British

333

memoranda - 5/8/42

State Department documents - White outline of 5/9/42: See Book 527, page 31

a) White opinion of: Book 529, page 114

Liquor

Sale on or near military establishments - Sullivan

48

memorandum - 5/8/42.

-M-

Military Reports
British operations - 5/8/42.

360

-PPatenotre, Raymond T.

See Foreign Funds Control
Post-War Planning

(Finance Ministers of United and Associated Nations ( proposed conference of: Agenda, etc., as prepared
( by White - 5/8/42.
(Stabilization Fund (United Nations) and Bank for
Reconstruction and Development of United and
Associated Nations: Agenda, etc., as prepared by
White - 5/8/42
a) HMJr congratulates White; suggests he (HMJr)

discuss plan with Hull - 5/12/42: Book 527,

page 235

b) FDR's memorandum - 5/16/42: Book 529, page 7

c) HMJr's letters to State, Commerce, Federal
Reserve, and Board of Economic Warfare:
Book 530, page 73

d) State Department appoints Pasvolsky and Feis:
Book 531, page 169

e) Conference; present: HMJr, Jones, Coe, Feis,
Bean, Pasvolsky, Eccles, Goldenweiser,

B. Bernstein, Foley, White, Bell, and Southard 5/25/42: Book 531, page 256

1) White report - 6/15/42: Book 539, page 149
-R-

Reconstruction and Development of United and Associated
Nations, Bank for
See Post-War Planning

111

169

- R - (Continued)

Book

Page

Revenue Revision

Baseball: Games at which proceeds are for Army and

Navy Relief Societies - taxable feature to be
reviewed by HMJr, Sullivan, and Helvering - 5/8/42.

526

2

44

a) Sullivan memorandum on conference

Gasoline: Delano (Frederic A.) plan - through increased
taxation - to bring about economy in the use of 5/8/42

-SSecurities, Government
See Financing, Government

Stabilization Fund (International)
See Post-War Planning

-TTaxation
See Revenue Revision

-UUnited and Associated Nations
See Post-War Planning
United Kingdom
See Lend-Lease
Uruguay

See Latin America

45

1

May 8, 1942
9:35 a.m.
GROUP

Present:

Mr. Bell
Mr. Thompson

Mr. Buffington

Mr. Blough

Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Graves
Mr. Schwarz

Mr. Paul
Mr. White

Mr. Haas
Mr. Kuhn

Mr. Foley
Mrs. Klotz

H.M.JR: Good morning, everybody. It is really

just to say hello. I haven't got a thing to ask anybody.

MRS. KLOTZ: I don't believe it.
MR. FOLEY: You wanted to be reminded to call
Crowley.

H.M.JR: I will do that right afterwards.
MR. SULLIVAN: Mr. Helvering and I would like to
talk to you.
H.M.JR: And for what?

MR. SULLIVAN: On the general policy of charitable
contributions.

H.M.JR: Was that the thing that I got criticized

for yesterday?

2

-2-

MR. SULLIVAN: No, no.

H.M.JR: You mean this thing?
MR. SULLIVAN: You are thinking of the movie actresses.

H.M.JR: Yes. What are you thinking of?
MR. SULLIVAN: I am thinking of baseball. The big
league teams have set aside eighteen games where all
the proceeds are going to Army and Navy Relief Societies.

The first one is being played in Brooklyn today. Even
the ball players have to buy a ticket, even Mayor LaGuardia.

Our ruling is, it is taxable. Landis says if taxable, it

will bankrupt the club, and they would have to call the
games off.

H.M.JR: Landis is a mean so-and-so.
MR. SULLIVAN: I don't care whether he is, when the

people in the country--

H.M.JR: Why do you wait until the day the ball game
starts? Why are these always brought to me a month late?
MR. SULLIVAN: This thing happened yesterday afternoon, sir.

H.M.JR: Why do I always get the things after they
are dirty jobs?

MR. SULLIVAN: You are not getting it after it is

a dirty job at all. I am saying with all of these things

coming up all over the co untry we have got to review
our general policy toward them, and that is why the
Commissioner and I want to talk to you. We don't want
to go ahead piecemeal on one ball game.
H.M.JR: The Commissioner only wrote me two or
three days ago on this same subject.

MR. SULLIVAN: I don't think he wrote you on this

3

-3-

at all, at least I didn't see it.
H.M.JR: I can't always operate with a pistol to

my head.
to

MR. SULLIVAN: There is no attempt to put a pistol

your head at all. I talked with Landis late yester-

day afternoon and this thing is not something that has to
be taken care of immediately, but I talked with the
Commissioner and we would like to have a general discussion on policy with you so we will know how we should
be guided as these various types of cases come up.

H.M.JR: Eighteen games, the first one starts today?
MR. SULLIVAN: The first is being played today, and
there is nothing we can do about that one at all.
H.M.JR: That is going to be taxed?
MR. SULLIVAN: I don't know, it depends - all of the
information hadn't been given to us - depends on the way
that is done.
H.M.JR: Who has muffed the ball?
MR. SULLIVAN: Not a soul.

H.M.JR: It is impossible.
MR. SULLIVAN: What do you mean it is impossible?
H.M.JR: Here you have got a ball game scheduled

today and they call up last night - either the baseball

people or we have waited until the game starts.

MR. SULLIVAN: We had a letter from them on May 2,

asking a lot of questions about a series of ball games.
The letter was written by Landis. It had income tax
questions, and it had Savings Stamps or War Stamps

questions. In a game to be played in July in Cleveland
they intend to sell - everybody who buys a ticket has
to buy a dollar War Stamp attached to it, and there

-4-

4

was an admissions tax question, and so on. I sent it
over to the Bureau asking them to draft that part of

the letter that dealt with the tax questions. I talked

with Mr. Graves who is going to draft that part of the
letter that related to the handling of the War Stamps.
Yesterday afternoon a wire came in from Landis saying

that the first of this series of ball games was to be

played tomorrow afternoon; and I talked with the Commissioner,

and he said that the letter was just being finished. He
said he would send it over and that on the basis of the

information that had been furnished us by Landis, he

didn't think that they were exempt. I told him that

from what I had read in the newspapers about the arrangement in Brooklyn I thought they would be exempt. Then

I called Landis, and from what he said in conversation,
I believe that they are exempt. Now, the way that was
left was that he was going to send further information

in on just what the situation is up there. If those

games are being conducted under the auspices of the

Army and Navy Relief, if every dollar that comes in at
the gate goes to them, if those ball clubs are merely
trustees for the Army and Navy Relief, it is exempt.

H.M.JR: My answer to you is, you are Assistant
Secretary in charge of Internal Revenue, you decide

it. Don't bother me with it.

MR. SULLIVAN: We weren't bothering you about this

particular case at all. We just wanted to have a talk
with you about the general policy. A lot of these are
close cases. Are we going to be tough, or are we going
to be lenient? That is what we want to talk to you about.
MR. PAUL: How does that line up with the movie
actresses, John? Any analogy there?

MR. SULLIVAN: Not at all. You see, Randolph,
if we hold that they are taxable, they expect to make
about two million dollars for Army and Navy Relief out

of these ball games. Now, that certainly is more than
five percent of what the ball clubs will make. Now,

if they are giving away all of that two million dollars and

-5-

5

yet we are imposing corporate income taxes and excess

profits taxes on that, these clubs that are operating

on a small margin will lose because of having done this.

MR. PAUL: The distinction is that the club is
giving it here and not the players, movie actresses.
MR. SULLIVAN: Sure, yes.
H.M.JR: Supposing you come over with the Commissioner

at eleven-thirty.

MR. SULLIVAN: Yes, sir.

H.M.JR: There is a difference between you and the

Commissioner?

MR. SULLIVAN: Not at all. We both want to help here.

H.M.JR: I thought you said there was a difference.
MR. SULLIVAN: No.

H.M.JR: I thought you said the Commissioner said-MR. SULLIVAN: On the basis of Landis' letter.
H.M.JR: What am I going to decide?
MR. SULLIVAN: You won't have to decide anything about

this case. We just want to talk to you about the various
types of cases that arise and acquaint you with the

problem, and find out just what our attitude should be on
these things.

H.M.JR: O.K.

MR. SULLIVAN: Eleven-thirty, sir?
H.M.JR: Yes.

MR. SULLIVAN: Right, that is all.

-6-

I think I will have the report ready on Jack and
Heintz, if you want that, at eleven-thirty, and I can
give you a report on War, Navy, Maritime Commission,
at that time.
H.M.JR: Clearing everything. Blough?
MR. BLOUGH: Nothing.

MR. BUFFINGTON: You asked me to speak with Mr.

Purcell about Crowley's attitude on this break-up of
Standard Gas. I talked to him on another matter the
other day, and he said that he-H.M.JR: If this is embarrassing, do you want to

leave the room?

MR. FOLEY: No, no not at all. There is no con-

flict of interest here at all.

MR. BUFFINGTON: He said he thought the New York

Times had purposely misinterpreted Mr. Crowley's
statement. As far as he understood Mr. Crowley's
statement, he was going along with the program. I
then asked him what he made of Mr. Shea's attitude to
president of North American. He said that Mr. Shea
had continuously made the statement that he was not

going to do anything to the detriment of the stockholders.
He is asking for a meeting on Monday with that committee

of five.

H.M.JR: I won't be here.

6

7

-7MR. BUFFINGTON: He wants to discuss, if possible,
next week, these three contemplated offerings, Macey,

National Distillers, and Phillip Morris, neither one
of which, I think, is as important as the question of
the possibility of the city of Cleveland offering a
hundred forty million bonds to acquire the Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Company from North American. It
looks as though one of the outs for some of these

utility companies is to sell part of their holdings to
the municipalities which will increase substantially

some of these non-taxable issues. I think that is much

more important.
MR. BELL: Very much.

H.M.JR: Tell Purcell eleven o'clock, Tuesday
will you take care of that?
MR. BUFFINGTON: Yes, sir. He wrote you a letter

confirming the discussion that we had at the last
meeting, and in that letter sent a suggested copy

of a letter for you to send to the President with

a statement that he had understood at that meeting

a letter was going to be sent. I checked with Mr.
Currie, and he said he had no understanding that he

was reporting to the President. That is all.
H.M.JR: Harold?
MR. GRAVES: Nothing.

8

-8-

H.M.JR: This fellow Masius is coming in at ten-

fifteen. I would like Kuhn here at that time. Who

else should be here?

MR. GRAVES: Gamble will be here.

H.M.JR: And then just so that everybody knows what

I am doing, Buffington is bringing his gang in at eleven.
I think it would be nice if Bell and Graves would be here
at eleven. Does that conflict with something?
MR. GRAVES: No, I can be here.

H.M.JR: In case this F and G thing should come up.
Bell, eleven?
MR. BELL: Yes.

MR. GRAVES: By the way, did you get my inquiry
about an engagement on Tuesday for Mr. Trounstine and

Mr. Moore?

H.M.JR: I gave them one. It isn't down here, but
I gave it to them.
MR. KUHN: That matter of the CIO building space on

K Street is moving along all right. There is nothing at
the moment for you to do on it.

Also, Mrs. Roosevelt's radio program, the Earl
Robinson piece, the Texas Company offered us the entire

last half of their regular Sunday evening hour; there will
be no Texaco plug, the whole thing will be turned over
to us, with the orchestra, and our old friend Goodman
as conductor.

H.M.JR: Wonderful.

MR. KUHN: That will be CBS nationwide. Since it is
a commercial program, should we ask Mrs. Roosevelt to
come up and speak or should we forget it?

9

-9H.M.JR: I would ask her, don't you think so?
MRS. KLOTZ: Yes.

H.M.JR: It isn't the first time.
MRS. KLOTZ: No

MR. KUHN: I will get the letter off today. That
is all.
H.M.JR: Paul?
MR. PAUL: Nothing.

H.M.JR: Any time you want to go, go.

MR. PAUL: I want to go a little early, but I can

stay a few minutes longer.

H.M.JR: I listened to Ernest Lindley last night at

quarter of eleven commenting on what we were doing. He

said, of course - he intimated I was doing this on account
of his column. Today he said it is not enough. I would
love to write him a letter and ask him just where he
would suggest raising additional taxes.
MR. PAUL: I have talked with him several times.
H.M.JR: Where would he raise it?

MR. PAUL: None of them ever get to that positive
side of the question.
MR. SCHWARZ: I talked with him the other day. He

said, "It just isn't enough." " He doesn't know how far

we should go.

MR. PAUL: However, he is one of the more decent,

intelligent of our critics.

H.M. JR: Got anything, George?

10

- 10 MR. HAAS: Another one of these wires just came in.
(Mr. Haas handed document to the Secretary.)
H.M.JR: Chick?
MR. SCHWARZ: Nothing

H.M.JR: Harry?

MR. WHITE: We had a meeting yesterday for the

interested persons with respect to the pooling of production of Canada and others. When you want to take it up,

I will tell you what the status of the situation is.
H.M.JR: How pressing is it?

MR. WHITE: It is not pressing. It is not pressing
at all. The next move is up to the Canadians. In any
case, Clark is going back to talk it over with his chief.
I think he is reassured he won't lose anything; he may
make something.

MR. BELL: Somebody must lose. Who loses, the
Treasury?

MR. WHITE: Only one answer to that.

H.M.JR: Harry, have you written anything on that
international stabilization suggestion? Have you got

anything for me to read over the week end?

MR. WHITE: I think I have, Mr. Secretary.

H.M.JR: If you will give it to me, I would like
to take it with me. I could be studying it over the

week end.

MR. WHITE: Then the matter of the British situation
with regard to Lend-Lease, Phillips has been leaving

several documents. You will want to explore that. I

don't think you ought to postpone that beyond next week.

11

- 11 -

MR. WHITE: I will give you the documents he left.
part?

H.M.JR: Why don't you pick out the significant

MR. WHITE: I will fix it.
H.M.JR: How about the question of McCloy?
MR. WHITE: We haven't heard from them, but that

is involved. It seems to me that the next move is the

State Department. The British have made a definite
recommendation.

H.M.JR: Give me one page - just give me one page
bringing me up to date.
MR. WHITE: All right. You want to send somebody

to Canada on the bond?

H.M.JR: Yes.

MR. WHITE: I will send Mr. Hoflich.
H.M.JR: O.K. You gentlemen have seen the stuff that

White is getting for us out of England. I thought that
was good, and I suggested, seeing he is my minister of
foreign affairs, that he send somebody up to Canada.
(Laughter) What's the matter, Harry?

MR. WHITE: Next time I will come with striped
trousers if I can borrow some.
H.M.JR: Be sure and keep your eyes down. (Laughter)
MR. WHITE: There is a problem with regard to Swiss
francs. We may need your backing. Before we start any-

thing, I want to find out whether you have any reaction.
(Laughter)

12
- 12 -

H.M.JR: Is he rash - not rash, go ahead.
MR. WHITE: The Swiss are not providing francs in

this country except for their own commercial transactions.

The consequence is, when we go into the market, there are
a number of Government agencies that are going into the
market, getting Swiss francs. We have to pay almost a

third more, which means the dollar is depreciated in

terms of the franc. I think the Swiss are doing it

deliberately, because they could very simply supply the

dollars, but I think they are putting pressure on us

because they are sore that we won't let them have any

gold. Now, I talked it over with Knoke, and we will
talk to the State Department. What I would like to do
is to have the Minister come in and talk to a group of

the Treasury people, merely ask whether he will want to

do anything. He probably will use that opportunity to
say no.

H.M.JR: What has happened about the proposal for

the Vatican? That was a question of buying Swiss francs.

MR. FOLEY: That is right. And Gautier cabled the
Central Bank, and I think that he got an answer yesterday
to the effect - I mean the substance of it was no. Knoke
and Pehle are trying to work it out some other way now.

H.M.JR: Incidentally, this just digresses a minute.
It is all right, your suggestion, Harry.
Edgar Hoover called me up yesterday and said he was
very much embarrassed that he hadn't been allowed to go

on our committee, that he had a lot of very valuable
information, and would get it together, and would send it
over to me personally. He said he wanted to go on the
committee, and to use his own language, he said, "The

situation in the Argentine stinks. Those were his own

13

- 13 -

words. He said, "I asked the Attorney General to let
me go on. For reasons I don't know, he said he wouldn't
let me go on." "

MR. WHITE: That is very curious.
H.M.JR: The most curious thing happened. Has
Harry told you?
MR. FOLEY: No, he hasn't. He came down to tell me,
but we got talking about something else.
H.M.JR: The Economic Warfare said, "Who do you

want?" I said, "State Department, question of freezing

the Argentine. I said, "Justice," and so forth and so on.
(Mr. Paul and Mr. Blough left the conference.)
H.M.JR: Good-by, boys, good luck. Remember where

I am on the sales tax as of today.

MR. BLOUGH: That's against it as of today?
MRS. KLOTZ: He gave you the right answer.
MR. WHITE: My maid pays taxes.
MR. BLOUGH: She does now.

MR. WHITE: Apparently.

14

- 14 H.M.JR: Anyway, so the Attorney General talks up
and says, "We have no longer any interest in this. The

Alien Property Custodian should be on that committee.
Somebody says, "Aren't you in?" "No, no, we have no

interest in that." Figure that one out.

MR. WHITE: They have no interest in subversive MC-

tivities, but they got a hundred and fifty undercover men

in South America.

MR. FOLEY: He must have been thinking of the Interdepartmental Committee that Shea used to sit on, probably.

MR. WHITE: No, I think he was playing ball with the

State Department.

H.M.JR: Hall seemed to like what I did yesterday.
MR. WHITE: I thought so, was a little surprised.
H.M.JR: Yes, he actually patted me on the shoulder
last night at the White House.

MR. WHITE: Is that so. After you left they kind of

gave the Board of Economic Warfare proposal the works;

Jones piled in, too, on the taking over the communications.
This Swiss franc thing - just let me say one more

remark. I think the Swiss Minister is going to respond
in his usual fashion of blaming the Treasury, and then we
will be left only with one recourse, which we will discuss

before we take, but I think that is what it will lead to

and like to know what you feel about it ahead of time. We
may have to suggest that we may find desirable to stop the
general license.

MR. FOLEY: I think we ought to recanvass that whole
thing, general license in Sweden, Spain, and Portugal.

H.M.JR: From the conversation I had with the President, I think he is in a much more receptive mind, from the
inquiries he made and everything else. I mean something

- 15 -

15

has happened. And I think that I would recanvass the
whole situation.
MR. WHITE: We will come to you again before we con-

template discussing that step, but that is what this will

lead to.

H.M.JR: Are you through?
MR. WHITE: Yes, on the Swiss.

H.M.JR: Would you mind giving me one page.

What is John Wiley and Donovan trying to do on that

situation in New York? I mean, I am not up on it. Give me

a page will you.

MR. FOLEY: Yes.

MR. WHITE: Whenever you are ready to go into that
moving picture proposal, I can suggest a simple remedy
for them which they can get the money.

H.M.JR: Would you mind giving me a little note on

it I can read? I won't have time today. I will take this

stuff up. I will read it.

MR. WHITE: You might be interested in knowing that
there is more interest among the economists and among the
men in the Departments who will do things, and more favorable

interest, with respect to the proposal for general rationing
is increasing.
H.M.JR: Good.

MR. WHITE: That is all.

H.M.JR: All right, Harry.
MR. BELL: Nothing.

MR. THOMPSON: I have a model of the citations.

H.M.JR: I like that. I think that is very nice.

16

- 16 MRS. KLOTZ: That saves so many letters, thousands

of them.

MR. THOMPSON: You would use the citation--

H.M.JR: Isn't that nice.
MR. THOMPSON: The Secretary of War has approved the

project for the building for the soldiers and ordered the
construction of it. But Secretary Ickes is objecting to
putting it on his park, so we may have to go to the President. I understand General Watson--

H.M.JR: Where are they going to do this thing?
MR. THOMPSON: We propose to put it where the Sherman

statue is, but Ickes, I am told, wants it down by Constitution Avenue. That is too far away.
H.M.JR: If they aren't going to do anything, these
poor soldiers are going to die of heat with all these steam

pipes.

(The Secretary held a telephone conversation with

General Watson.)

H.M.JR: Where is this, on the Sherman lot?
MR. THOMPSON: The Sherman statue.

H.M.JR: Where is that?
MR. THOMPSON: Just across the street. That is where

he is supposed to put it.

H.M.JR: He said get it immediately to Rudolph Foster.

Ten-thirty is the deadline, but get it to Rudolph and he

will see that the President gets it. Get it to Rudolph
right away.

MR. WHITE: Does that placard represent a departure

in your policy (indicating placard captioned "Buy Bullets
for Our Men") or are you just considering that?

17

- 17 -

H.M.JR: That was done by these druggists entirely on

their own. What don't you like about it, Harry?
MR. WHITE: Ten cents buys twelve bullets.
H.M.JR: Twenty-five cents.

MR. WHITE: I thought earlier in the campaign you had

definitely decided against that sort of thing.
H.M.JR: We find out this Dr. Likert, which we had
nothing to do with, but the thing he found out was that the
first thing that the families have gone into with the workmen is to know that their money is going for munitions.
MR. WHITE: Outside of the fact that isn't true.
H.M.JR: Why isn't it true?
MR. WHITE: I mean the implication isn't true. The

statement is true, but the implication is that if they
don't give twenty-five cents, there will be twelve bullets
less; if they do give twenty-five cents, twelve bullets
more. We know that isn't true.
H.M.JR: Will you take him out?

MR. KUHN: I don't think that is the implication.
MR. FOLEY: The people like to know that they are help-

ing to pay for the bullets and other tangible things which

will kill Germans and Japs.

MR. WHITE: That is perfect nonsense. It says your

twenty-five cents will pay for twelve bullets, and so forth.
MR. SCHWARZ: It will.
MR. KUHN: Won't it?

MR. GRAVES: Mr. Secretary, may I come back to this?

(Indicating certificate.)

H.M.JR: John wants to know - he is not getting in on

18
- 18 this.

MR. GRAVES: I think the citation is wrong in this
respect: That is the War Bond symbol there, and this has

nothing to do with War Bonds.

H.M.JR: Put the Treasury Seal on it.
MR. GRAVES: Or the eagle.

MR. KUHN: We have a good eagle in the Bureau of Engraving.

MR. SULLIVAN: Have you definitely decided the amount,
the dollar?

MR. FOLEY: He intended his dollar to buy bullets.

(Laughter)

MR. SULLIVAN: Getting seventy-nine cents worth of

engraving there.

H.M.JR: I thought that this money would be credited
to the War Savings Bonds on their quota.
MR. THOMPSON: That's right.
me.

MR. GRAVES: It is right? I am asking, nobody told

H.M.JR: I mean if that is the case, do you still feel

the same way about the symbol?

MR. GRAVES: Yes, if that is the case.
H.M.JR: I almost got you.
MR. THOMPSON: We might put the eagle there (indicating)

because we put the seal there (indicating).
MRS. KLOTZ: What is the deadline?

MR. SULLIVAN: I think a dollar is too low.

19

- 19 -

MR. FOLEY: The fellow will say, "I gave you the dollar
to buy bullets, not to buy one of those. If There will be
criticism if you make it so low.
H.M.JR: Well, how much would you make it? (Laughter)

MR. FOLEY: Give you a good price, make it right.

H.M.JR: Four ninety-nine? Five dollars?

MR. FOLEY: I think five dollars is better.
MRS. KLOTZ: Will you be criticized for spending the

money on engraving?

H.M.JR: No.

MR. FOLEY: As little as a dollar, I think you might.
H.M.JR: Five dollars?

MR. FOLEY: That is better than a dollar.
MR. BELL: How about the school kids that give ten
cents? They ought to have one of those.
MR. FOLEY: Send their ten cents-room.

H.M.JR: Group it together, and we give it to the classMR. BELL: But they come in individually.

H.M.JR: Let's start at five dollars, work down. Five
dollars all right, boys?
MR. SULLIVAN: Yes.

H.M.JR: All right. Who else? All right, class is

adjourned.

- 20 -

20

MR. FOLEY: I think it will be ready tomorrow morning.
H.M.JR: When you are ready will you let me know

and I will be waiting.

MR. FOLEY: Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.

H.M.JR: Harry, you don't want to use - what is it

in golf when you give a man a stroke he can use any

time?

MR. SULLIVAN: A bisque.

H.M.JR: Harry only allows himself one a week. He
has taken it already.
too.
week.

MR. SULLIVAN: And all he got was a half on the hole,

MR. WHITE: I had better be absent the rest of the
H.M.JR: O.K.

21
May 8, 1942
10:10 a.m.
HMJr:

Hello.

Operator:

Mr. Crowley.

HMJr:

Hello.

Leo

Crowley:

Hello.

HMJr:

Leo.

C:

Yes.

HMJr:

Good morning.

C:

Good morning, eir.

HMJr:

Leo, how about you and I and our lawyers

getting together, say, three o'clock next

Tuesday, on this question of straightening

out overlapping.
C:

HMJr:
C:

Well, I'd be glad to do that. Here's the
way that I feel about that thing there
Yeah.

that unless there's some real reason
for speeding the thing up - we've tried every
way in the world to cooperate with your

fellows, and we'd like to know a little

bit more about the overlapping and what we
ought to do and what you ought to do before

we change the order. Now, if there's any
particular thing that your fellows feel that
they can't do, of course, we'll do anything
that you want.

HMJr:

No, I personally want to get it straightened
out, and I don't want to wait. There's no
reason to wait.

C:

Well, I'll be glad to come over there anyhow.

HMJr:

There's no reason to wait.

22

-2I don't care. Whatever the President wants to

C:

do with that thing there; but if he wants to
take it all away, I don't care what he does
with it. But I don't know what - just how we
can clarify the thing until we know definitely
where our lines ought to be drawn.

HMJr:

C:

Well, I don't see what there's to be gained by
stalling.
Well, I've no objection to coming over at three
o'clock.

HMJr:

C:

HMJr:
C:

HMJr:

Well, I'd like to make one effort to see if
we can't get together.

Let me suggest that you do this. Let me suggest that first let, if you will for a few days,
let our lawyers and your lawyers sit down together and see where their difference is; and
then we'll try and get together, you and me,
and straighten out that difference with them.
Well, Foley's been ready for a week or ten days.
We would - our fellows feel that they shouldn't
make any change in the order now because they
don't know enough about the thing. I mean,
that they don't know where they're going to where the lines ought to be drawn. Now, if I'll tell Markham to get ahold of Foley again
and see if they can get together.
Well, supposing you do that; but I just want
to let you know how I feel. I mean, I'd like
to make a real effort to see if we can't have
a meeting of the minds.

C:

HMJr:

All right. Let me talk to Markham, and we'll
get in touch with Foley and Bernstein and see
if they can get together, and then if they then we'll get together.
But certainly before the end of the week I'd
like to see you, because, as I say, I don't
know of any reason for stalling on this thing.

23

-3C:

All right. I'll be glad to do that.

HMJr:

Thank you.

24

1

MEMORANDUM

May 8, 1942.

TO:

FROM:

Secretary Morgenthau

Mr. Sullivan

JLS

I am attaching hereto for your use over the weekend

preliminary reports on the Jack and Heints, Inc., case.
Helvering agrees with me that a little more work
on this before it is presented to
There are a few items upon which we think our agent's
can
be sustained
and
would
like
Committee. Commissioner
should
be we
done
present
thetoJoint to to the Tax
position Joint Tax Committee the picture which we would be able sustain
before
the Board of Tax Appeals or the courts.
Incidentally, the President of the Company has informally from
agreed
totothe
reduction of the employees bonus deduction
$510,000
$229,000.

X

25
MAY 6 1942
IT:RRR

Memorandum for Mr. Cann:

In re:

Jack and Heints, Inc.,

Bedford, Ohio.

Year ended October 31, 1941.

In accordance with your instructions, the report of the internal

revenue agents dated April 30, 1942, in the case of the above-named
corporation for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1941, has been reviewed. The taxpayer was advised of the proposed deficiency in income and excess profits taxes aggregating $929,746.23 in a preliminary
letter dated May 1, 1942, issued by the internal revenue agent in
charge at Cleveland.

The net income reported in the return was increased from
$376,537.38 to $1,885,868.18, primarily because of the following pro-

posed adjustments;

(a) Increase in inventory as of
October 31, 1941

(b) Net addition to reserve for group
insurance

(a) Capital expenditures
(d) Gain from sale of property other
than capital assets
(e) Welfare expense disallowed
(f) Accounts receivable increased
(g) Experimental and research

$ 300,853.01
32,258.78
34,965.31
29,667.95
33,355.11
142,046.22

expense disallowed

115,165.13

and employees disallowed

836,999.94

(h) Salaries and bonus to officers

There are attached hereto with respect to the principal items set
forth above statements setting forth the pertinent facts and the conclusions reached relative thereto. For your convenience, however, the

conclusions reached are summarized below:

26
-2Memorandum for Mr. Cann,

In re: Jack and Heints, Inc.
Increase in Inventory as of October 31, 1941
This adjustment made by the agents consists of three items as

follows:

Inventory value of tungsten not included
in closing inventory

$ 22,398.09

Charge-off of cost of finished materials
purchased and manufactured, especially

for the J. H.-10 Starter

Omission of overhead from work in process
Total

67,978.65
210,476.27
$300,853.01

There appears to be little doubt that the Bureau can sustain its position in respect to the first and last adjustments. With respect to
the second item, the agents' adjustment is proper on the basis of the

evidence at hand, but upon appeal the taxpayer may be able to prove
that the material represented by this item was obsolete as of
October
31, 1941, and was properly eliminated from the inventory on
that date.
Net Addition to Reserve for Group Insurance

The evidence indicates that this represents an increase in a surplus reserve, and, as such, does not constitute an allowable deduction.
Capital Expenditures

This represents the cost of putting an old building in an operating condition and the agents' action in capitalising these expenditures is proper.
Gain from Sale of Property Other than Capital Assets

This taxpayer acquired the capital stock of K-W Ignition Corporation on January 6, 1941, for $100,000.00 and immediately took over its
assets and liabilities and dissolved the transferor. The agents oon-

clude that the liquidation falls under section 112(b)(6) and that the

27
3

Memorandum for Mr. Cann:

In re: Jack and Heints, Inc.
transferee must use the transferor's basis in accordance with section
113(a)(15). The taxpayer contends that it was a purchase of assets
and that the basis thereof is the purchase price. For reasons stated
in the attached statement, it appears that the taxpayer oan prevail
in this issue.
Welfare Expenses

It is believed that upon submission of complete data the taxpayer
may be able to support the deduction of this item, or at least a por-

tion thereof. Attention is called to the statement of the agents, however, that if the disallowance of this item is protested, consideration

should be given to the disallowance in whole or in part of cash expenditures aggregating $25,600.00 allegedly for traveling and entertainment

expenses, but which were not properly supported.

Accounts Receivable Increased

The agents set up as Accounts Receivable $142,046.22 an item de-

soribed as "price adjustment for indirect labor per terms of contract."

The reason given by the taxpayer for not making this adjustment was
that this balance due from the War Department may be oancelled volun-

tarily because of the publicity resulting from the investigation be-

fore the Naval Affairs Committee. Since there was nothing as of
October 31, 1941, to indicate that this account would not be collected,
the agents' adjustment appears preper.

Experimental and Research Expenses

The amount of the experimental and research expenditures was 6Xpended by a predecessor corporation. Therefore, whether the amount is

a capital expenditure or expense item, the agents' action in disallowing
the item as a deduction to the taxpayer is proper.
Salaries and Bonuses

The agents state that the amounts allowed for salaries and bonuses

are based upon an estimate of the fair value of similar services

rendered by employees with similar capabilities who are employed by

firms manufacturing and selling products in competitive fields. However,
the data comprising this "yard-stick" were not submitted to this office
for study. The duties and responsibilities of some of the officers and
employees are outlined vaguely in the special agents' report. From a

28
-

Memorandum for Mr. Cann:

In re: Jack and Heints, Inc.

study of the data in the file, it is the opinion of this office that

the allowances made by the agents on account of salaries and bonuses
are reasonable with the possible exception of Christmas bonuses to
752 employees, accrued between January 1, 1941, and October 31, 1941,
and paid December 20, 1941, in the amount of $229,650.00. In spite
of the fact that the bonuses were voluntary and depended upon the

ability of the corporation to earn enough to pay the amount specified

(15 percent of the payroll), it is believed that the corporation could

not have refrained from paying such bonuses and still retain the good
will and cooperation of its employees in view of the commitment made
to such employees in the inter-office correspondence dated June 2,
1941, and the prosperous condition of the corporation. This bonus
was paid to all of the company's employees, not just the key employees.
In the attached statement, the question of salaries and bonuses
is covered more fully, and on the basis of the evidence at hand, it
is the opinion of this office that a disallowance of at least
$532,349.91 can be sustained. This amount is the result of the proposed disallowance of officers' salaries and bonuses in excess of

$50,000.00 to each, Christmas bonuses accrued in excess of the amount
indicated above, and salaries and bonuses to key employees in excess
of a reasonable allowance, as shown in the following summary:

Total Salaries

Disallowed
by Agents

Disallowance

215,697.41

$236,549.96
89,558.41

$161,549.93
89,558.41

510,891.57

510,891.57

281,241.57

$1,047,305.61

$836,999.94

$532,349.91

Paid and Accrued

Officers
Key employees

All employees,

excluding officers

and
Total

Estimated

$ 320,716.63

Minimum

Invested Capital

The agents have allowed as the excess profits oredit 8 percent of
the $100,000.00 equity invested capital paid in. No allowance was made
on account of borrowed capital. No consideration was given to advances

made to the taxpayer by the War and Navy Departments aggregating over

$2,400,000.00, and the agents admit that in any reconsideration of the
case, notes payable of $37,800.00 should be considered.

29
-

Memorandum for Mr. Cann:

In re: Jack and Heints, Inc.
If the so-called advances are in reality loans which meet the requirements of section 719 of the Code, they constitute borrowed in-

vested capital. If, however, such advances represent advance payments
on account of goods to be delivered in the future under the contract,
they ordinarily would not meet the requirements of section 719 and,
accordingly, would not constitute borrowed capital.
Conclusion

It is believed that the taxpayer's protest must be considered and
the issues reviewed in the light thereof before any practical basis of
settlement can be envisioned. It appears that the agents' adjustments
can be sustained before the Board or courts with the possible exception
of depreciation and loss on sale of assets acquired from K-W Ignition

Corporation, welfare expenses, and salaries and bonuses. The Board and
the courts may be more liberal with respect to salaries and bonuses
than the agents. The agents state that notes payable in the amount of
$37,800.00 should be given consideration as borrowed capital in any reconsideration of the case. Also, the taxpayer may be able to prove and
it may be to the advantage of the Government to ooncede that the
finished materials for J.H.-10 Starters were obsolete as of October 31,

1941, in a settlement of the case. In any consideration of this case,
it should be kept in mind that any adjustments made during the taxable
year with respect to inventories, Christmas bonuses accrued but not
paid during the year, and probably the accounts receivable adjustment

on account of price adjustment will be reflected in the net income for

the year ended October 31, 1942.

On the basis of the evidence in the file, this office approves

the revenue agents' report. It is recommended that any concession
made to the taxpayer with respect to the items mentioned above should
be made only after careful consideration of such additional evidence
as
the taxpayer may submit and only as a basis of settlement of the
case.

Acting

Deputy Commissioner.

30

INCREASE IN INVENTORY AS OF OCTOBER 31, 1941

This adjustment made by the agents consists of three items,

Inventory value of tungsten not included in
closing inventory

$ 22,398.09

Charge-off of cost of finished materials
purchased and manufactured, especially

for the J. H.-10 Starter

Omission of overhead from work in process

The total is

67,978.65
210,476.27
$300,853.01

There appears to be no question but that the amount of $22,398.09 should

be included in the closing inventory. This is purely a question of fact as
to the physical presence of the material, and there appears to be no dispute
on that score.

With regard to the item of $67,978.65, the report states that this
amount was ordered scrapped by the taxpayer, after the taking of the inventory,
for the reason that an anticipated order from the Navy Department for
J.H.-10 Starters, upon which the expenditures in question had been made, had

not been received and the model starter was then considered not satisfactory.
However, it is shown in the report that although the Navy Department did

notify the taxpayer in 1942 that the J.H.-10 Starter would not be used, orders
for this starter had actually been received by the taxpayer subsequent to the
close of the taxable year.

This, too, is a question of fact as to just when the starter did become

obsolete, but the evidence in the agents' report definitely indicates that
it was not actually obsolete at the close of the taxable year 1941.
As to the inclusion of the amount of $210,476.27 overhead in the closing
inventory, the reason assigned by the taxpayer for not including the overhead

in the closing inventory is that (a) such inclusion was not a conservative

2

31

practice, and (b) if the war should suddenly end, same (evidently meaning overhead) would have no value.

As to whether the inclusion of overhead in an inventory is a conservative

practice, the regulations specifically state that cost means
"(3) In the case of merchandise produced by the taxpayer since
the beginning of the taxable year,

(a) The cost of raw materials and supplies entering
into or consumed in connection with the product,

(b) Expenditures for direct labor,
(c) Indirect expenses incident to and necessary for
the production of the particular article, including in

such indirect expenses a reasonable portion of management

expenses, but not including any cost of selling or return
on capital whether by way of interest or profit. (Undersooring supplied.)

There is no question, therefore, but that overhead, as such, is a required

factor in the computation of the cost of a manufactured article. In this connection, it is to be noted that the report does not indicate that the taxpayer
disputes the amount of the overhead but apparently merely is objecting to the
inclusion of the amount in the closing inventory.
The taxpayer's reason that if the war should suddenly terminate, such value
would be dissipated is not considered sufficient to exclude the overhead from the

inventory value. If the inventory is taken on the "cost or market, whichever is
lower" basis and the market value in a succeeding year is lower than cost, the
taxpayer would derive a benefit between the difference of the cost and such lower
market value in that year.

Furthermore, it is apparent that to allow one taxpayer to exclude from the
inventory computation what it considers abnormal overhead, would discriminate

against other taxpayers engaged in war contracts which in all probability, likewise involve abnormal costs due to the essence of time and other factors entering
into war production.

32
-

Again it is to be noted that the taxpayer would get the benefit of the inoreased value included in any closing inventory by the inclusion of the same
value in the opening inventory of the succeeding year. Consequently, the

adjustment is merely a shift from one year to another. Assuming that profits

are consistent in all years, this shift would appear to benefit the taxpayer
in the later years of higher tax rates.
For the reasons stated above, the entire inventory adjustment of
$300,853.01 is considered proper.

33

GAIN ON SALE OF PROPERTY OTHER
THAN CAPITAL ASSETS AND
EXCESSIVE DEPRECIATION

On January 6, 1941, Jack and Hoints, Inc., entered into a contract to
acquire the outstanding stook of K-W Ignition Corporation for $100,000.00.
A check was issued therefor on January 7, 1941. On January 9, 1941, a

stock certificate was issued in the name of J. & H., Inc., and on the same
day the patents, materials, machinery, equipment, etc., of K-W Ignition
Corporation were transferred to J. & H., Inc., and the transferee assumed

all of the liabilities of the transferor. K-W Ignition Corporation was
dissolved.

The agent conoludes that in accordance with section 112(b)(6) of the

Code, no gain or loss is recognized upon the receipt of J. & H., Inc., of
the property distributed in complete liquidation of K-W Ignition Corporation, and that the basis of the property received is the same in the hands
of the transferee as it would be in the hands of the transferor under the
provisions of section 113(a)(15) of the Code.
The taxpayer contends that it acquired the stook of K-W Ignition Corporation for the sole purpose of obtaining its machinery upon subsequently
planned liquidation and that the basis of such machinery should be
$100,000.00, the purchase price of the stock.
The agent does not state why the entire purchase price of $100,000.00
was allocated to machinery by the taxpayer, although other assets such as
patents and inventories were acquired upon dissolution of K-W. It may be

that the liabilities assumed by J. & H., Inc., were considered to equal the
value of the other assets received.

34
-2In dealing with income tax matters, particularly reorganization and
sales and exchanges, the Board and courts have held repeatedly that taxa-

tion is an intensely practical matter and that the substance of the thing
done, and not the form it took, must govern. Carter Publications, Incorporated, 28 B. T. A. 160, Prairie oil and Gas Company, 66 Fed. (2d) 309,
Ct. D. 767, C. B. XIII-1, page 183, Gregory V. Helvering 293 U. S. 465,
14 A. F. T. R. 1191; and cases cited in paragraph 10.253A of 1942 Prentice-

Hall. The taxpayer's position is upheld by the decision of the United
States Circuit Court of Appeals in Helvering V. Security Savings and
Commercial Bank, Ct. D. 940, C. B. June 1935, page 300. The court said

that where a bank, for the purpose of acquiring and operating a branch
bank, purchased all the stock and then took over at book value all the

assets of another and in the same year received from it as a final liquidating dividend an amount less than that paid for the stock, the events connected with the purchase were, in effect, one transaction, and the bank

was not entitled to deduct as a loss the difference between the cost of the
stook and the liquidating dividend.
The stockholders of KeW, other than a Mr. A. F. Williams, are not shown

in the agent's report, but there is no evidence that J. & H., Inc., or its
stockholders in any way controlled K-W prior to the purchase of its stock

on January 6, 1941. In the absence of such control by J. & H., Inc., or

its stockholders, it is believed that the Bureau will have difficulty maintaining its position before the Board and courts. In the event this issue
is conceded or loss upon adjudication of the case, the proposed deficiency
would be decreased approximately $22,000.00.

35
WELFARE EXPENSES

The amount of $33,355.11, designated as Welfare Expenses by the

agents, is composed of twelve items and, with the exception of the amount
of $16,000.00 described as "Amount reserved to cover Waltham Watches to

be distributed to employees as Christmas gifts," appears to be in the
nature of entertainment expenses for the benefit of the company's em-

ployees. No particular detail in addition to the general description
is shown.

In the case of H. H. Bowman, 16 B. T. A. 1157 (Aoquiesced), and the

cases cited therein, it was held that in view of the publicity obtained
and the maintenance of morale among employees, such expenditures oon-

stituted ordinary and necessary expenditures of doing business.

It is believed that if the taxpayer is able to justify these expenditures by reason of the necessity for maintaining morale, the acquisition

of desirable publicity, or any other business purpose, difficulty would
be encountered in sustaining the disallowance of the entire amount of
$33,355.11 other than the amount of $16,000.00.

With regard to the item of $16,000.00 for Christmas bonuses, it has
been held in numerous cases that such bonuses paid to employees at

Christmas time, when reasonable, are deductible as expenses. On the

other hand, the report indicates that the amount of $16,000.00 may not
have been actually expended, and, if so, would not be deductible.

Considering the item in its entirety, it is probable that of the
amount of $33,355.11 disallowed by the agents, the taxpayer may be able

to support the claim for approximately one half of the total item.

36
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE INCREASED

In the agents' report taxable income has been increased by $142,046.22
composed of amounts considered to be proper accruals as of October 31, 1941.

The major portion of this item is the amount of $110,586.15, designated as

"price adjustment for direcElabor per terms of contract." The agents'
report further states that "Seventy-five percent of the amount shown as

price adjustment for direct labor up to April 30, 1941, and adjustment for

cost of material has been collected." It is further stated that the balance
shown as due from the War Department may be cancelled voluntarily because

of publicity resulting from investigation and proceedings before the Naval
Affairs Committee.

However, there is nothing in the report to indicate that these receivables were considered as doubtful of collection on October 31, 1941. Therefore, as there appears to be no question as to the amounts involved, but

morely the possibility of future cancellation, there is no apparent reason
why they should not have been reflected in the income for the year ended
October 31, 1941.

37
EXPERIMENTAL AND RESEARCH EXPENSE --- $115,000.00

In the agents' report there is restored to taxable income the amount of
$115,165.13, representing expenditures in connection with research and de-

velopment of starters which were considered by the agents to be of a capital
nature or operating expense of Jaok & Heintz, Ltd., predecessor corporation.
of this amount, $111,291.96 was expended for direct expenses and $3,873.17

for supplies by the predecessor corporation, and expensed on the books of

the taxpayer in the instant year.
Normally, unless it can be shown that expenditures for development work

do not result in the acquisition, development or improvement of a capital

asset, such expenditures are of a capital nature and the cost thereof is
recovered through amortization over the life of the patent. The burden of
proof that these expenditures are not of a capital nature would be definitely
on the taxpayer.

With regard to the instant situation, the comments of the agents, as

disclosed on page T-6 of the report, definitely indicate that as the result
of such experimental work some sixty applications for patents have been

filed indicating that at least a considerable portion of the total experimental charge must have resulted in improvements having a life of more than
one year. Since no patent had been granted, amortization has not been
allowed.

In the event that the taxpayer was able to prove that the amounts in
question represent legitimate expenses when expended, a deduction therefor

could not be taken by the taxpayer for the reason that the amounts were
expended by a predecessor corporation.

38
EXCESSIVE SALARIES AND BONUSES

$836,999.94

In the agents' report, this amount is disclosed to be:
Total Paid
and Acorued

Officers
Salaried employees
Shop employees and all
salaried employees,

excluding officers

Total

$ 320,716.63
215,697.41

Allowed

$ 84,166.67
126,139.00

510,891.57

$1,047,305.61

Disallowed

-

$210,305.67

$236,549.96
89,558.41
510,891.57
$836,999.94

The figure of $320,716.61 shown above for the officers is composed of
the following:
William S. Jack
Ralph M. Heints

William R. Jaok
C. L. Jaok

President
Secretary
Treasurer

Vice-president

Total

$100,000.01
100,000.01
100,000.01
20,716.60
$320,716.63

In addition to the foregoing salaries which were expensed on the books

of the corporation, there was voted to the officers at an alleged meeting
of the board of directors held on October 7, 1941, bonuses in the following
amounts:

William S. Jack
Ralph M. Hoints

William R. Jack
Total

$ 33,354.23
33,354.23
33,354.23
$100,062.69

Exhibit E of the agents' report disclosed that no part of this bonus
was expensed on the books during the fiscal year ended October 31, 1941.

As to the salaries paid to these three officers, it is disclosed that the
minutes of the alleged October 7, 1941, meeting retroactively increased

the salaries of the three principal officers as follows:

39

-From

William S. Jack
Ralph M. Heints

William R. Jaok
Total

# 50,000.00

To

50,000.00
50,000.00

$100,000.00
100,000.00
100,000.00

$150,000.00

$300,000.00

As to the officers' salaries, it would appear that two questions are
involved,

(1) The reasonableness of such salaries, whether $25,000.00

as allowed by the agents; $50,000.00, the figure origin-

ally set by the officers themselves; or the $100,000.00
which was authorised near the end of the fiscal years and

(2) If the officers' salaries claimed are considered to be
reasonable, whether the accrual of any portion in excess
of $50,000.00 was authorised.

The second premise is based upon the statement of the agents that the
alleged meeting of October 7, 1941, apparently never took place and that

all authorisations contained in the alleged minutes are to be disregarded.
With respect to the alleged meeting of October 7, 1941, the special agents'
report discloses that it was brought out at a meeting of the Committee on
Naval Affairs of the House of Representatives in the testimony of D. W. Lake,

Comptroller, that the minutes of the directors meetings contained no author-

isation for the increase in the officers' salaries from $50,000.00 to
$100,000.00 per annum, that notes relative to the authorisation of the increases in the salaries of the officers and special bonuses had been given
to him, which notes he had placed in his desk but had never gotten around

to having written them up; that subsequent to the hearing in Washington,
he had the minutes for the meeting of October 7, 1941, at which the salary

-3-

40

increases of all officers were authorised, written up and, in error, inoluded in these minutes his notes relative to the authorisation of the
special bonuses to key employees.

If the corporation oan establish that the salaries and bonuses paid
to the officers were reasonable and can offer reasonable evidence and
proof of the meeting allegedly held on October 7, 1941, even though the

minutes of that meeting were not written up until some time thereafter,

the accrual would appear to be proper, especially in the light of the
Supreme Court decision in the case of the Ox Fibre Brush Company, 281 U. S.
115, Ct. D. 265, C. B. December 1930, page 384, which company was allowed

a deduction for the accrual at the time the liability was created for
salaries voted in connection with services rendered in a prior year.
With regard to the question of reasonableness, however, the following
statement of the agents is significants
"The rate of salary increase to key employees, coupled with
lump sum special bonuses during the current year, appears to be

accelerated in proportion to the earnings of the company."

The information in the agents' report indicates that the taxpayer

would have difficulty in proving that the officers were entitled to any
greater salary (including bonuses) than $50,000.00 each. Consequently, of

the $236,549.96 disallowed by the agents in the case of the officers, it
would appear that $150,000.00 can probably be sustained as a disallowance.
Salaried Employees

As to the salaried employees (mostly key employees), the agents' re-

port discloses the following:

41

-Salary, monthly bonus and vacation pay
Bonus (special)
Total

$110,322.41
105,375.00
$216,697.41
126,139.00

Allowed by the agents
Disallowed

89,568.41

Whether the disallowance of the $89,568.41 by the agents in the case of
these key employees can be sustained simmers down to a question of reasonable-

ness. In this connection, the basic annual rate of compensation used by the
revenue agents in their determination appears to be substantial. The agents
state that the amount of salaries and bonuses allowed by them is based upon

an estimate of the fair value of similar services rendered by employees with
similar capabilities who are employed by firms manufacturing and selling

products in competitive fields. However, no data in this respect were sub-

mitted for consideration. It would appear that this test as to reasonableness is a good one as there should be plenty of comparative data along these

lines in the industrial center in which the particular industry is located,
and it is believed that the agents' estimate is quite fair.
Significant in this respect is the agents' statement that the bonuses
appear to be in proportion to the company's earnings. It must also be born
in mind that in addition to the special bonuses of $106,375.00 voted to
these key employees, they likewise appear to be entitled to the monthly
bonus of $50.00 per month voted to all employees.
All Employees (Excluding Officers)
During the year 1941 there was accrued upon the books of the corpora-

tion the amount of $577,815.72 representing the fulfillment of a plan adopted
by the company of paying a monthly bonus of 5 percent and also the setting

42

-5aside of a proposed Christmas bonus of $50.00 per month for each employee
for each month employed from January 1, 1941, to the date of the payment

on December 20, 1941. of the $577,815.72, there was actually paid the
amount of $66,924.15, leaving $510,891.57 accrued and unpaid on the books

at the end of the year. of the amount of $510,891.57, the authorized
Christmas bonus of $50.00 per month computed for the period of January 1,
1941, to October 31, 1941, amounted to $229,650.00. This amount appears

to have been actually paid, together with the amount accrued to the date
of payment, on December 20, 1941. The balance of $281,241.57 appears to

be merely an excess accrual on the books and for which there appears to

be no liability.
In general, Christmas bonuses are allowable if, when added to the
regular rate of compensation, they do not exceed reasonable compensation

for services rendered. Inasmuch as the agents do not indicate that they
consider these 80-called Christmas bonuses unreasonable, it would seem

that the principal question involved as to the allowance of the $229,650.00
would be whether there was a legal liability upon the corporation to pay

this amount. That there was no such legal liability is definitely indicated in the company's own language, as disclosed in its memorandum to the

employees under date of June 2, 1941, in which the proposed plan was dis-

oussed and in which the employees were given the right to vote on certain

particulars. The proposed plan states specifically that the plan was
voluntary on the part of the management and not compulsory, and would de-

pend upon the ability of the corporation to earn enough to pay the amount

specified, or more if possible. This bonus of $50.00 per month likewise

43
6-

was authorized at the alleged meeting of October 7, 1941, and, as stated

above, if it can be proved that this meeting did take place then there is

a distinot possibility that the accrual of the monthly bonus up until
October 31, 1941, would be in order. In any event, this amount appears
to have been actually paid on December 20, 1941, and if not allowed in
the fiscal year ended October 31, 1941, would be allowable in the succeeding
year. Consequently, as to the amount of $229,650.00, there is some doubt

that the revenue agents can be sustained. There appears to be no basis for

the allowance of any portion of the difference between the total accrual of
$510,891.57 and $229,650.00, or $281,241.57. No portion of the 5 percent
bonus appears to be included in the unpaid amount as the revenue agents

have allowed the amount of $66,924.15 for monthly bonuses actually paid

during the fiscal year.
Salaries in General

Considering the salary question in its entirety, it is considered quite
likely that the action of the revenue agents can be sustained to the following extent,

Total Salaries
Paid and Accrued
Officers
Key employees

$ 320,716.63

Total

Minimum

Disallowance

215,697.41

$236,549.96
89,558.41

$161,549.93
89,558.41

510,891.57

510,891.57

281,241.57

$1,047,305.61

$836,999.94

$532,349.91

All employees,

excluding officers

Estimated

Disallowed
by Agents

44

My

MEMORANDUM

May 8, 1942.

TO:

The Secretary

FROM:

Commissioner Helvering and Mr. Sullivan

RE:

Conference on "Benefit Performances

JLS

This conference with you was requested by Commissioner

Helvering and Mr. Sullivan because of the great increase in requests
for rulings on the taxability as income of receipts to be donated to
charity. The particular case involved was a benefit baseball game
being played by the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants this

afternoon at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. You indicated that if the

performance were sponsored by a charitable organisation you felt the
proceeds should not be taxable as income to the performers and we
assured you that this matter could be handled that way.

You also indicated that you thought a representative of
the benefited charity should be present to accept the proceeds and
that a representative of the Treasury Department should also be present
to watch the donation of the proceeds and to certify to us the details
of the transaction.

Upon their return to Mr. Sullivan's office, there was await-

ing Mr. Sullivan a telephone cell from Larry MacPhail, President of the
Brooklyn Dodgers. Mr. MacPhail read to Mr. Sullivan the original offer
made by the Brooklyn Dodgers to the Navy Relief Society, the response
from the Navy Relief Society, asking the Brooklyn Dodgers to conduct
this baseball game today as agents for the Navy Relief Society and to hold
for the account of the Navy Relief Society all proceeds of the game minus
expenses of police, ticket-sellers and ushers. Mr. MacPhail also read
the letter he wrote to the Navy Relief Society confirming this acceptance
and agreeing to the terms and conditions. Mr. MacPhail then told Mr.

Sullivan that an official of the Navy Relief Society would be in his
office that afternoon to accept the proceeds.

I asked him if he would have it announced over the loud speakers
at the beginning of the game that this game was being conducted by the
Dodgers as agents of the Navy Relief Society and under the sponsorship of

the Navy Relief Society. He agreed to do this. I further suggested that

Mr. Dan Bolich, Revenue Agent in Charge at Brooklyn be present at the time
the proceeds were turned over to the Navy Relief Society 80 that he could
certify the transaction to us. Mr. MacPhail accepted this recommendation.

45

MAY 8 1942

My dear Mr. Smith:

I wish to thank you for your letter of May 5. 1942,

transmitting several suggestions to bring about economy
in the use of gasoline and rubber, prepared by Mr. Delano.

In your letter you suggest that it might be desirable to
increase steeply the rate of tax on gasoline.

The proposal which was made in March for increasing

the gasoline tax by 1g cents a gallon to 3 cents a gallon

was prepared in conference with representatives of the
Var Production Board, the Office of Price Administration,
and the Bureau of the Budget, as well as other organizations. The information developed at these conferences
forecast the present rubber and gasoline shortages, and
the gasoline tax was considered as a method of inducing

conservation. In view of the inequitable effects of a
high tax rate on essential users of gasoline, it was agreed

that the necessary conservation could better be accomplished
through A gasoline rationing program. It appeared doubtful
whether very high gasoline taxes could effectively supplement rationing in view of the magnitude of the conservation
problems.

However, in view of your interest and that of
Mr. Delano, I am asking our staff to take another look at
the question to see if they are still of the same opinion
as the conferences developed.

Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthan. Jr.

Secretary of the Treasury
Hon. Harold D. Smith
Director, Bureau of the Budget
Washington, D. C.
RB-MF/nr

5/8/42

Photo file n.m.c.
tile wh thompson

EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
BUREAU OF THE BUDGET
WASHINGTON, D.C.

May 5, 1942

OFFICE OF

THE DIRECTOR

My dear Mr. Secretary:

I think Delano may have something in the
attached suggestions concerning economy in the

use of gasoline and rubber. The first suggestion

might be dealt with in the tax bill. The others
are largely state and local matters.
I have thought for some time that it might
be wise to rather steeply increase the gasoline

tax. At any rate, you might like to throw this
suggestion into the Treasury tax hopper to see
what comes out.

Sincerely yours,

The Honorable

The Secretary of the Treasury

Attachment.

April 29, 1942
Frederic A. Delano.
HOW TO BRING ABOUT ECONOMY IN THE USE OF GASOLINE AND
RUBBER BY AUTOMOBILE OWNERS

AND OTHER USERS OF THESE ARTICLES

1. Put a surcharge of 10 cents a gallon on gasoline, not because I like
a sales tax per se but because such a surtax will automatically bring
about economy in the use of gasoline and rubber.

2. Charge a minimum of 25 cents per day for all day parking on city streets

or parking lots. This will encourage people to share the use of their
cars with their neighbors and give the same inducement to taxi and

jitney drivers.
3. Encourage owners of cars to employ friends or relatives to aot as
chauffeurs morning and evening to bring them and their neighbors down

to work in the morning and home from work in the evening.

4. Encourage multi-service use of taxicab and jitney service by simplifying
rules and specifying certain cab stands uptown and downtown, with a

fare say 25 or even 30 cents per capita within the present area of
zones 1 and 2.

Suggested lune

love

48

MEMORANDUM

May 8, 1942.

TO:

The Secretary

FROM:

Mr. Sullivan

TLS

A few days ago you requested a memorandum relating

to the several written protests you have received about the sale
of liquor on or near military establishments.
I am attaching hereto a memorandum from Commissioner

Helvering, setting forth certain statutes. Our conclusion is that

as Secretary of the Treasury you have no jurisdiction over the sale
of beer, wine or alcoholic beverages on military posts other than
the authority you exercise on the sale of these beverages in all
other places.

49

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
OFFICE OF
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
ADDRESS REPLY TO
OF INTERNAL REVENUE
AND REFER TO

May 7, 1942.

Memorandum for the Secretary:

Reference is made to our recent telephone conversation
about complaints concerning the sale of intoxicating liquors

at or in the vicinity of military camps and the authority of
the Bureau of Internal Revenue to curb the traffic.

The Bureau has, as intimated during our conversation,

no jurisdiction under existing law to regulate or control
the sale of intoxicating liquors at or near military camps
or posts. The functions of the Bureau are solely those of
a tax-collecting agency in respect of the sale of liquor at
retail or to consumers. This is clearly indicated by the

provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, hereinafter referred
to, which impose special (occupational) taxes upon retail
dealers in liquor and provide for their enforcement.
Subsection (b) of section 3250, Internal Revenue Code,
imposes an annual special tax of $27.50 upon retail dealers
in liquors; and subsection (e) of such section imposes an
annual special tax of $22 upon retail dealers in malt liquors.
Persons engaging in such businesses are required to file returns (sec. 3272 (a)). post conspicuously in their places of
business the stemps denoting payment of the special taxes
(sec. 3273 (b)). and keep records of all liquors received
(sec. 3252 (a)).

Section 3253 provides for the imposition of a fine of

not less than $100 nor more than $5,000, and imprisonment

for not less than thirty days nor more than two years, in
the case of any person who carries on the business of a

retail liquor dealer or retail dealer in malt liquors and
wilfully fails to pay the special tax as required by law.

Sections 3252 and 3274 provide for the imposition of small

PORDEFENSE

BUY

fines where the dealer wilfully fails to keep the required
records or to open them for official inspection, or fails
to post the special tax stamps, respectively.

50

Memorandum for the Secretary

Page 2.

The official interest and authority of the Bureau of
Internal Revenue in respect of the sale of liquor at retail
extend only to seeing to it that the dealer pays the requisite
special tax, posts the special tax stamps, keeps the required
records, and receives and sells only taxpaid liquors, and
that delinquencies in respect of those obligations are penalized where the facts of the case warrant. The Bureau is without power to control or prohibit the carrying on of the
business in any particular area. The special tax stamps are
in no sense licenses, but are mere receipts for taxes (License
Tax Cases, (1866) 5 Wall. 462); and the permit provisions of
the Federal Alcohol Administration Act are not applicable to
retailers.
The only law of general application, of which I am aware,
that provides for control of the sale of liquor on premises
used for military purposes is that embodied in section 38 of
the Act of February 2, 1901 (U.S.C., title 10, sec. 1350).
This section provides as follows:

"The sale of or dealing in beer, wine, or any
intoxicating liquors by any person in any post ex-

change or canteen or Army transport or upon any

premises used for military purposes by the United
States, is prohibited. The Secretary of War is
hereby directed to carry the provisions of this

section into full force and effect."

In addition, sections 289 and 272 of the United States
Criminal Code, as amended (U.S.C., title 18, secs. 468, 451),
have the effect of making penal the commission or omission
upon any military reservation of any act which would be penal

if committed or omitted within the jurisdiction of the state
or territory in which the reservation is located. The Bureau

of Internal Revenue, however, is not charged with the enforcement of those provisions of the Criminal Code.
During the previous World War, the President, as Commander

in Chief of the Army, was authorized by section 12 of the Act
of May 18, 1917 (U.S.C., 1934 ed., title 10, sec. 1353),
entitled "An Act to authorize the President to increase tempo-

rarily the Military Establishment of the United States," to

make such regulations governing the prohibition of alcoholic

51

Memorandum for the Secretary

Page 3.

liquors in or near military camps and to the officers and en-

listed men of the army as from time to time were deemed neces
sary or advisable. The provisions of this section were made
applicable to the navy by the Act of October 6, 1917 (40 Stat.
393). The section was, however, expressly repealed by section
203 of the Act of August 27, 1935 (49 Stat. 878).

Commi ssioner.

52
May 8, 1942

Telegram received from John A. Hartford, President
Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.
New York

"Consumer comment on price ceilings practically nil
except in reply to questions store managers have asked in

attempt to get better cross section. Answers indicate
lack of consumer understanding of basic purpose and
objectives of ceiling.

"Pittsburgh sales Wednesday eight and one-half percent

under two weeks ago. Sales first three days this week

one percent over same period two weeks ago. No other comment. New York Wednesday sales up slightly. Only comment
continues on coffee and sugar. Manager inquiries show
hope prices will be lower. Philadelphia Wednesday sales
slightly below last Wednesday and two weeks ago. No other
comment. Very few intelligent questions asked. Chicago
sales first three days above both last week and two weeks

ago. Average customer reply shows little understanding of
ceilings. Increasing evidence day-to-day buying. Considerable shifting to perishables as customers use up present
stocks canned goods. Detroit sales Wednesday show general

gain over last week. Cincinnati sales off slightly. Com-

ment generally favorable but belief expressed that ceiling
should be placed on farm prices to be workable."

53
COPY

May 8, 1942

Telegram received from L. A. Warren, President,
Safeway Stores, Inc.,
Oakland, California

Pursuant to your request for daily report sales for

Tuesday and Wednesday this week indicate no appreci-

able change attributable to general maximum price
regulation order.

54
May 8, 1942

Telegram received from R. E. Wood, Sears Roebuck

and Company, Chicago, Illinois

"Sales increases over preceding year compared with

increases during the week preceding April 29 are as

follows: mail order May fifth six percent better,
retail May first ten percent poorer. Saturday

May second, limited number of larger stores show
twelve percent decrease from corresponding Saturday
1941 against three percent increase previous Saturday,
a fifth over corresponding Saturday 1940. One contributing cause is May moving days, 1941, heavy sales
of stoves, refrigerators and other appliances not
available 1942.

55
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE

TO

FROM

May 8, 1942

Secretary Morgenthau
Mr. Haas

Subject: Analysis of BLS preliminary data on consumer expenditures and savings.

In response to your request, I am submitting the following brief analysis of the BLS tables giving a preliminary
tabulation of the consumer expenditures survey for 1941 and
the first quarter of 1942.
It should be kept in mind that the figures in these
tables are based on a tabulation of about one-third of the

sample to be covered by the survey, which will cover, when
completed, about 1000 families and 300 single individuals.
Rural families are to be covered in a separate survey.
Analysis

(1) Table 1 shows that total incomes (including non-

money income) have increased sharply in the lower income

groups in the first quarter of 1942, while the higher incomes
show some reduction.

Thus, for the money income group "under $500", whose incomes (including non-money income) averaged $415 in 1941, an

average income of $145 was reported in the first quarter of
1942. Multiplied by 4, this would indicate roughly an annual
rate of $580, or 40 percent over the 1941 level. The next
higher group ($500 to $1,000) shows a 29 percent increase.

(Annual rate comparisons are shown in a Summary Table.)

The moderate reductions indicated for the higher income

groups may be due to the effect of wartime restrictions on
small businesses, or first quarter earnings may not be
entirely representative of the year as a whole.
(2) Table 2 shows for 1941, and Table 3 for the first
quarter of 1942, a comparison of money incomes with (a) total
money expenditures (excluding bond purchases), (b) direct tax

payments, (c) net savings, and (d) purchases of Government
bonds. These two tables give a breakdown by income intervals
of $250 up to $1,500.

-2-

56

One point shown by these tables is that total expenditures
(on an annual basis) for consumption, gifts, and taxes have
declined from the 1941 levels in 5 of the 9 groups.
A second important point is that savings have increased,
and that all groups in the first quarter of 1942 show net
savings, whereas the four lower groups reported deficits in
1941.

A third point is the relatively large purchases of
Government bonds. by the lower income groups in the first
quarter of 1942. Those making the survey attribute this
largely to three factors: greater social pressure to pur-

chase bonds in the lower income groups, the fact that many
workers receive bonds as bonuses, and the fact that those in
the upper groups used their money for income tax payments in
this quarter.
Since bond purchases by the 5 lowest income groups in

the first quarter of 1942 substantially exceeded the net savings in that period, the difference must have come from a

reduction in other assets or an increase in liabilities.

(3) Tables 4 and 6 show one important point: that money
expenditures for current consumption by the lower income

groups have increased sharply in the first quarter of 1942
(if put on an annual basis), while such expenditures by the
upper groups have declined.

(4) Tables 5 and 7 indicate what items of expenditures
for current consumption have been increased or reduced. The

main point to be noted is that expenditures in the first

quarter of 1942 (if raised to an annual basis) show sharp
increases in the food and clothing items by the lower income
groups, while expenditure for automobile purchase and maintenance by these groups has been materially ourtailed.
(5) Tables 8 and 9 show certain details of net savings

(or deficit) for 1941 and the first quarter of 1942, giving

both purchase and sale of Government bonds, changes in savings and checking accounts, and changes in both assets and

liabilities.

(6) Table 10 shows the average number of persons per
family in each group.

Inflationary implications
This survey, on the whole, indicates inflationary spend-

ing tendencies by the lower income groups. The sharp

57

-3increase in incomes of these groups 18 being reflected particularly in increased purchases of food and clothing, which
contributes to the inflation spiral by raising prices of
these important components of the cost of living.

2

76

92
156

132

140

88

124

112

120

1942

5

6

8
26

15

12

73

41

119
Purchases of

1941

Government bonds

32

16

64

48

80
100

528

188

1942

1,072

63

11
-99

-80

-49

?

1

4

115

-19

428

920

168

272

15

21

27

108

132

Net savings

1941

4

8

16

38

1942

3

2

1

0

4

1.

payments

1941
Direct tax

36

24

16

20

148

1942

63

37

31

41

Gifts and

131

158

2,284

2,860

167

1941

contributions

(In dollars)

900

412
1942

1,724

1,348

3,516

established in first quarter

784

381

Expenditures for

1941

1,623

1,211

2,283

3,247

4,507

current consumption

Summary table : Comparison of 1941 dnta with 1942 annual rate 1

448

732

980

1942
1,228

1,480

1,876

2,668

3,688

5,008

income

323

625

875

1941

Average money

1,125

1,375

1,731

2,527

3,828

5,578

10,000

Figures for first quarter multiplied by 4.

group

2,000 - 3,000
1,500 - 2,000

Income
500 - 750
Under 500

750 - 1,000

1,000 - 1,250

1,250 - 1,500

3,000 - 5,000

5,000

1

Source: Treasury Department compiled from BLS data.

59
Confidential
UNITED STATES BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

Preliminary Figures
Average Money Plus Nonmoney Income

Estimates for City Families and Single Persons
1

First Quarter

:
:

Of 1942

Class in 1941
Under $500

1

Money Income

1941

$

415

$

145

793

256

$1,000 and under $1,500

1,273

375

$1,500 and under $2,000

1,802

494

$2,000 and under $3,000

2,595

654

$3,000 and under $5,000

3,889

919

$5,000 and under $10,000

5,626

1,275

$500 and under $1,000

Cost of Living Division

May 6, 1942

annual
Rate

$580
1024
1500
1976
2616

3676
5100

Confidential

2

U. S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

60

Preliminary Figures
Money Expenditures,
Tax Payments,
Net
Saving and
or Deficit,
Government Bond Purchases
Estimates
for City
Families
Singleand
Persons

1941

Average
Average
Money income

class in 1941

total

total

money

money

expend-

income

ituras

Average total

Average

Direct
Tax

Average

Net Saving

Payments or Deficit

amount spent

for purchase

of Government
Bonds

Average amount in dollars
$ 323

426

625

723

875

946

2

1,000 and under $1,350
1,250 and under $1,500
1,500 and under $2,000

1125

1170

3

1375

1393

4

1731

1689

2,000 and under $3,000
to and under $5,000
5,000 and under $10,000

2527
3828

2429
3426

5578

4702

nder $500

800 and under $750
750 and under $1,000

-99

0

6

-60
-49

1

-19

5

8

12

+11

15

4

+63

26

15

+115

41

21

+428

73

27

+920

119

Percent of total money income
1500 and under $750
$750 and under $1,000

131.89
115.68
108.11

1,000 and under $1,250
$1,250 and under $1,500
$1,500 and under $2,000

104.00
101.31
97.57

.27
.29

96.12
89.50
84.30

.59
.55

Under $500

$2,000 and under $3,000
$3,000 and under $5,000
$5,000 and under $10,000

0

.16
.23

.23

.48

-30.65
-12.80
5.60

1.86

- 1.69
.80
3.64

1.07
1.09
1.50

4.55
11.18
16.49

1.62
1.91
2.13

.80
.91

1 Including expenditures for current consumption. gifts and contributions, and direct taxes

but does not include expenditures for bondo.

Cost of Living Division
May 6. 1942

Confidential 61
U. S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

Preliminary Figures
Money Expenditures, Tax Payments, Net Saving or Deficit, and Government Bond Purohases

Estimates for City Families and Single Persons
First Quarter of 1942
Average

Average
Money Income Class
in 1941

Total

Total

Money

Money

Expenditures

Income

112

108

$500 and under $750
$750 and under $1,000

183

174

$2,000 and under $3,000
000 and under $5,000
$3,000 and under $10,000

Direct
Tax

Payments

Average

Net Saving

or Deficit

Average Total
Amount Spent

for Purchase

of Government
Bonds

Average amount in dollars

Under $500

$1,000 and under $1,250
$1,250 and under $1,500
$1,500 and under $2,000

Average

2
4

245

8

233

307

291

370

350

469

39

2

12

1

35
33

1

16

30

2

20

28

445

4

25

23

667

619

22

47

922

19

791

42

132

22

1252

985

68

268

31

Percent of total money income
Under $500

$500 and under $750
$750 and under $1,000

100.0
100.0
100.0

96.4
95.1
95.1

$1,000 and under $1,250
$1,250 and under $1,500
$1,500 and under $2,000

100.0
100.0
100.0

$2,000 and under $3,000
$3,000 and under $5,000
$5,000 and under $10,000

100.0
100.0
100.0

Including
expenditures
Less
than $0.50
1942

94.8
94.6
94.9

0.3
0.5
0.9

5.2
5.4
5.3

9.8
7.6
4.9

92.8
85.8
78.7

3.3
4.6
5.4

7.0
14.3
21.4

2.8
2.4
2.5

3/

19.1
13.5

for ourrent consumption, gifts and contributions and direct taxes
3

ost of Living Division

34.8

0.4

3.6
4.4
4.9

3/

Less than 0.1 percent

Confidential

62

462

U. S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

Preliminary Figures
Average Income and Outlay

Estimates for City Families and Single Persons

1941
Total
Money Income Class
in 1941

Money

Income

Money

Expenditures

for Current

Consumption

Money

Expenditures

Direct

for

Gifts and
Contributions

Tax

Payments

Net

Saving or

Deficit

Average amount in dollars
-99

$323

$381

41

749

784

31

$1,000 and under $1,500

1243

1211

37

3

$1 500 and under $2,000

1753

1623

63

4

+63

$2,000 and under $3,000

2544

2283

131

15

115

$3,000 and under $5,000

3854

3247

158

21

428

$5,000 and under $10,000

5621

4507

167

37

920

Under $500

$500 and under $1,000

0

-67

1

-8

Percent of total money income
-30.7

Under $500

100.0

118.0

12.7

$500 and under $1,000

100.0

104.7

4.1

0.1

-8.9

$1,000 and under $1,500

100.0

97.4

3.0

0.2

-0.6

$1, 500 and under $2,000

100.0

92.6

3.6

0.2

3.6

$2,000 and under $3,000

100.0

89.7

5.2

0.6

4.5

$3,000 and under $5,000

100.0

84.3

4.1

0.5

11.1

$5,000 and under $10,000

100.0

80.1

3.0

0.5

16.4

0

7 note the savings of families write incomes of 1250-1500
Cost
Division
of shown
Living in the following table.

May 6, 1942

Confidential

63
U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Preliminary Figures
Money Expenditures for Current Consumption

Estimates for City Families and Single Persons
1941

Housing,

Money income class in 1941

Total

fuel,

Food

light,
and

refrigeration

FurOther
household

operation

nishingo

Cloth-

and

ing

Auto-

Other

20-

transporta-

bile

Personal
care

Medical

care

Recrea-

tion

To-

Read-

bacco

ing

tion

equip-

Formal

Other
items

educa-

ment

tion

Average amount in dollars
116

18

14

17

28

302

190

26

24

79

45

20

17

28

1,211

440

266

41

49

138

76

33

28

50

51

36

18

1,623
2,283
3,247
4,507

559

341

61

90

178

109

43

37

81

7

45

18

700

453

97

172

265

162

54

49

183

84

54

24

960

526

168

225

387

429

59

TO

142

no

75

1,315

581

270

269

547

862

61

96

147

135

106

4
2

4

3

3

22

a

16

2

14

9

154

784

0

381

1

3

6

$500 and under $1,000
$1,000 and under $1,500
$1,500 and under $2,000
$2,000 and under $3,000
$3,000 and under 85,000
$5,000 and under $10,000

5

Under $500

12

19

27

so

21

45

36

10

70

Percentage of total money expenditures (for current consception on)
Under $500

$500 and under $1,000
$1,000 and under $1,500
$1,500 and under 82,000
$2,000 and under 85,000
$3,000 and under $5,000
$5,000 and under $10,000

Cost of Living Division
May 6, 1942

100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0

100.0

40.4
38.5
36.3
34.4
30.7
29.6
29.2

30.4
24.2

4.7

3.7

3.3

3.1

22.0
21.0
19.8

3.4

4.0

3.8

5.5

16.2
12.9

4.5
10.1

7.3

4.2

7.5

5.2

6.9

11.2
11.0
11.6
11.9

6.0

6.0

12.1

1.6

3.7

10

.8

.8

.0

.8

2.2

3.6

20

2.8

1.0

.5

.6

6.8

2.8
2.7

2.3

4.1

216

3.0

1.1

.3

.7

6.7

2.6

2.3

5.0

29

2.8

1.1

.1

.8

7.1

2.4

2.2

5.4

3.7

2.4

1.0

.8

1.2

18.2
19.1

1.8

2.2

4.4

34

2.3

.9

.6

1.4

1.4

2.2

3.3

so

2.8

.0

of

1.5

5.7

.8

Confidential

O
U. S. BURMAU OK LABOR STATISTICS

Preliminary Figures
Average Income and Outlay

Estimates for City Families and Single Persons
First Quarter of 1942
Money

Total

Money Income Class
in 1941

Money

Expenditures

Money

for Current

Income

Direct

Expenditures

for Gifts and

Saving

Payments

Contributions

Consumption

Net

Tax

Average amount in dollars
112

is

103

L

500 and under $1000

$

5

241

225

4

,000 and under $1,500

365

337

6

1,500 and under $2,000

L69

431

9

1/

$

1/
2

4

:

nder $500

12

20

25

2,000 and under $3,000

667

571

27

22

47

000 and under $5,000

922

715

33

42

132

1,252

879

37

68

268

5,000 and under $10,000

Percent of total money income
nder $500

100.0

91.9

4.5

2/

3.6

500 and under $1,000

100.0

93.3

1.7

2/

5.0

1,000 and under $1,500

100.0

92.3

1.7

.5

5.5

1,500 and under $2,000

100.0

91.9

1.9

.9

5.3

2,000 and under $3,000

100.0

85.6

4.0

3.3

7.1

3,000 and under $5,000

100.0

77.5

3.6

4.6

14.3

5,000 and under $10,000

100.0

70.2

3.0

5.4

21.4

Less than $0.50.

Less than 0.1 percent.

at of Living Division
6, 1942

Confidential
65
U. 5. BURKAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

Preliminary Figures
Money Expenditures for Current Consumption

Estimates for City Families and Single Persons
First Quarter of 1942

Housing,

Money income class in 1941

Total

Food

Other

Pur-

fuel,

House-

and re-

light,

hold
oper-

ingo

frigers-

ation

equip-

tion

nishand

Auto-

Cloth-y
ing

mo-

bile

Other

transportation

Personal
care

For-

Medical
care

Recre-

ation

To-

Read-

bacco

ing

ml

educa-

Other
items

tion

ment

Average amount in dollars

16

10

10

28

13

13

5

3

6

4

9

5
7

147

89

15

52

571

185

112

23

25

73

39

13

12

40

24

12

715

227

130

40

86

56

16

16

37

34

16

275

148

53

59

98

79

21

21

22

45

22

4.9

1.0

1.9

1.0

4.0

3.1

.9

3.0

3
6

7

21

8

T

,

879

35

9

3

5

431

16

a

7

5

13

4

2

11

26

3

T

5

18

y

3

2

3

44

5

11

9

72

5

119

10

1

337

28

2

52

T

30

84

1

44

225

2

$500 and under $1,000
$1,000 and under $1,500
$1,500 and under $2,000
$2,000 and under $3,000
$3,000 and under $5,000
$5,000 and under $10,000

103

2

Under $500

Percentage of total money expenditures for current consumption
Under $500

$500 and under $1,000
$1,000 and under $1,500
$1,500 and under $2,000
$2,000 and under $3,000

33,000 and under 85,000
$5,000 and under $10,000

y

Less than $0.50

3/

Less than 0.1 percent

Cost of Living Division
May 6. 1942

100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0

42.7
37.4
35.3

34.1
32.4
31.8
31.3

29.1

4.9

23.1

3.1

2.9
2.2

23:3

3.3

2.1

20.6
19.6
18.2
16.9

4.0

3.5
4.4

4.9

5.6

6.0

6.7

3.7

4.9

1.9

1.9

12.5

4.4
5.3
6.0
6.8

3.1

13.0
12.1
12.8
12.0
11.1

2.9

2.2

3.3

2.1

4.7

2.2
3.0

3.0

2.1

6.5

3.0

3.0

1.2
1.2

2/

.
2/

.9

.9

.7

.5

2.3

2.1

7.0

4.2

2.1

1.1

.T

7.8

2.2

2.2

5.2

4.8

2.2

1.0

.0

1.3

9.0

2.4

2.4

2.5

5.1

2.5

.8

.9

2.4

.5

Confidential

66
U. S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

Preliminary Figures

Average Change in Specified Types of Assets Compared with Net Change in Assets and in Liabilities
Estimates for City Families and Single Persons

141
U.S. Government Bonds
and Defense Stamps
Money income

class in 1941

Amount

Amount

spent for

received
from sale

purchase
Under $500

6

$

$500 and under $1,000

$0
0

Tax

savings
notes
Purchased

0

6

$1,000 and under $1,500

13

0

$1,500 and under $2,000

26

0

0

$2,000 and under $3,000

41

0

0

$3,000 and under $5,000

73

$5,000 and under $10,000

119

0

0

Net

change in
money in
savings
accounts

change in
money in
checking

Change

accounts

$ -119

0
$

0

5

0

Net 1

Net

$

-3

Net

Cost of Living Division

Net

in

Liabili-

Saving

in

Assets

ties

Deficit

$ -84

$

or

+15

$ -99

-33

-5

-31

+36

-67

+11

-s

+38

+46

-8

-13

+10

+118

+55

+63

-10

-54

+116

+22

+115

+11

+143

+453

+25

+428

+52

+508

+1010

+90

+920

1 Plus (+) means an increase in liabilities, minus (-) means a decrease in liabilities.

May 6, 1942

Change

67

Confidential

U. S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

Preliminary Figures

Average Change in Specified Types of Assets Compared with Net Change in Assets and in Liabilities
Estimates for City Families and Single Persons
First Quarter of 1942
U.S. Government Bonds
and Defense Stamps

Money income

class in 1941

Amount

spent for
purchase
$

der $500

Tax Savings Notes

Amount

Amount

received
from sale

Amount

spent for

used for

purchase

tax payments

-

39
$

$

Net

Net

change in
money n
savings
accounts

change in
money in
checking
accounts

Net

Net

Net

change Change
in

Saving

in

or

Liabilities

Assets

Deficit

2

-

$

1

2

3

4

$

$

3

8

,000 and under $3,000

000 and under $5,000
000 and under $10,000

--

-

23

-

-

19

--

-

22

31

--

-

--

--

--

--

--

-

- 21

-

- 26
- 19

t 13

t

2

t 12

-6

6, 1942

t

25

t

32

t

50

t

12

2

20

5

25

3

-8

t

28

109

- 23

132

- 64

t

91

202

- 66

268

Plus
(f) means
an increase in liabilities; minus (-) means a decrease in liabilities
Less than
$0.50
at of Living Division

14

4

500 and under $2,000

28

--

7

.000 and under $1,500

33

1

00 and under $1,000

--

Confidential

68
U.S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

10

Preliminary Figures
Estimated Average Number of Persona Per Family

City Families 1

1941
Average

Money income class
in 1941

total
family
sime

Average No. of

persons per family

18 years under
and over

18 years

1.3

1.2

.1

2.6

1.8

.8

$1,000 and under $1,500

2.5

1.8

.7

$1,500 and under $2,000

3.1

2.3

.8

$2,000 and under $3,000

3.1

2.3

.8

$3,000 and under $5,000

3.5

2.8

.7

$5,000 and under $10,000

3.8

2.8

1.0

3.8

3.1

.7

Under $500

$500 and under $1,000

$10,000 and over

1/ Including one-person families
Cost of Living Division
May 6, 1942

69

May 8, 1942

My dear Madela Secretary:

I have before me a set of 10 tables that were
prepared in response to my request by the Bureau of

Labor Statistics, giving an early tabulation of data

from the quarterly survey of consumer expenditures
now being conducted by that Bureau. I find these
tables of the greatest interest and usefulness in show
ing the changing patterns of consumer spending and san
ing under wartine conditions, and their variations
between the different income groups. I hope that

nothing will interfere with the continuation of these

quarterly surveys, since I know of no other source
from which such information may currently be obtained.

May I extend my thanks for the find cooperation of
your people in making this special tabulation for me,
which, I understand, required a substantial amount of
overtime work by the Prices and Gost of Living Branch

of the Sureau of Labor Statistics. I appreciate

especially the courteey and helpfulness of Mr. A. F.
Hiarichs, Acting Commissioner of the Durean of Labor
Statistics, and the assistance of Miss Asyness Joy,
Miss Faith Williams, and Miss Alice Hanson of the
Prices and Cost of Living Branch.
Sincerely,
(Signed) R. Morgenthau, Jr.
Henorable Frances Perkins,

The Secretary of Labor,

n.m.c

Washington, D. c.

By Messenser Fungis
Copies

GOH: Ja 5/8/42

/

70
THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON

May 8, 1942

TO THE SECRETARY:

I talked to Governor Ransom today in
response to his telephone call to you on May 7.
He said that he merely wanted to thank you for
the cooperation he had received from the Treasury

in connection with the revision of Regulation W
(Consumer Credit regulations). He said he also
wanted to tell you that he thought it would be
very helpful if some time in one of your press
conferences you would refer to the regulations
of the Board on Consumer Credit and give them

a little boost. If you care to do this, you

might have George Haas prepare a little memo

after talking further with Mr. Ransom.

sur

FORDEFENSE

BUY
UNITED

STATES
BONDS
LOGSUMPS

71
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE May 8, 1942

Secretary Morgenthau

TO

FROM

Mr. Hase

Subject: Recent Changes in Prices and Yields of Government
Securities

The most important developments of the past week in the
Government securities market have been concerned with the two
new issues of Treasury bonds. The new 2 percent issue opened
on Tuesday morning with a premium of only 3/32 bid, but rose
during the day to close with a premium of 6/32. On Wednesday

and yesterday, the issue fluctuated slightly, closing last

night with a premium of 5/32 bid, or 6/32 mean of bid and ask.
All taxable issues in the 2 percent area have been weak,
especially since the terms of the new issue were announced in

0

Monday morning's papers. The declines began last Friday immediately after announcement of the coupons which the new issues
would bear. On Monday and Tuesday, further declines occurred,
although there have been some recoveries since then. The

2-1/2's of 1956-58 increased in price by 6/32 during the week,
while the 2-1/2's of 1967-72 declined by 1/32, notwithstanding
the fact that the Federal Open Market Account purchased $9 mil-

lions of this issue.

Total purchases of Treasury securities by the Federal Open
Market Account during the week ran to $95 millions and there
were no sales. Purchases consisted of $32 millions of Treasury

bills, $29 millions of certificates of indebtedness, and $34
millions of taxable bonds as follows:

2's of 1949-51 (old issue) $21 millions
2-1/4's of 1952-55
2-1/2's of 1967-72

4 millions
9 millions

Subscriptions to the new 2 percent issue aggregated $3.3

billions. Preferential allotments in full amounted to $69 millions. The subscription figures indicate that the allotment
basis will be approximately 40 percent or somewhat less. Subscriptions to the 2-1/2 percent issue aggregated $691 millions

as of last night.

72

Secretary Morgenthau - 2

The bill rate advanced again this week, moving up to
0.36 percent, as compared to 0.34 percent the preceding week.
Certificates of indebtedness also lost ground, notwithstanding the fact that the Federal Open Market Account purchased
the new certificates for the first time. Quotations last
night were bid 0.51 percent and ask 0.49 percent.
Compared to March 19, the market remains basically weak.

The yields of all taxable bonds and notes are higher than on
March 19, with the greatest increase shown in the case of
short-term securities. Wholly tax-exempt notes also have
lost ground, while long-term partially tax-exempt bonds represent the only sector of the market which is in an improved
position as compared with the March 19 benchmark.

73

Price and Yield Changes of United States Securities
April 30, 1942 to May 7, 1942
Prices

Security

Yields

April 30,

May 7,

1942

1942

Change

April 30,

May 7,

1942

1942

(Decimals are thirty-seconds)

(Percent)

-

Bills
Average rate last issue

-

Certificates

11/1/42

-

1/2%

Taxable Notes

Taxable Bonds

/15/49-51

100.06

100.06

99.22
99.09
99.21

99.21
99.08
99.19

101.12

101.02

100.23

100.10

100.06
2-1/2

2-1/4

2-1/2
2-1/2

15/62-67

9/15/67-72

Wholly Tax-exempt Notes
1-3/4

12/15/43
3/15/44
5/15/44

9/15/44
3/15/45

1

Tax-exempt

2-3/4

4/15/44-46
12/15/44-54
9/15/45-47
12/15/45

3-1/8

3/15/46-56
6/15/46-48
6/15/46-49
10/15/47-52

12/15/47

.00

.90

.95

.96

-.02

1.09

1.11

+.02
+.01
+.02

-.10
-.13

1.75

1.81
1.95

+.06

1.89

+.06

1.97

102.18

+.06

100.21

100.20

-.01

2.47

100.26

100.22
100.30
100.28

-.04
-.03
-.01
-.01

2/32*

-.03

2.00
2.10
2.15
2.27

+.04
.00
+.01

-.01

100.27

2.47

.00

.05

-3/32*

.10

.20

+.10

.32

.33

+.01
+.01
-.01

.36

.00
.00

.40

.38
.39

.00

.41

.41

.00

+.01

.44

47

-.01

.00

.43

.43

.00

-.05

.50

59

103.16

-.07

.68

.80

-.07
-.10
-.05
-.05

.61

105.29
105.17

104.16
107.24
105.24
105.12

109.29
107.19
108.00
115.12
104.21
107.22

109.24
107.13
107.25
115.10
104.20
107.20
107.01

101.06
101.04
100.23
101.11
100.29

Bonds

103.23
104.23
108.02

107.02
104.18
110.24

9/15/51-55
12/15/51-53

110.17
104.26
103.13

106.13

106.18
108.16

104.27

12/15/60-65

.53

.00

9/15/48
12/15/48-50
12/15/49-52
12/15/49-53
9/15/50-52
6/15/51-54

2-3/4

53

.88

103.17
100.28
102.24

2-1/2

9/15/56-59

+.02

103.17
100.31

3/15/48-51

2-3/4
2-3/4

.50

1.96
2.10
2.14
2.28

2-3/4

2-7/8

48

-.09

103.07

10/15/43-45

+.02

100.01

100.29
100.28
101.06
101.04
100.23
101.10
100.29

1

3/4

.36

100.10

101.01

12/15/42

1-1/8
1-1/8

.00

-.01
-.01

34

-

2-1/2

Change

109.28
109.02
109.09
109.25

103.02

104.16
110.25
106.14
106.18
108.16
110.19
104.31

103.16
105.00
110.03
109.09
109.15
110.03

Treasury Department, Division of Research and Statistics
Excess of price over zero yield.

.39

-.01

.90

+.09
+.12
+.09

.88

.98

+.10

.97

1.00

.94

.98

+.03
+.04

-.05
-.06
-.07
-.02
-.01
-.02

1.13
1.11
1.13
1.32
1.14

1.16

1.38

1.39

+.01

-.01
-.02

1.34

1.34
1.29

+.01

1.61

-.01

1.60
1.66
1.74

.00

+.01
+.01

1.28
1.62
1.60

1.15

1.18
1.32

1.15

.00

1.66
1.74

+.02

1.78

+.05
+.03
+.05
+.07
+.07

1.71

1.77
1.69

1.66

1.65

1.80

1.79

2.00
2.02
2.07
2.11

2.00
2.06
2.09

.00

+.06
+.10

1.98

+.03
+.04
+.05
.00

+.01

.00

.00

.00

-.01

-.02
-,01
-.01
-.02
-.02
-.01
-.02

May 7, 1942

.

74
Price and Yield Changes of United States Securities
March 19, 1942 to May 7, 1942
Yields

Prices

Security

March 19,

May 7.

1942

1942

Change

March 19,

Taxable Bonds
3/15/48-50

6/15/49-51
9/15/49-51

2

2-3/4
2-1/2
2

3-1/8
2-1/2
2-1/2
2-3/4

101.28
101.04

101.02

100.10
100.06

w.i.

.53

+.16

.76

.90

+.14

.84

.96

1.02

1.11

+.12
+.09

-.26
-.26

1,67

1.81

+.14

1.83

1.95

+.12

1.97 w.i.
2.00

100.28
102.24

103.17

1.96
2.09
2.12
2.24

2.15
2.27

+.04
+.01
+.03
+.03

100.27

100.20

-.07

2.46

2.47

+.01

101.04
101.11
101.04
101.03
101.16
101.10
100.27
101.16
101.00

100.22
100.30
100.28
100.27

-.14
-.13
-.08

5/32*
2/32*

.05

.22

.33

-.08

.26

.37

+.11
+.11

101.04
100.23
101.11
100.29

-.10
-.06
-.04
-.05
-.03

103.21

103.02

-.19

10/15/43-45
4/15/44-46
12/15/44-54
9/15/45-47
12/15/45

104.06
105.06

103.16
104.16

6/15/62-67
9/15/67-72

101.06

2.10

.20

-6/32*
-6/32*

.26

.38

+.12

.34

.39

+.05

.37

29

+.04

.43

+.04
+.02

.41

.43

41

.59

-.22

.57

.72
.91

.98

+.07

.94

1.00

105.28

107.24
105.24
105.12

-.22
-.19
-.14
-.16

.80
.90

.90

.98

+.06
+.08

3/15/46-56
6/15/46-48
6/15/46-49
10/15/47-52
12/15/47
3/15/48-51

110.08
107.28
108.08
115.20
104.23
107.28

109.24
107.13
107.25
115.10
104.20
107.20

-.16
-.15
-.15
-.10
-.03
-.08

1.11
1.09

1.16

9/15/48
12/15/48-50

107.07
104.21
110.22
106.16
106.20
108.18

107.01
104.16
110.25
106.14
106.18
108.16

-.06
-.05

110.20
104.29
103.10
104.28
110.00
109.10

110.19
104.31
103.16
105.00
110.03

Tax-exempt Bonds

4-1/4

99.29

99.19

37

-.11

12/15/43
3/15/44
6/15/44
9/15/44
3/15/45

3-1/8

99.21

99.21
99.08

-.06
-.10
-.13

Tax-exempt Notes
9/15/42
12/15/42
1-3/4
6/15/43
1-1/8

3-3/4

-.06
-.10
-.13
-.10

100.06

.50

100.01

Wholly

2-3/4
2-1/2

100.12
99.31

+.16

100.12
103.23
101.06
103.05

2-1/2

2-1/4
2-1/2
2-1/2
2-1/2

-

Taxable Notes
3/15/43
9/15/44
12/15/45
3/15/46

-

11/1/42

.36

-

Certificates
1/2%

.20

-

-

Change

(Percent)

(Decimals are thirty-seconds)
Bills
Average rate last issue

May 7,
1942

1942

12/15/49-52
12/15/49-53
9/15/50-52
6/15/51-54

2-1/4
2-7/8
2-3/4

12/15/60-65

108.11
106.06

109.09

1.15

+.05
+.06

1.13

1.18

+.05

1.33

1.32
1.15
1.39

-.01
+.01

1.34

+.01

1.29

+.01

1.61
1.60
1,66

-.04
.00

-.02

1.33
1.28
1.65
1.60
1.66
1.74

1.74

.00

-.01

1.78

+.02

1.70
1.68
1.80

1.77
1.69

-.01
-.01

1.65
1.79
1.98
2.00
2.06

-.03
-.01

2.09

-.01

+.03

-.02
-.02

+.06

+.04
+.03

-.01

109.12

109.15

+.03

110.00

110.03

+.03

Treasury Department, Division of Research and Statistics
Excess of price over zero yield.

+.18
+.23
+.18

1.15
1.38

2.00
2.01
2.07
2.10

.00

.00

-.02
-.01
-.01

May 7. 1942.

to

75
May 8, 1942

TO:

HAROLD N. GRAVES

SUBJECT:

PROGRESS REPORT FROM WAR SAVINGS STAFF

QUOTA CAMPAIGN

Evidence of increased public interest in the War
Savings Program since announcement of the County Quota

System is reflected in the upward sales trend, particularly
in Series E Bonds, in the last few days.
Delaware War Savings officials reported that Bond

sales there were at their highest. The Delaware Administrator
believes the sales increase resulted from quota campaign

publicity.
PLEDGE CAMPAIGN

Plans for the New York State War Bond Pledge Campaign

in mid-June are progressing rapidly. Headquarters have been set
up at 581 Fifth Avenue, New York, and representatives of the
Radio and Press Sections, Special Events, and Production
Departments have been loaned to the New York organization to
form the nucleus of the State Pledge Campaign organization.

In Massachusetts, preliminary reports on the Pledge
Campaign results show that out of 4,800 homes in Milton, a Boston
suburb, more than 3,000 pledges were obtained. An increase in
Bond sales by both post offices and banks was also noted through-

out the entire State.
2035liv

76

-2NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS

By Presidential Proclamation, May 17 has been set

forth as "I Am An American Day". On this date, more than

150 educational, civic and patriotic organizations throughout the nation are sponsoring programs to inspire the newly
naturalized citizens and the country's more than 5,000,000

aliens. A list of the committees and chairmen in charge of
these events has been forwarded to State Administrators. The
majority of these committees are undertaking a drive on "I Am
An American Day", to sell $5,000,000 worth of War Savings Bonds.
PAYROLL SAVINGS

The Payroll War Savings Plan now has been adopted by

71,735 concerns throughout the country. A total of 21,301 firms,
or 64 per cent of the 33,327 companies with over 100 employees

are included in this 71,735 total. Sixty-six per cent of the
30,400,000 employees of private concerns - a total of 19,976,460
wage earners, are now exposed to the Payroll Savings Plan. In

addition, 1,452,303, or 33 per cent of the 4,400,000 Federal,
State and Local Government employees, now have the plan available
to them.
NEWSPAPER CARRIER SALES

Sales of War Savings Stamps by newspaper carrier boys

held steady during the month of April, with sales in the last
two weeks exceeding those of the first two weeks of the month. A

chart showing sales for the weeks of April 4, 11, 18 and 25 is

attached.

-3NEWSPAPER CARRIER SALES (Continued)

Total sales to date by the newspaper carriers of
879 newspapers amount to 266,108,876 ten-cent Stamps or their

equivalent in Bonds or Stamps of larger denominations. This

total figure represents an increase of 15,090,977 reported
sold since April 30.
WOMEN'S ACTIVITIES

Reports on Bond selling progress of Women's War
Savings Committees are now being received by the Women's

Division. Outstanding among these is the Chicago and Cook
County Women's Committee which sold approximately $14,355,000

worth of Bonds and Stamps during March and April. In Chicago,
there are approximately 1,500 women volunteer booth workers

operating in banks, hotels, clubs, railroad depots and office
buildings.

Within the last four months in the New York City
area, women have sold more than $22,000,000 worth of Bonds and

Stamps. Many sales have been made by mobile units of girls
costumed in red, white and blue pinafores, with huge pockets
for carrying money and stamps, who cover restaurants, parades,

ball parks, beaches, etc.
The Women's Section has sponsored War Savings programs

at four large women's organizations conventions during the last
week. These were the Daughters of the American Revolution

78

-4WOMEN'S ACTIVITIES (Continued)

meeting in Chicago, where a session was devoted to War Savings
and purchases of $106,000 worth of Bonds pledged; the General
Federation of Women's Clubs convention in Fort Worth, Texas;

the Junior League Convention in Kansas City, Missouri; and the
annual meeting of the Association of Press Women.
COMMUNITY SING

Lucy Monroe's nationwide tour takes her to Memphis,
Tennessee, on Wednesday, May 13, where she will conduct her

song festival in that city's open-air theatre.
RALLIES

Fay Wray and Bob "Tex" Allen, screen stars, appeared

at a Bond and Stamps rally at Akron, Ohio, on April 27. They
also visited the "Victory Center" at O'Neil's Department Store,
and aided in making sales which totaled $5,200. Miss Wray also
appeared at Trenton, New Jersey, on April 16 to inaugurate the
Payroll War Savings Plan of employees of General Motors' Eastern

Aircraft Division.
Luise Rainer, twice winner of the Motion Picture
Academy Award, set a new Bond sale record for a one-day personal

appearance in Toledo, Ohio, on May 2. Sales totaled $4,500,000.
Martha Raye, stage and screen comedienne, and Wythe Williams,

commentator and lecturer, also contributed their talents to
swelling the Toledo sales total.

-5-

79

RALLIES (Continued)

Dorothy Lamour, picture star, chalked up sales of
$4,240,485 when she visited Gary, Indiana, on May 2, as guest

star of that city's "United Action Day". She visited Gary's
huge Steel Workshop, City Hall, the city's tin mill and
Memorial Auditorium. Workers of the Carnegie Illinois Steel
Corporation pledged Bond purchases totaling $2,850,000.
VICTORY HOUSES

Programs at the Los Angeles Victory House from

April 7 through April 22 featured appearances by the following
stars and musical organizations:
Martha Gales, English actress; LeRoy White Swing Band;

Barbara Britton, Paramount actress; Mexican Tipica Orchestra;
Los Angeles Concert Orchestra; Virginia O'Brien, M-G-M star;

Sonja Henie, 20th Century-Fox star; the Dean Randall singers of
Inglewood, California; Boys Band; Hollywood Songs of Legion Band;
Nancy Gates, RKO player; Dolores Moran, Warner Brothers actress;

Rufe Davis, stage, screen and radio star; Lorraine Gettman and
Margaret Chapman, Columbia players; Don "Red" Barry, Republic

actor; animals from United Artists "Jungle Book" picture, with
Sabu, its star; Anna May Wong, Screen Actors Guild; Donnive Lee,

Paramount player; Sheila Ryan, 20th Century-Fox star; Marjorie
Lor, Universal actress; Bill Bozerge and his accordian, and
Nancy Coleman and Faye Emerson, Warner Brothers actresses.

-6-

80

NEWSREELS

A special Payroll War Savings picture in connection
with the International Harvester campaign is now being made
in the Chicago plant of that company.
The War Savings Staff newsreel crews are now operating
in Alabama, Florida, South Carolina and Virginia.
BUSINESS PUBLICATIONS

Returns to date indicate that 593 business publications,
with a combined circulation of 4,564,404, are using our current
advertising release, Number 3.

In addition, 273 business publications advise that
they will publish our advertising release, Number 4, which was

mailed out on April 24. Additional returns on this release are
still being received.
COMPANY PUBLICATIONS

A new kit of material for use in 2,112 company
publications was released this week. Copy attached.
Also attached is a copy of the Bucyrus-Erie Company's

publication, "Scoop". This issue is devoted almost in its
entirety to promotion of War Bonds and Stamps, and is a typical
example of the cooperation being extended by company publications.
RADIO

"Women and the Quota", a special interview between
Mrs. Morgenthau and Alma Kitchell, was broadcast Friday, May 1,
over the Blue Network from Washington.

81

-7RADIO (Continued)

Four religious leaders, representing all faiths,
endorsed the Quota Plan in a broadcast over the NBC Network
on Sunday, May 3, from 5:00 to 5:30 P.M.

Beginning Sunday, May 3, and scheduled for eight
succeeding Sundays, Tommy Dorsey and Orchestra Program will

make quota appeals to the younger generation from 8:00 to

8:30 P.M. over the Blue Network. Kay Kyser and his Orchestra,
who conducted an MBS broadcast rally for Bonds and Stamps from

Chicago on April 20, will also promote Bond Sales and the
Quota Campaign in his nightly broadcasts from Meadowbrook.
Minute Men speakers are now appearing on all 868

radio stations in English and eleven foreign languages, boosting
the Quota Campaign.

The Payroll Savings Plan has been installed by 465
radio stations, of which 368 report 100 per cent employee

participation. Station WIBC of Indianapolis is the first station
to report every employee investing at least 10 per cent of pay
in Bonds. A similar report was received shortly afterward from
the management of Station WELI, New Haven, Connecticut.

A special one-half hour transcribed program on May 1,

entitled "Roll Call of the Nation", was broadcast over 304

radio stations throughout the country. Every station in
Washington, D. C. and six New York City stations carried the
program.

-8-

82

RADIO (Continued)

A total of 5,146 transcribed Quota announcements "Voice of the People" - were broadcast over 262 stations.
The thrice weekly transcribed series, "The Treasury
Star Parade", is now being broadcast by 779 of the nation's
868 radio stations.
PRESS

Although pay deductions in the War Department's
Pay Reservation Plan do not begin until May 30, already more
than 60,000 authorization cards have been received, and cards

are being received at the rate of 7,000 daily, the War
Department, Office of Chief of Finance, reports. The War
Department's Pay Reservation Plan is being set up for all
officers, soldiers and nurses, and for more than 600,000
civilian personnel.

In reporting the successful launching of the War
Department Bond program, the Office of the Chief of Finance

forwarded newspaper publicity items from the various corps areas.
These items and pictures appeared in daily and Army Camp news-

papers. Clippings are attached.
In inaugurating the Pay Reservation Plan, newsreel
pictures were taken of the Secretary of War and the Secretary
of the Treasury, and newsreel shots of soldiers at Fort Myer,

Virginia, signing up for Bonds. These pictures were taken by

-9-

83

PRESS (Continued)

Pathe, Paramount, Universal and Fox, and are scheduled to be

shown in all first run theatres beginning Wednesday, May 6.
A total of 83 War Bond slogans, quarter page

advertisements, etc., appear in current issues of adventure,
love and detective magazines. These will be carried on a

continuing basis as the result of contact established by the
Press Section with the editors and publishers.
LABOR PRESS

Complete cooperation of the editors of the Labor
Press in continuing their promotion of War Bonds through their

publications and through the daily press by publicizing the
activities of unions is being sought by the Labor Press Section.
Chief of the War Savings Labor Press is scheduled to address

the editors of the Labor Press at the convention called by the
Labor Section of the War Production Board. A copy of a
memorandum to editors attending the convention, and of a

questionnaire prepared for them by the War Savings Staff, is
attached.
RELIGIOUS PRESS

Four War Bond cartoons were distributed in mat form

this week to the religious press. Two of the most influential
of these publications reported they will use this material. They
are The Christian Herald, New York, with a total circulation of

- 10 -

RELIGIOUS PRESS (Continued)

253,000, and B'nai B'rith, national Jewish monthly.
Many Catholic, Jewish and Protestant newsprint

weeklies reprinted the Secretary's "Quota Letter".

VFC/sb

84

85

Analysis of Exposure to Payroll Savings Plans
May 2, 1942

Number exposed

to payroll

savings plans

Total number
in the
country
(estimated)

Percent

of total
exposed

Part A - Summary by Number of Organizations Exposed

I. Business organizations

(1) Large railroads

158

167

95

(2) Other firmswith 500 employees or more
(3) Other firms with 100 to 499 employees

4,927

6,275

79

16,216

26,885

60

(4) Subtotal - large firms

21,301

33,327

64

(5) Firms with less than 100 employees
(6) Total business organizations

50,434

#

71,735

*

II. Governmental organizations

.

III. Grand total

71,735

Part B - Summary by Number of Employees Exposed

I. Business organizations

#

#

(5) Firms with less than 100 employees
(6) Total business organization

.

18,815,930

0

(4) Subtotal - large firms

*

(2) Other firms with 500 employees or more
(3) Other firms with 100 to 499 employees

1,273,260
14,062,894
3,479,776

#

(1) Large railroads

1,160,530
19,976,460

30,400,000 1

66

397,981

23

33

II. Governmental organizations
(2) State and local governments

1,054,322

1,700,000 1
2,700,000

(3) Total governmental organizations

1,452,303

4,400,000

(1) Federal Government

III. Grand total

21,428,763

34,800,000 1/

Office of the Secretary of the Treasury,
Division of Research and Statistics.
1

Excludes agricultural employees, military personnel, employees on WPA or NYA or CCC projects,

proprietors, firm members, self-employed, casual workers and persons in domestic service.
Data not available.

39

62

May 8, 1942

86

Firms Employing 100 to 499 Persons Participating in Payroll Savings Plans
(As reported by the Defense Savings Staff's State Administrators)
:
:
:

arizona
Arkansas

Northern California
Southern California
Colorado

Connecticut
Delaware

District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia

Idaho

Illinois
Indiana

Iows

Kansas

Tentucky

Louisiana
Yaine
Maryland

Yasaachusetts
Fight zan
Kinnesota

Mississippi
Tissouri
Yentana
Vebrasics
Tevada

New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York

North Carolina
North Dakota

Ohio

Oklahoma
Oregon

Pennsylvania

Shode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah

Termont

Virginia
Washington

Test Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

Total

May 2

savings plans

number

of firms

(estimated)

Apr. 18

Apr. 25

Key 2
59

55

158

167

285

43

47

47

58

74

81

81

lab

45

45

142

31

32

32

512

531

536

536

96

99

100

756

774

783

1,171

22
66

67

113

113
279

115
279

170
622

66

66

68

277

45

45

21

24

32

84

25

65

45
38

29

35

52

52

53

152

34

147

154

155

155

95

99

100

133

140

167

589

23

2h

28

31

31

31

50

62

62

62

1,300

1,335

1,352

2,252

58

59

60

415

429

456

586

71

73

To

165

175

175

271

61

65

$

276

276

276

100

100

100

136

276
146

151

312

lab

47

LB

179

187

203

38h

47

49

53

60

63

68

198

30

*2

24

177

188

204

405

labe

46

50

639

652

1,523

2

2

43

689

64h
718

740

1,022

67

70

72

376

376

379

399

94

%

59

59

60

143

61

41

472

472

516

664

71

ho

10

40

40

100

85

85

24

22

71

78

100

100

103

104

105

123

84

14

14

15

24

58

58

58

63

494

523

145
867

61

64

91

93

53

57

89

463

60

33

33

53

35

94

2,060

2,133

2,218

4,239

49

282

285

290

499

14

14

14

29

1,126

1,140

1,164

1,739

166
211

167

167

345

LB

219

239

271

78

1,682

1,715

1,743

2.032

83

165

22h

69

72

74

41

45

47

154

161

71

78

81

21

21

21

18a

*8

56

67

65

174

361

326

326

50

NEW

199

199

199

86

100

100

100

21

had

his

all

are

1.375

2b

24

26

111

*2

34
HER

95

88

92

76

76

59

60

60

63

94

261

297

310

***

83

24.6

124

72

49

50

50

in

41

as

100

100

100

100

100

100

9th

234
134

245
136

137

272

278

282

29h

680

17

17

17

17

2a

Alaaka

Hailroads

Apr. 25

Percent of total having payroll

Total

$

Apr. 18
149

Alabama

:

savings plans

:
:

State

Number of firms with payroll

2

2

2

is

lis

is

52

94

94

15.365

15,776

16,265

26.937

57

59

60

May 8, 1912.

Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, Division of Research and Statistics.
. Data are for April 25. Insamich sa no May 2 report was received.

87

Firms Employing 500 Persons or More Participating in Payroll Savings Plans
(As reported by the Defense Savings Staff's State Administrators)

Number of firms with payroll

Colorado

Connecticut
Delaware

District of Columbia
Florida
Georgis
Idaho

Illinois
Indiana

(estimated)

May 2
41

41

41
9

Northern California
Southern California

Apr. 25

Percent of total having payroll

of firms

9

Arizona
Arkansas

Apr. 18

Total
number

savings plans

Apr. 18

Apr. 25

May 2

69

59

59

59

12

75

75

75

9

Alabama

:

State

savings plans

16

16

16

22

73

73

73

122

122

124

170

72

72

73

121

123

123

159

76

77

77

25

26

26

26

96

100

100

114

114

115

151

75

75

76

15

16

17

22

68

73

32

32

32

52

62

62

27
62

28

29

30

63

44

46

48

86

87

102

102

84

85

100

11

11

11

11

100

100

100

391

396

400

88

93

101

529
152

74

75

76

58

61

66

61

69

69

100

22

25

25#

36

23

23

23

23

100

100

Kansas

39

39

70

54

56

56

Kentucky

38

Louisiana

29

29

31

74

39

39

42

48

48

51

54

R9

89

Maine.

94

85

102

82

83

Bl

84

86

237

240

242

343

69

70

71

265

271

271

303

87

89

89

9l

94

94

Iowa

Maryland

Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota

79

79

79

84

27

28

36

72

75

78

Mississippi
Missouri

26

103

103

108

128

80

80

84

100

100

100

2h

30

77

77

80

80

80

8o

31

94

97

97

185

77

81

82

100

100

100

72

72

74

67

67

73

4

4

30

142

151

150

5
5
5

New Mexico
New York

4

30

29

5

3

New Jersey

3

New Hampshire

23

23

Nevada

3

Montana
Nebraska

767
103

759

782

1,059

112

154

North Carolina
North Dakota

103

Ohio

412

415

Oklahoma

33

46

67

72

31

67

31

Oregon

52

92

98

51

52

100

48

558

560

608

92

551
61

67

0

0

0

o

0

o

86

5

South Dakota

5

Tennessee

50

Texas

63

68

75

89

97

50th

50

-72

63

8a

85

91

92

81

89

91

87

89

92

100

100

87

57

57

57

141

45

45

51

57

57

100

100

100

57

14

8

Utah

85

100

5

84

490

418

5

Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Caroline

0

84

8

Vermont

12

12

12

12

Virginia

96

97

96

99

93

96

93

70

70

71

71

60

60

65

84

86

152

84

100

100

100

100

100

100

Railroads
Total

3

Alaska

130

30

3

Wyoming

39

128

127
1

Wisconsin

39

65

3

36

1

West Virginia

50

50

1

49

1

Washington

109

115

95

95

109

95

109

4,938

5,036

6,390

76

77

79

4,864

May 8, 1942.

Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, Division of Research and Statistics.
Data are for April 25, inasmuch as no May 2 report was received.

.

88
CONFIDENTIAL

Sales of United States Savings Bonds
From May 1 through May 7. 1942
Compared with Sales Quota for Same Period

(At issue price in millions of dollars)

:

:

:
:

46.5
55.5
73.8
97.0

47.8
57.8
70.5
84.0
98.0
109.7

97.3
96.0
104.7

:

22.3

:

94.6

to

Date

:

:

25.7

:

24.3

:

11.6

90.7%

:

$ 14.0

May 1

:

$ 12.7

: Quota

Daily

Quota,
May 1
to

:

$ 12.7

Date

:

Date

Quota

: as % of

:

Daily

to

:

Date

as % of

to Date

May 1

Total

Actual Sales

:

:

Date

to

:

to

to

:

Daily

May 1

:

May 1

Date

: Sales

:

: Quota, : Sales
: May 1 : to Date

Actual Sales

Series F and G
Actual Sales
: Quota,

:

Series E

Date

Sales

to Date
as % of
Quota

$ 7.3

$ 9.0

$ 20.0

$ 20.0

$ 23.0

7.9

15.2

16.0

95.0

19.4

39.4

41.7

94.5

10.3

25.5
33.1
48.8
60.8

29.5
37.1

86.4

32.6

77.3

89.2

16.6
34.0
35.3

72.0
88.6

93.1
93.4
101.9
109.4

$ 7.3

81.1%

87.0%

1
2

4

8.9

5

18.4

5

6

23.2

115.5

7.6

15.6
12.1

49.8
60.3
69.3
76.3

98.0
100.8

122.6
157.9

94.9
120.3
144.3
167.3
186.0

7
8
9

11

12
13

14
15
16

8

4
20
21
22
23

25
26

27

28
29

131.8
141.8
154.5
168.0
182.0
193.7

89.8
97.4
110.1
120.6
129.6
136.6

221.6
239.2
264.6
288.6
311.6
330.3

215.8
225.8
238.5
252.0
266.0
277.7

150.1
157.7
170.3
180.8
189.8
196.8

365.9
383.5
408.8
432.8
455.8
474.5

299.8
309.8
322.5
336.0
350.0

210.3
217.9
230.5
241.0
250.0

510.1
527.7
553.0
577.0
600.0

Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, Division of Research and Statistics.
ource: Actual sales figures are deposits with the Treasurer of the United States on account of proceeds of sales of
United States savings bonds. Figures have been rounded and will not necessarily add to totals.

May 8, 1942.

89

Alf
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY.

May 8, 1942.

Mail Report

Bond mail of one sort and another, but largely inspired by letters of inquiry, hold the top place in number
of pieces of mail received during the past week.
To date the four-question mailing on bonds, distributed through the Federal Reserve Banks, has brought in a

total of 2,310 cards of reply.

There were a number of pleasant comments on the

Secretary's newsreel appearance -- 6 in particular being
highly favorable; others implied a favorable reaction by

the nature of the comment. One woman wrote that though
unemployed until May, 1941, she had raised her weekly War

Stamp purchase as a result of hearing the talk to $10 a
week out of her salary of $40.
There are fewer comments on the house to house cam-

paign, but the unfavorable ones outnumber the favorable by
4 to 1.
Organized labor submitted 6 communications -- 4 opposing wage ceilings; 1 favoring price control; 1 recommending

certain tax legislation. There continue to be many letters

antagonistic to labor, varying from general suggestions
that Unions be taxed, to factual reports of high Union dues,
Union orders to "go slow", etc.
The Women's Clubs of West Virginia are still urging

legislation to halt inflation.

One of the most interesting of the gift campaigns is
that of the school children of Puerto Rico. We have not

had formal notification of it, but judging by the letters
received, the youngsters are cooperating for a "First
Dollar Received for Defense" fund. Evidently each child

90

-2Memorandum for the Secretary.

May 8, 1942.

has to earn the dollar and each letter reports how this
was done -- through sale of candy, helping mother with
housework; taking care of family garden, etc.

Mail forwarded from the White House continues very

heavy. The month of April brought in 1,058 letters.
Over the past 5 years, the average for the month of April

has been 540. Of those received this past month, we acknowledged 742 here, and rerouted 307. Of the latter, 15
protested the appointment of Mr. Hannegan as Internal
Revenue Collector at St. Louis. Of the letters acknowledged,

approximately 25% urged control of the liquor traffic for
the duration of the war. These varied from personal letters
to resolutions from organizations.

Gabrite E. torbrish

91

-1General Comments on the Present Emergency

Elizabeth Hamlin, Baltimore, Md. I have never made enough

salary to pay income. In fact, the year ended with my
being a little in the red, so I am saving my dimes to
give to my Country, (the best on earth). Enclosed find an
order for $5, and I hope I can send more soon. No one that
works in this land of ours should be allowed to send less
than this to his Government, no matter how little he is
supposed to pay. Nothing less than this should be accepted
by the Government. All sixteen or over should pay.
Leon Gordon, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Culver City,

Calif. Please accept the enclosed check for $1,000 as a

gift to Uncle Sam. It is my intention to put aside a

regular sum monthly and each time this reaches the amount

of $1,000 to add it to my contribution as a slight token
of my appreciation of the Government's effort in our behalf.
Joe Dean, Secretary, Local 450, UFWA, Cleveland, Ohio. * # *
Here in Cleveland we have a large, modern plant, manufactur-

ing office partitions, which can produce thin steel bulkheads and interior fittings for ships, as well as plane

and tank parts. This plant, the E. F. Hauserman Company,
with which we have a union contract, up to the present time

has secured small war contracts only for its regular product-partitions for Army camps and war plants. But all the company's efforts to do really important war work--such as
supplementary shipbuilding--have been turned down, and as a

result the plant is working at less than half of capacity.

* Why is there so much delay in spreading the work,
which we all know must be done in the shortest possible

time? If the great shipbuilding industry, as well as the
aircraft and automobile industries, cannot do it all,--and
it is obvious that they cannot--portions of the work should

be subcontracted immediately to all the small plants that
are able to help. Or must we assume that the monopoly controls of big industry are to be preserved, even if we lose
the war? The workers in this union, in common with all
organized labor, have pledged themselves to the task of

winning the war. We feel it is our duty to point out to

92

-2the WPB, and all other agencies of the Government, every

means of increasing production at every point. As loyal
Americans, we feel that so long as plants such as Hauserman's remain idle, we are not giving our brothers in the
armed forces the support they rightfully expect of us.
Edward L. Sargent, Woodbury, N.J. Since the beginning
of time, man has had the desire to save and possess small

articles that would remind him of a certain happening;
souvenirs they are called. # # * I believe that James
Farley was the first man to make the U. S. Post Office a
paying proposition through his practice of furnishing
many issues of stamps for the collectors to buy and to
save. Why couldn't the Treasury Dept. start a "World
War #2 Souvenir Campaign"? Any article would do. A fragment of a Jap plane, a piece of metal from a "Dud" bomb

stamped with a serial number for a saleable price. The
article, serial number, and name of the original purchaser
for permanent record could be taken by, for example, the
Post Office clerks when the sale was made.

J. Purdon Wright, Baltimore, Md. Under date of March 24
I wrote you asking certain questions concerning the obtaining of a release of a mortgage held by an alien enemy.

Not hearing from you, I wrote again on April 14. It is
now May 1, and still I have not heard from you. Is it
not possible for a citizen to get a reply to an inquiry
from your Department?

T. D. Quinn, Administrative Assistant to the Attorney
General, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C. There
are transmitted herewith checks numbered 2066,2219, 2120

and 2128, dated Jan. 9, Jan. 14, Jan. 21, and Feb 10,
drawn on the California Bank, First and San Pedro Office
by The Rafu Shimpo, in the sum of $377.50, $1,676.21,
$473.00 and $842.38, respectively. These funds represent
Japanese
contributions by subscribers to the Los Angeles
Daily News for the purpose of purchasing an ambulance for
the United States Army.

93

-3The following is quoted from an open letter addressed
to Mr. Henry Morgenthau, Jr. and printed on the front
page of the Laredo Times, Laredo, Texas: "Naturally,
the taxpayers read a great deal about you and one of the
things that impresses us a great deal is that we have
never heard of any responsible person questioning your

honesty and integrity. In politics, that is quite a

record." Comments on increased taxation, labor difficulties and demands, and in particular, the details of a
local scandal in regard to airport construction. "You and
I both believe any good American should expose corpuption

of this kind, unless we are drifting into the kind of

Government we are trying to defeat in Europe. # #

We

have taken these matters up with our Congressman. He

frankly tells us things are in such a mess in Washington
it is hard to get anybody there to understand anything.

We believe our Congressman will be re-elected by a great
majority because the people generally know him a capable
man, and don't blame him as the cause of all this mess.

We are thinking of having this letter reprinted in one of

the Washington newspapers in the next week or so as a paid
advertisement as we did once before. We would do this

just to try to find out if patriotism is for sale or if the

spoils belong to the fellow who puts up the most money for
Government contracts and political campaigns.
Mrs. Louise Moody Merrill, Providence, R.I. The people

are willing to give their last dollar for taxes and Defense
Bonds, but they are not willing to have it squandered by

the Government. # # " When it is F.D.R. and Harry Hopkins,

they cannot help it. Are you going to let them do this?

If the people can be assured their money is being used to
the very best advantage, you will get more money. I know

you are doing your very best, but you will have to fight
harder. I am grateful for what you are trying to do in
this terrible mess.

George Schofield, N.Y.C. I would hate to be charged with

not being patriotic, but how can this Administration expect
us to buy War Bonds after reading the testimony brought out
before the House Appropriations Committee yesterday with
reference to Mrs. Rosenberg. I should appreciate your
point of view.

94

-4Favorable Comments on Bonds

Walter D. Erwin, General Agent, General American Life

Insurance Company, St. Louis, Mo. Just a note to tell
you that in the last four months I have contacted the
personnel and management of eighteen organizations in

Southern California employing approximately 4,125. Sev-

eral of these concerns are now 100% on purchase of War
Bonds under the salary allotment plan which has been sug-

gested by your Department, and which we of the life

insurance fraternity have installed. You will be happy
to know that in my entire work I have yet to meet a single
person who has not been sold on the idea and I therefore
believe that the purchase of War Bonds will continue and

will increase. The new idea of ringing doorbells is a

good one because that really combs the territory and will
doubtless show a decided increase in purchase of Bonds

and Stamps. * I appreciate your splendid leadership

and assure you of my continued earnest cooperation in this
colossal job of finding the money to finance the war.
Hersch Schipper, Weirton, W. Va. This afternoon I went
to a movie. You were on the screen, urging all Americans
to buy Defense Bonds at the rate of 10% of their earnings.
How proud I was then ! And I wished you were there in person

so I could tell you, Sir, not just 10%, but 60% of my earnings are invested in Defense Bonds every month. I pledged
that to our dear President several months ago in the form
of a letter, and since then I buy every month a $100 Bond.

And I have a double purpose too -- first of all, that great

land. of liberty must reassure her freedom forever. We must

win the war. Second, it may rescue my wife and little

child, if they are still alive in one of the Nazi Polish

ghettos.

Wolf & Dessauer, Fort Wayne, Ind. (Telegram) Last week
instead of holding our customary anniversary sale, Wolf &
Dessauer Department Store devoted its entire advertising

and selling efforts to the sale of War Bonds. Result,

our co-workers sold over $300,000 worth of War Bonds during
the six days.

95

-5Samuel Neusner, Publisher, The Jewish Ledger, Hartford,

Conn. Your form letter of April 21 was received and was

highly appreciated. I had no idea that the Treasury
Dept. noticed papers like ours which are of service. It

may interest you to know that we have been carrying Bond
and Stamp publicity from the first day the campaign was

announced. We claim no credit for that because it is our
duty to work with all Government Departments. Insofar as

paid advertising is concerned, I feel it would be criminal
on the part of any publisher to charge for advertising

space in connection with the sale of War Bonds and Stamps.
I herewith offer you a quarter page of our paper weekly

until the war is over. If there is anything else you
desire, please don't fail to call upon us.

C. H. Hilbers, Detroit, Mich. My son, Gerard, Jr., is a

newspaper carrier for the Detroit News, and has been work-

ing very hard to sell Defense Savings Stamps. In fact, so

hard that he in a few weeks has sold enough Stamps to earn
a bronze badge, a silver, and a gold bar. Now the boy has

lost this and the poor kid is just about heartbroken over
it. My earnest request to Your Honor is -- can you replace
this for him, even if we do have to pay for same? I will
gladly do SO. He now has for himself two $25 Bonds, and
sells more than 200 Stamps a week, and he is only 14 years
old. We ourselves are 100% for the U. S. and have $250
in Bonds, and are buying $10 worth every week. It is

96

-6Unfavorable Comments on Bonds

C. R. Loafer, Springfield, Mo. You want us to buy War
Bonds. I want to buy as many as I can, but in three
attempts to do so today, I was unable to make the purchase. The first attempt was at a bank. There was no
one at the cage where they sold Bonds. I next went to
the Southside Station of the Post Office. They said
there was no one there who could write out a Bond. I
went back there later for my third attempt. They said
they would close in 10 minutes and that wasn't time
I don't want to waste
enough to write out a Bond.
valuable time trying to argue some one into selling me
a Bond every time I can buy one. I would suggest a general letter to Post Office employees telling them that
you really want to sell these Bonds.
Max Mendlowitz, Brooklyn, N.Y. Please make a statement

through the press on the following -- Many recipients of

Home Relief, Old Age Assistance, Child Welfare, and the

blind would like to skimp from their food a few pennies
a week to buy Defense Stamps, but fear the officials of
the Department of Public Welfare may stop the aid they
receive. We all want to have a share in our forthcoming

victory. Home Relief officials must give the o.k. for

recipients to buy Defense Bonds and Stamps.

J. K. Beach, Liquid Carbonic Corp., Dallas, Tex.
In my letter of April 24 I told you that we were extremely
proud of the fact that in six months' time we had invested
$20,000 face value in Defense Bonds from all of our em-

ployees out of a payroll of $55,000. The actual dollars

and cents involved means that we put $15,000 in actual
cash into Bonds out of a payroll of $55,000, which figures
almost 30%. This was made up through the fact that several

of our higher salaried group bought well in excess of the

minimum which we had suggested for our employees. This,

-

I am sure, will convince you that we are thoroughly willing
in fact, eager to do everything in our power to help the

Government finance this war. I told you in that letter that
I sincerely hoped the Senate would not act upon your sug-

gestions for raising the new seven and a half billion dollars

97
-

in taxes. I feel that in the form you presented it, you

are dealing a staggering blow to all the incomes in
America which will be felt particularly by the crowd from
$3,000 to $10,000. * # * I could not ask my employees at
large to subscribe 10% of their monthly salary to Bonds

with your tax bill staring us directly in the face. I,

myself, will have a terrible time paying my own income
tax next year if your suggestions are approved, and will
certainly have to cut down from a $100 Bond every month

possibly to $50, but very likely to a $25 Bond. In other
words, I feel that you are putting the burden in the wrong
place and still feel that a general Sales Tax is the only
solution to the problem.

Henry Moseman, Carter, S. Dakota. Many farmers are deeply

in debt. Some owe far more than all their property will
sell for at present. What position should be taken in sell-

ing these individuals War Savings Bonds? To buy, they must
borrow money at high interest, and the money goes out of
production, and nearly all farmers here are short of money

for producing, and this will be unsound inflation, and likely
to leave many broke when they should be able to support

themselves. It seems to me if such individuals would pledge
to pay off on their debts, when such debts are large, the
country will be benefitted more than if forced to buy Bonds.
J. W. Moore, New Orleans, La. If I may suggest -- lets

have the LIBERTY BOND DRIVES OF THE FIRST WAR OVER AGAIN.

Proof that such drives will work again is found in the success of trips taken by movie stars, etc. These Bonds now

being offered were "savings" Bonds in which only the very
thrifty were interested. We have moved from that stage
into a need for money represented by these Bonds, and have
done nothing to stir the patriotism or enthusiasm of possible

Bond buyers. Lets quit trying to give a slow horse a shot
in the arm for awhile, then COME OUT WITH A LIBERTY BOND

DRIVE, and you can soon sell five billion dollars, because
it will give us common folks a chance to express our fidelity,
our enthusiasm for the success of our effort, and at least
satisfy our desire to DO SOMETHING TO HELP THE CAUSE, which

we do not have under the present set-up, and would be completely deprived of if subscriptions were made compulsory.

98

-8Northern Pump Co., Minneapolis, Minn. (Telegram) On
receipt of your telegram we immediately called a mass
meeting of our 6,400 employees and advised them that
employees applying for 10% of their pay in War Savings
Bonds would receive a 5% pay increase. # # # This action

represents the first and, I hope, only coercive payroll

deduction originated by the management. It is indeed unfortunate that during this war effort, management should

have to take the responsibility of coercing labor to

purchase Defense Bonds which they would not, repeat not,

purchase of their own free will. # # # Our Bond sales
have averaged only 7%, which is far better than any After
other local plant not using coercive methods.
months of explanations and sales effort on the part of
the management, explaining the basic safety and other fine
investment qualities of War Bonds, even our highly intelligent machinists feel that their Social Security deductions
are gone forever, and that War Bonds are a questionable and
undesirable investment. There is always a certain loss
of school spirit and friction when management tells labor
how to spend the pay check. However, our employees will
understand that their management is also subject to pressure from Governmental officials. * * #
L. Y. Spear, President Electric Boat Co., Groton, Conn.
(Telegram) Our campaign for sale of War Savings Bonds

inaugurated July, 1941. Our plan publicized by Federal
Credit Union as model to be followed. Sales through plant
slowed down only when Reserve Banks required three weeks

to deliver Bonds. No relief obtained by reporting situation to E. W. Sloan. Nevertheless, original goal passed.
Suggest you send representative to help solve delivery
problem.

Geo. A. Peachman, Auditor, California Bank, Los Angeles.

In connection with payroll deduction plan for the purchase

of War Savings Bonds, there has accumulated in the custody
of the various employers, amounts which must in the aggregate represent a very large sum of money, consisting
of payments by employees toward the purchase price of
Bonds subscribed for through the employer. For example,

99

-9if an employee allots $1.00 per month, it would take
19 months to accumulate sufficient funds to acquire a

$25 maturity value Bond, and the Treasury in the meanwhile does not have use of the funds. # # # Such funds
could be made available to the Treasury through the purchase of Stamps, but this procedure does not appear to be

practical to follow, and as the Bonds are not negotiable,
It does not appear practical for the employer to purchase
Bonds as trustee, with the accumulated funds. I feel sure

that both employees and employers would be willing to cooperate in any practical procedure recommended by the
Secretary of the Treasury and thus make immediately available for war purposes what in the aggregate should be a
very large amount.

John P. Mulherin, Jr., Jacksonville, Fla. I have just

read your letter to the people of Georgia in The Augusta
Chronicle, in which you state that every wage earner is

expected to set aside ten per cent of his salary for the

purchase of War Bonds or Stamps. I would like to know
how this arbitrary percentage was arrived at. Anybody
with intelligence enough to keep out of an insane asylum

should be able to figure out that a single man with no

dependents can buy a much larger percentage of Stamps than

a man with a family working for the same salary. # # # In

my case, as is probably the case of many other married men

with children, If I set aside 10% of my salary, I will

have to cut down to two meals a day, or start sleeping in
a tent. I am now 42 years old, and I am a Veteran of the

first World War. ( enlisted (volunteered) at the age of
17, and saw service in France with the 28th Division. I

therefore feel that I do not need to make any defense of my
patriotism.

Mrs. Robert Rives LaMonte, New Canaan, Conn. # I believe
that there are thousands on thousands of families like mine
who would willingly and gladly buy more Defense Bonds, were

it not for one haunting nightmare - the dread of a doubling
of next year's income tax. There are two of us in our
family at home, both in the neighborhood of 75 years old.
# We are obliged every moment to have a trained nurse,
and a general maid to care for us and cook and clean. Our

100
- 10 income comes half from trust funds; half from accumulated
earnings. * # # This year we paid an income tax of $427.
The idea that next year's tax may be $850 means a constant

saving from our regular monthly expenditures. I do not
object to a Sales Tax, but for the sake of a large population, I do wish that in some way we could know what our
next March income tax will be. This would set free our
small savings and we could buy more Defense Bonds.

Julius Helphand, Helphand Clothing Co., Sioux Falls, S. Dak.

With reference of the sale of victory bonds I wish to convay my personal obserwation in my comunity and the small

towns within seventy-five miles arround. The farmers

are getting a lot of cash for hogs and farm produce, those
moneys is princeply hoardet, hiden in cash and kept out of
banks, and they buy very little bonds. The reason bonds
is not bought is manny. Some think that they will sell of
the price like in the last war, some don't wish any one to

know they have money, and manny are fifth and sixt columsnist.
One advance the idia that the government is paying ten prices
for everything they buy, and why trow awy the money. Those
is a poor exuse, but they are not buying bonds. Would sug-

gest that you should order the sale of bonds in every town
and make it plenty high; make one demand and a good one.

Mrs. A. J. Day, Silver Spring, Md. Before you make it

compulsory to save 10% on War Bonds may I bring to your

notice several facts that perhaps you are unaware of. First,
may I state that I think the idea an excellent one for munition workers and others who are making large sums of money

now, but as the wife of a Government worker, I feel like saying, "How in the world can it be done?" Are you aware that
most of the men in Government work have not had an increase

in salary for a year or so? * * * I am enclosing a copy of

our budget and if you can suggest a way that I might save
10%, then I shall be most happy.

101

- 11 Further Response to Special Mailing in Regard
to 10% War Bond Purchases

(Favorable)

A. J. Altmeyer, Chairman, Social Security Board. Thank
you for the stimulating material on War Savings.
Both the explanatory statement and the "case history" of
the General Electric Company seem to me to be very well
designed and presented. Their distribution just preced-

ing the President's "fireside chat" is very timely. We

expect to make effective use of this material as one means
of encouraging increased participation in War Savings on
the part of the Board's personnel.

Senator Theodore G. Bilbo, Washington, D. C. % # I am

well impressed with the way the program is being executed.

A truly American spirit governs, and there is a significant
absence of the "witch hunting" element. Besides raising
funds for prosecution of the war, this plan will go far to
engender habits of thrift among our people. The thrift

angle is important too, when we consider that our enemies
now are fighting us with our own waste materials of the

past. It is gratifying to see that millions of Americans
are responding in a spirit of patriotic privilege and duty.
I am especially happy to have your comments on the manner
in which Organized Labor is responding, because there has

been entirely too much criticism of Labor by certain groups
of individuals who would have it appear that Organized

Labor is a kindred spirit if not actually a blood cousin

of the Axis powers. * # # The members of my staff have been

buying Stamps and Bonds right along, I believe, but I shall
urge them to step up their purchases in the future in line
with the schedule suggested in your leaflet.

102
- 12 Further Response to Special Mailing in Regard
to 10% War Bond Purchases

(Unfavorable)

C. H. Armstrong, Wichita, Kan. N # # You say that from
July 1, 1942, to June 30, 1943, we shall spend in the
neighborhood of 60 billion dollars. Then you say: "I
shall be glad to hear from you and I shall welcome any
inquiries or comments you may wish to make." This let-

ter is in response to the invitation quoted above. My

comment on the first statement is that you would not need
quite so much money if your department and other depart-

ments of the Government would quit wasting so much on use-

less paper and printing. My second comment is that I, as

an employer, do not have time to wade through such a mass

of words as is contained in the material which I am re-

turning herewith. About all that is essential in this
could be told to me in a our-page folder, which I would
gladly read. I most assuredly do not have time to sit

down and read all this stuff which just reached me, and
which is similar to many other loads of propaganda which
come to my desk from Washington. All of the above is intended to be constructive, as I am most heartily in sympathy
with the purpose of the effort to raise the money necessary
for the war, and to do everything possible to carry on
successfully.

Robert H. Cowdery, Vice President, The American Fork & Hoe
Your general reasoning is probably
Co., Geneva, Ohio.

correct, but in individual cases like ours, it is miles

astray. By act of Washington, two-thirds of our business
here has been wiped right out. * * *Our people are frightened
and do not know what they are going to do. Certainly they
are not going to be very interested in buying more Bonds,
nor are they particularly impressed by the fact that they
are going to have greatly increased earnings. We may be an
exception, but you can't get water out of a stone, and all
over the country there are very, very many instances where
these arbitrary closures, without offering war work in return,
are making it impossible for people who were happy earning

103
- 13 money to purchase as many Bonds as they were doing. You

are looking at all of us as just the same kind of Guinea
Pigs, but after all, we have our individual problems, just

as American citizens have always had them, and regimenta-

tion may be fine in theory, but it is tough on the exceptions. We all accept the sacrifices demanded from us, but

your letter sort of rubs it in. * *

*

P. J. Cardinal and 0. A. Zeitz, War Bond Committee,
Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., Nutley, N.J. Much thought has

been given to your letter of April 25. Judging from our
own experience, success along the "first front which you
outline should be attainable in fairly quick time. *
In connection with your "second front" it seems to us
that the suggested formula is too simple in that it is
unfair to expect the per capita monthly allotment from

workers in all types of business. * In all of the

publicity it seems to be taken for granted that, due to

the war effort, every wage earner has experienced a tremendous increase in real wages -- i.e., the difference
between actual wages and cost of living. To us this seems
an erroneous approach. Overlooked are the thousands of
wage earners employed in industries where real wages have,

on the whole, not increased appreciably, if at all. In

many instances "real" wages have undoubtedly gone down

instead. These folks, nevertheless have been straining
their budgets to purchase war bonds, although their average
participation may amount to a considerably lower percentage
than the 10% you set up as a goal. Because they have been
steadily employed for a considerable period, they know more
about their living expenses, judicious spending, and the

advisability of thrift. * " So that if you want to pipe

off the really dangerous increased purchasing power, It
would seem that a formula ought to be devised which would

call for War Bond participation, not according to wage
levels, or average percentage of payroll, but in proportion
to the extent to which an individual's wages increased over
a carefully selected recent period.

- 14 -

104

Unfavorable Comments on Taxation

Comments from a letter Senator Rufus C. Holman has received from Charles Konecki, Manager of the Columbia

Supply Company, Astoria, Oregon. -- On April 24, 1942,
a representative of the U. S. Revenue Department, Liquor
Division, appeared in my office. He informed me that I
had to pay for a special stamp in addition to our own
stamp, because we had sold some $30 worth of beer which

we delivered to Oney's Tavern, located at Elsie, Oregon,
some thirty miles from Astoria. This Tavern has been
established for quite a number of years, and as far as
we had knowledge, has been duly licensed by both the State
and Federal Liquor Control Boards. # " # The Department
did not, in any way, protect us by advising us that Oney's
Tavern was not in possession of this stamp, regardless of
the fact that the Department has some twenty inspectors
visiting us from time to time. The Department did not
discover that the proper stamp was not in use until the
Tavern made application for a stamp for the ensuing year.
When the application did come through, the distributors

were not notified. This collector is now collecting for

a stamp from every distributor which costs $96.25. We cannot quite figure out why each of us should pay for a stamp.
At the most, it should be divided equally between the seven
distributors here. # # *I have asked the Revenue Collector
for a hearing on this matter, but he informed me that
should any one refuse to pay, an attachment could be made

on the business and no hearing of any kind would be allowed."

105

MAY 8 1942

Dear Bills

I have your letter of
12

May 6.

I as willing to make
available the services of Mr. E.
Hiley Campbell to assist in the
investigation looking toward the

identification of certain French
funds.

Sincerely,
(Signed) Henry

Non. William J. Donovan,

Coordinator of Information,

Washington, D. C.

Photofils n.m.c.
EHF:mdm

5/7/$2

By Messenger Sturges 4:40

COORDINATOR OF INFORMATION
WASHINGTON, D. C

May 6, 1942

Dear Henry:

As you doubtless know, the Treasury and COI have begun

a search which may lead to the identification of certain
French funds, of which John Wiley recently spoke to you.

It would be of the utmost help if you could find it
possible and convenient to loan us temporarily the services of Mr. E. Riley Campbell, who has already assembled

valuable material bearing on this matter. As you are
doubtless aware, his qualifications are unique.

I should be most grateful for your early and favor-

able consideration of this request -- which I realize is
no small one.

With best personal regards,
Yours very sincerely,

Biu
Jorgan
William Donovan.
The Honorable

The Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. C.

V

107

TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE May 8, 1942
TO

Secretary Morgenthau

FROM E. H. Foley, Jr.

Some time ago a member of Pehle's staff attended a conference

in New York along with representatives of the office of the

Co-ordinator of Information, at which an informant named Archawski,
formerly associated with several large French banks, discussed

various important French officials and companies, particularly
Laval. Although the informant had no definitive information, he
felt confident that Laval had substantial funds in the United States,
and reasoned that it was most likely that such funds were held

here by persons with whom Laval has had close associations in the
past, particularly, Raymond T. Patenotre.
The information obtained at this New York conference was
the basis of the memorandum Wiley sent you about Laval. Subsequently a meeting was held between COI and the Treasury at which

the Treasury indicated that it would continue its investigation

of the various leads and call on COI for any help which was needed.
The Foreign Funds Control and Mr. Wiley's staff are cooperating
in the investigation.

The significant information in our possession with respect

to Laval's funds may be summarized as follows:

It is true that Raymond T. Patenotre was a close
friend and supporter of Laval. They had numerous

financial deals, as a result of which Laval profited to
a substantial extent. Patenotre has approximately
$5 million dollars in blocked accounts in the United States.
Patenotre is, of course, a wealthy individual in his own
right since he married Eleanor Elverson, former owner of
the Philadelphia Inquirer which was ultimately sold to

Annenberg.

We have discovered that between the middle of 1940
and the middle of 1941 there was increase of approximately
$2,500,000.00 in the Patenotre accounts in the United States.

108

-2We are tracing the source of these funds. . It may be
significant that Rene de Chambrun, the son-in-law of
Pierre Laval made a visit to the United States during
this period.

Laval is also believed to have an interest in the

Metropolitan Fire Insurance Company through a French

company in this country known as Trans-Atlantic Securities,
which is in turn owned by two French insurance companies.
We will keep you informed of any significant developments.

9.1.74.

109

MAY -1942
KENCRANDUX FOR THE PRESIDENT:

Recently you inquired as to the present status of
the De Laval Separator Company, which has an office in
Poughkeepsie. The information available to us with respect to this company may be summarized as follows:

This company, which has assets of about nine million dollars, has been blocked as a national of Sweden
since June 14, 1941, and is presently operating under a

Foreign Funds Control license. It is engaged in the
business of manufacturing cream separators, milking
machines, oil purifiers, and other industrial centrifugal machinery. Since 1939 it has been producing substantial quantities of machinery and equipment for the

War and Navy Departments and for the Maritime Commission.
The De Laval Separator Company has several subsidiaries
in the United States and Canada.

The officers and directors of the De Laval Separator
Company are all Americans residing in the United States
except one Axel Wastfelt, who is residing in Sweden.
There have been no significant changes in the officers
or directors of the company since 1927.
Our records indicate that 10 percent of the stock

of the De Laval Separator Company is owned by F. J. Arend,
an American citizen who has been president of this com-

bany since prior to 1927. Five percent of the stock is
held by two other American citizens. The remaining 85

percent of the stock of the De Laval Separator Company is
owned by Aktiebolaget Separator, a Swedish company. In

July, 1941, this stock was placed in a voting trust held
by three American citizens who are officers of the De
Laval Separator Company.

110

-2Aktiebolaget Separator has a small branch office
located in New York City which is presently operating
under a Foreign Funds Control license. The primary
function of this branch office is to collect the earnings of De Laval Separator Company and its affiliates
for transmittal to Sweden. A representative of this
New York office indicated in a sworn statement to the
Foreign Funds Control that all of the owners of
Aktiebolaget Separator are believed to be residents
and nationals of Sweden. Other than this sworn statement, we have no definite information as to the ownership of Aktiebolaget Separator. However, we have established that in 1938 J. Wallenberg was one of the
directors of the company. He is no longer a director.
Two of the present directors of the concern were minor
employees in 1938.

ments.

We will keep you advised of any significant develop-

(Signed) H. Morgenthau, JF.

JWPehle:ged 5/8/42

111
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION

DATE May 8, 1942
TO

FROM

Secretary Morgenthau

H. D. White

There are appended two separate folders:

The first folder, la5 elled "Conference of Finance Ministers
of the United and Associated Nations," includes a sample draft of
the kind of invitation that the President might send, the agenda
that might go along with the letter, and the detailed agenda for
the conference and sub-committees. We also have some other
material bearing on the agenda and conference which 18 not included.
The second folder, labelled "United Nations Stabilization
Fund and Bank for Reconstruction and Development of United and

Associated Nations," includes the outline of the suggested plan
and some discussion of the important points.
I suggest that you glance through the folder labelled "Conference of Financial Agencies - etc. If and read Part I of the
suggested plan in the other folder.
The important decision to be made at this time is not the

merits of a particular plan, but rather, the question as to,
first, whether a conference should be held, and if so, who shall
call the conference and when shall it be called. There is at
least a couple of months of preliminary work necessary between
the calling of the conference and the first meeting of the Ministers. It is not assumed that we would present to the conference
any specific plan, though a general outline might be made
evailable informally.
If you believe we should go ahead, a decision will have to
be made whether you should approach the President directly, or
whether to submit the idea to the State Department or Board of
Economic Warfare first. There are a number of other points of
preliminary "tactics" that would need to be determined before
anything is done.

I believe the whole business, if handled correctly, can be

extremely important.

This is not a matter that can be postponed indefinitely, inas-

much as we are committed by a resolution of the Rio Conference, and
2 number of inquiries have already reached me as to the status of

the matter. Furthermore, if the Treasury doesn't initiate a conference on the subject it almost certainly will be initiated elsewhere, and it should be preeminently Treasury responsibility.

112

CONFERENCE ON FINANCIAL AGENCIES FOR
POST-WAR RECONSTRUCTION

I. List of
Finance Ministers to be Represented at the
Conference.
II. Program
of the Conference of Finance Ministers of the
United and Associated Nations.
III. Tentative
Suggestions with Respect to the Agenda for
the Conference.

IV. Formal Invitation by the President of the United States
to the Governments of the United and Associated

Nations.

V. Address by the Secretary of the Treasury of the United
States, Setting Forth the Need for and Objectives
of a Stabilization Fund and a Bank for Reconstruction.
VI. Addresses of Representatives of Leading Countries.
VII. Tentative Agenda for Sub-Committees of the Conference:
A. Sub-Committee on Powers of the Stabilization
Fund;

B. Sub-Committee on Powers of the Bank for
Reconstruction;

C. Sub-Committee on Conditions for Membership

in the Stabilization Fund;

D. Sub-Committee on Conditions for Membership
in the Bank;
E. Sub-Committee on the Composition and Management
of the Fund;

F. Sub-Committee on Capital Structure, Distribution
of Profits, and Management of the Bank;

G. Sub-Committee on the Preparation of Organic Laws
for the Bank and for the Fund.

Treasury Department

Division of Monetary Research
April 1942.

113

I

114

Note:

United Nations are those nations which
have agreed not to negotiate a separate peace

with the Axis nations.
Associated Nations are neutral nations
which have severed diplomatic relations with
the Axis powers.

115
I.
FINANCE MINISTERS TO BE
REPRESENTED AT CONFERENCE OF UNITED

AND ASSOCIATED NATIONS

United Nations
Commonwealth of

Australia

1. Hon. J. B. Chifley

Treasurer

2. M. Camille Gutt

3. Hon. J. L. Illsley

Minister of Finance Kingdom of Belgium
Minister of Finance Dominion of Canada

4. Mr. H. H. Kung

Minister of Finance Republic of China

5. Sr. Carlos M. Escalante Duran Minister of Finance Republic of Costa Rica
Minister of Finance Republic of Cuba
6. Dr. Oscar Garcia Montes
Minister of Finance Republic of Czecho7. M. Ladislav Feierabend
Slovakia

8. Sr. Virgilio Alvarez Pina

Minister of Finance Dominican Republic

9. Sr. Rodrigo Samayoa

Minister of Finance Republic of El Salvador

0. Mr. K. Varvaressos

Minister of Finance Kingdom of Greece

11. Dr. Jose Gonzalez Campo

Minister of Finance Republic of Guatemala

12. Sr. Abel Lacroix

Minister of Finance Republic of Haiti

3. Sr. Quesada

Acting Minister of

Republic of Honduras

14. Sir Jeremy Raisman

Finance Member of

Government of India

15. M. Pierre Dupong

Minister of Finance

Grand Duchy of

16. Jr. J. Alberda

Minister of Finance, Kingdom of the

7. Hon. Wal ter Nash,

Minister of Finance

Finance

Vice Regal Council

Luxemburg

A.I.

Netherlands

New Zealand

8. Engr. J. Ramon Fevilla Sacasa Minister of Finance Republic of Nicaragua
Minister of Finance Kingdom of Norway
9. Mr. Paul G. Hartmann
0. Sr. Jose Antonio Sosa

Minister of Finance Republic of Panama

21. Mr. Henryk Strassburger

Minister of Finance Republic of Poland

2. Hon. J. H. Hofmeyr,

Minister of Finance Union of South Africa

3. Mr. Arseni G. Zverev

Peoples' Commisar

24 Sir Kingsley Wood,

for Finance

Chancellor of the
Exchequer

25. Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr.

26. Mr. J. Sutej

Union of Soviet
Socialist Republica
United Kingdom of

Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
United States of

Secretary of the
America
Treasury
Minister of Finance Kingdom of Yugo-Slavia

116
Associated Nations
27. Sr. Joaquin Espada

28 Sr. Arthur de Souza Costa
C

Minister of Finance Republic of Bolivia
Minister of Finance Republic of Brazil

30. Sr. Vicente Illingworth

Minister of Finance Republic of Colombia
Minister of Finance Republic of Ecuador

31. Sr. Eduardo Suarez

Minister of Finance Republic of Mexico

32. Sr. Rogelio Espinoza
33. Sr. David Dasso

Minister of Finance Republic of Paraguay
Minister of Finance Republic of Peru

34. Dr. Javier Mendivil

Minister of Finance Republic of Uruguay

29. Dr. Carlos Lleras Restrepo

35. Dr. Alfredo Machado Hernandez Minister of Finance Republic of Venezuela

II

118

Program of the Conference of

Finance Ministers of the United Nations,
Washington, D. 0.

1st Day -- Afternoon -- First Plenary Session.
A. Address by the President stating broad objectives
of Conference.

B. Nomination and installation of the Presiding
Officer, the Secretary of the Treasury of the
United States.

C. Remarks of acceptance by the Secretary of the
Treasury of the United States, as Presiding
Officer.
D. Nomination and appointment of the Secretary of
the Conference (an official of the United States
Treasury Department).

E. Formation of Committee on Program and Procedure,

made up of the leaders of the delegations of all
countries represented.

F. Address by senior Finance Minister present,

expressing the gratification of all delegates at
their opportunity to participate in the conference.
2nd Day -- Morning -- First Session of the Committee on
Program and Procedure.

A. Recommendation that there be formed a Committee

on Financial Agencies for Reconstruction, made up

of delegates of all the powers represented, and
having authority to appoint sub-ommittees.

-21. Committee to consider and report on all topics
to the plenary sessions.

2. Secretary of Committee to prepare, without
official stenographic report:
a. A list of the Delegates and Secretaries
present;

b. The course and result of the Committee's
deliberations;
c. Announcements to the press, approved by
the heads of delegations.
3rd Day -- Morning -- Second Plenary Session.

A. Address of the Secretary of the Treasury of the
United States, setting forth the need for and
objectives of the Stabilization Fund of the United
and Associated Nations, and the Bank for Post-War
Reconstruction of the United and Associated Nations.
(1 hour).

First Session of the Committee on

Financial Agencies for Reconstruction.

A. Resolution directing the appointment of SubCommittees to prepare interim and final reports
on the organization of the Bank and the Fund, with

the privilege of discussion, but not voting, at
such Sub-Committess, to be extended to all delegations. Sub-Committee appointments to be made as

delegations, not as individuals. Sub-Committees

to have privilege of utilizing technical personnel
from any delegation not a member of such SubCommittee.

119

120

-31. Sub-Committee on Powers of Fund.
2. Sub-Committee on Powers of Bank.

3. Sub-Committee on Conditions for Membership
of Fund.

4. Sub-Committee on Conditions of Membership
of Bank.

5. Sub-Committee on Composition and Management
of Fund.

6. Sub-Committee on Capital Structure, Distribution of Profits, and Management of Bank.
7. Sub-Committee on the Preparation of Organic
Laws for the Bank and for the Fund, to prepare
legal embodiment of principles 8.8 soon as
accepted by the various Bub-Committees, and

to present these legal statements to the
appropriate Sub-Committee as soon as drafted.
B. Appointment of Sub-Committees.

3rd Day -- Afternoon -- First Session of Committee on Financial
Agencies for Reconstruction.

C. Address by representative of Republic of Brazil
(10 minutes).

D. Address by representative of Republic of China
(10 minutes).

E. Address by representative of Republic of Mexico
(10 minutes).

F. Address by representative of Kingdom of the
Netherlands (10 minutes).

G. Address by representative of Union of Soviet
Socialist Republica (15 minutes).
H. Address by representative of United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland (20 minutes).

-4121

4th Day -- Morning and Afternoon -- Second Session of Committee
on Financial Agencies for Reconstruction.

A. Presentation of views by others of 35 nations
represented.

5th to 8th Days -- Meetings of all Sub-Committees.

A. Preparation of interim reports for submission to
the Committee on Financial Agencies for Reconstruction.

9th Day -- Morning and Afternoon -- Third Session of Committee
on Financial Agencies for Reconstruction.

A. First Interim Report of Sub-Committee on Powers
of Stabilization Fund.

B. Discussion of report.
Resolutions accepting portion or whole of report.
C.

D. Resolution directing the Sub-Committee to re-examine
any proposals rejected by the Committee and to con-

tinue its discussions until prepared to render a
final report.
10th Day to 20th Day -- Sessions of Committee on Financial
Agencies for Reconstruction.
A. Reports of Sub-Committees and Resolutions thereon.
20th and 21st Days -- Sessions of Committee on Financial
Agencies for Reconstruction.

A. Draft Resolutions on Stabilization Fund, for
Plenary Session.

B. Draft Resolutions on Bank, for Plenary Session.
22nd Day -- Third Plenary Session of Conference.

A. Discussion of draft resolutions presented by
Committee on Financial Agencies for Reconstruction.

122

-5-

B. Formal adoption of resolutions.
C. Recommendations as to date of Fourth Plenary
Session.

D. Resolution directing continuance of meeting of
Committee on Financial Agencies for Reconstruction.

123

III

III.

124

Tentative Suggestions with Respect to the Agenda for
the Conference

Post-War Agencies of Financial Reconstruction
I.

An international stabilization fund, under which shall
be discussed:

A. Powers.

1. Purchase and sale of gold.
2. Purchase and sale of foreign exchange.
3. Purchase and sale of securities of member
governments.

B. Operations.
1. Limited purchases of members' currencies.
C. Size and Composition.
1. Minimum resources.

2. Gold, currencies, and securities.
3. Determination of contribution of each participating
government.

4. Voting rights of members.
D. Conditions of membership.

1. Monetary policy.
2. Exchange policy.

3. Tariff policy.
4. Commercial policy.

5. Payment of outstanding loan interest.
6. Peaceful objectives.

7. Cooperation in restricting capital exports from
another participant.

E. Management.

125

-2II. A be
Bank
for Post-War Reconstruction, under which shall
discussed:
A. Powers of the Bank.

1. Purchase and sale of gold.
2. Purchase and sale of securities.
3. Issuance of notes in new international currency
and acceptance of deposite in currencies of
participants.

4. Issuance of securities.
B. Lending operations.
1. Gold for monetary reserves.

2. Guaranteed loans for private investors.
3. Direct loans for improvement in standard of
living.
C. Capital Structure.

1. Total capital.
2. Apportionment of shares.

3. Voting rights of members.
D.

Conditions of Membership.

1. Monetary policy.
2. Exchange policy.

3. Tariff policy.
4. Commercial policy.

5. Payment of outstanding loan interest.
6. Peaceful objectives.
E. Management.

128

VI

128

IV

IV.

Preliminary Suggested Draft

127

Formal Invitation to Governments of the
United and Associated Nations

The President is deeply grateful at the cordial response
to his suggestion that there should be a Conference of the
Treasury Departments of the United and Associated Nations, on

the subject of Financial Agencies for Post-War Reconstruction,
in connection with which the Establishment of an International
Stabilization Fund will be discussed, in accordance with
Resolution XV, approved on January 28, 1942, by the Third

Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the American Republics.
The dangers of uncoordinated economic policies after the

armistice are readily apparent, in the light of the history
of the two decades of chimerical peace which ended in 1939.
The monetary and exchange difficulties of 1920-25 are even
more vividly remembered by the other American Republics than

by the United States; the violent distortions of trade on the
European Continent in that period impressed the European

allies of the United Nations even more profoundly than the

United Kingdom. In all parts of the world the restrictions
upon international trade which followed the collapse of
American foreign lending in 1929 brought painful readjustments.
To the depression which followed, and which struck most heavily
at Central Europe and at Latin America, we may ascribe the

accession to power of the Hitlerian regime in Germany. It is
believed that the United and Associated Nations have learned the

lessons of those twenty years. The approaching victory is
believed to be an opportune occasion for these nations to
attempt the stabilization of exchange rates, commercial policies

-2-

128

and the flow of foreign lending, so that a repetition of the
cycle of economic collapse, commercial policies dictated by
unimaginative self-absorption, and armament programs may not

again plunge the world into a third and even more desperate
struggle. For even those peoples which felt most secure are
now reaping the consequences, in casualties and in hard

labor, of their failure to take effective action to assist
well-meaning business and governmental organizations which

were in a weaker position, in the early months of the great
depression.

In order to take effective international steps, it is
clear that the United Nations must prepare plans and establish

an organization which will be ready to function on the day
after the armistice. To agree upon the plans, set up the
organizations, and provide adequate staffs will occupy months
and perhaps years. To encourage the businessmen and workers

of the United Nations and those who labor for them in the
territories now occupied by the enemy, and who may subsequently

join the United Nations, a definite organization must emerge
while the war continues. Protestations of good intentions must
be supported by tangible agencies, ready and capable of taking

quick and effective action, if we are to give the necessary

reassurance which will bring forth the best efforts of all
our people. It is even more important that the United Nations
give some real encouragement and some evidence of their

ability to assist the populations of territories now occupied
by the enemy, so that they will give us their invaluable
assistance in destroying the enemy's supplies and communications
behind his lines.

129

-3As the date of the armistice cannot be predicted, it
is the earnest wish of this Government that, through an

interchange of views with the facilities afforded by a
Conference of Finance Ministers and Secretaries of the

Treasury, it may be possible to find a solution of the
international financial problems of the next era of peace,
of unquestioned importance even in the stress of war, that
is, such common understandings with respect to matters of

international financial concern as may serve to encourage our
populations for the struggle, promote an enduring peace, and
assure a rising S tandard of living for our peoples after
the victory has been won.

130

V

131

V.

Final Draft Not Complete

V. Address by the Secretary of the Treasury of the United
States, setting forth the need for and objectives of a
Stabilization Fund and a Bank for Reconstruction.

132

VI

133

VI.

Final Draft Not Complete

VI. Addresses of Representatives of Leading Countries.

134

VII

135

VII. A.

136

Tentative Agenda for the Sub-Committee on the Powers of

the Stabilization Fund of the
United and Associated Nations

A. Technical Operations.

1. Purchase, sale and custody of gold.
2. Purchase, sale and custody of notes, drafts and
bankers' acceptances denominated in the currency
of any participating country.

3. Purchase and sale of direct obligations of the

central government of any participating country.
4. Acceptance of Deposits.

5. Transfers of title to gold, deposits, and bills

by cables or by draft, duly authorized by the
participating Treasury, to any other participating
Treasury.

B. Purchases of Member currencies.
1.

Treasury of each participating country authorized
to purchase limited quantity of some other currency
from Fund, by surrender of its own currency, for
settlement of debit balance in international accounts,
by payment into another account at the Fund.

a. Exclusion of capital exports from "debit
balance in international accounts."
b. Determination of rate of exchange.
C. Fixation of total amount of currency which
a country has indisputable right to purchase.
d. Limitations on use of currency purchased.
e. Other considerations.

2. Authorization to participating Treasury to purchase
foreign currency in excess of this limited amount,
for settlement of balances due, by payment into
other accounts in Fund.

a. Approval of some proportion of voting strength
of Fund.

(1) Estimated interval before repayment.
(2) Recommendations of Fund on methods of

reducing deficit in balance of payments.

137

-2C. Purchase of balances blocked in member countries at
the end of the war.
1. Repurchase agreements.

2. Limitations on use of proceeds.
3. Service charges.

D. Fixation of buying and selling prices for gold and
currencies.

E. Limitations on dealings with private corporations or
individuals.

F. Consent of government concerned prior to transactions
in any currency.

G. Purchase and sale of currencies of non-participating
governments.

H. Borrowing by the Fund.

I. Purchase and sale of investments.
J. Use of borrowed currency by members for payment of
defaulted loans.

K. Loans of local currency to members.
L. Service charges.

138

VII. B.

139

Tentative Agenda for the Committee on Powers of the
Bank for Post-War Reconstruction of the
United and Associated Nations
A. Loans.

1. Loans for providing metallic reserves.

a. Interest rates.
b. Maturity.
2. Gueranteed loans.

a. General requirements.

(1) Proof of unavailability of private loans
at reasonable interest rates.

(2) Report on purposes of Loan.

(3) Satisfactory rates of interest and
maturities.

(4) Special approval for loans to be expended
on armaments.

(5) Special approval for loans to governments
in default on loans issued to private investors.
b. Special requirements.
(1) Maximum rate of interest.
(2) Maximum proportion of principal and interest
eligible for guarantee.
(3) Prohibition against use of funds for repayment
of outstanding loans.

3. Direct loans.
a. Proof of non-availability of private loans at
reasonable rates and satisfactory maturities.

b. Report approving loan as emergency relief or as
effecting permanent increase in standard of
living of borrowing country.

C. Low rates of interest.
d. Maturities associated with fruition of project.
e. Special approval for loans to be expended on armaments.

(1) Voting procedure.

-2f. Special approval for loans to governments in
default on obligations to private investors.
(1) Association of approval with debt
settlement in some cases.

4. Limitations on Bank's loan operations.
a. No geographical restriction on expenditure,
if within member countries.

b. Currency of loan and of service of loan.
(1) In part, in currency of borrower.

(2) In part, in new international unit.
B. Organization and finance of international corporations,
for development of raw materials, and for stabilization
of commodities, upon approval of membership of Bank.

1. Voting procedure.

2. Limitations on operations of corporations.
C. Technical operations.

1. Purchase, sale and custody of gold.
2. Purchase, sale and custody of securities of
participating governments.

3. Issuance of debentures and other securities, as
well as non-interest-bearing notes.
4. Acceptance of demand, time, custody deposits and
accounts by participating governments, fiscal agents
and central banks.
5. Establishment of demand, time and custody deposits
and accounts with governments or fiscal agents or
central banks.

6. Discount or rediscount of bills, acceptances and
other obligations and credit instruments of
participating governments, fiscal agencies and
central banks.

7. Rediscount with any government, fiscal agency or
central bank of bills, acceptances and instruments
of credit.

8. Purchase and sale of cables, checks, drafts and
acceptances for the account of participating
governments or fiscal agencies.

140

141

-39. Agency functions for participating governments
and
fiscal agencies, central banks and political
subdivisions.
10. Economic analysis and publication.

11. Limitation of transactions to:
a. Dealings with member governments.

b. Dealings with central banks and fiscal agents.
C. Dealings with Stabilization Fund of United
and Associated Nations.

d. Dealings with an international bank owned
jointly by some member governments.

e. Dealings with subsidiary corporations.

142

c

VII. C.

143

Tentative Agenda of the Sub-Committee on Conditions of

Membership in the Stabilization Fund of the United and
Associated Nations

A.

Membership in Bank for Post-War Reconstruction of United and
Associated Nations.

B. Abandonment of exchange controls not approved by Fund.
C. Negative commitments.

1. No alteration of exchange rates without approval of Fund.
2. No bilateral clearing agreement without approval of Fund.
3. No circulation of gold without approval of Fund.
4. Adoption of no fiscal or banking policy leading to change
in net balance of payments without approval of Fund,

5. No increase in tariff rates or change in tariff administration prior to report on proposed changes by Fund.

6. No default on public securities without approval of Fund,
7. No subsidy on exports to member countries without approval
of Fund.

8. No sale to or purchase from member countries of foreign
exchange without approval of Fund.

9. No acceptance of capital inflow from any member country
which does not permit such capital exports.
D. Positive Commitments.

1. Concentration of gold in Central Bank or Treasury.

2. Gradual reduction of existing tariff schedules.
3. Availability to foreign governments of investments owned
by their nationals in the second country.
E. Penalties for Failure to Fulfill Commitments.

1. Suspension of voting rights.
a. Procedure in voting suspension.
2. Expulsion.

144

-2a. Procedure in voting expulsion.
3. Expulsion from Bank for Reconstruction of United and
Associated Nations.

4. Forfeiture of sums due Fund, upon return of contribution.

145

D

146
VII. - D.
Tentative Agenda of the Sub-Committee on

Conditions of Membership in the Bank for
Post-War Reconstruction of the United and
Associated Nations

A. Membership in

1. United Nations Stabilization Fund.
2. Public subscription to "Magna Charta of the United
Nations."

3. Peaceful relations with other members.

B. Expulsion by two-thirds vote

1. Primarily for aggression.
2. Other causes.

147

VII. - E.

148

Tentative Agenda of the Sub-Committee on the Composition

and Management of the Stabilization Fund of the United and
Associated Nations

A. Minimum $5 billion.
B. Composition.

1. Gold.

2. Currencies of participating countries.
3. Securities of participating countries.
C. Determination of contribution of each participating government.

D. Size of initial payment.
E. Form of initial payment.
1. Minimum gold payment.

2. Minimum gold and/or currency payment.

3. Securities.
F. Penalty for failure to make contribution.
G. Board of Directors, consisting of one member from each government, plus President of Bank for Post-War Reconstruction of
United and Associated Nations.

1. Factors in voting power of representatives.
a. Gold contribution to Fund.
b. Currency contribution to Fund.
2. Right to increase total contribution, upon approval of
Fund, and enlarge voting power.

3. Decisions by majority vote, unless otherwise specified.
4. Chairman and Operating Committee.

149

150
VII. - F.

Tentative Agenda of the Sub-Committee on Capital Structure,

Distribution of Profits, and Management of the Bank for
Post-War Reconstruction of the United and Associated Nations.

A. Total authorized capital of 10 billion dollars, in 10,000
shares.

1. Initial payment.
a. Composed of gold and currency of the country.

2. Share certificates salable only to Corporation.
B. Voting strength of shares and members.
1. Minimum of 25 votes per member government, plus one vote
per share.

2. Shares and vote of Stabilization Fund of United and
Associated Nations.
C. Minimum subscription.

1. Percent of estimated national income.
2. Percent of notes and bank deposits.
D. Surplus.

1. To receive 25 percent of profits each year.
2. Maximum surplus equal to 20 percent of paid-in capital.
E. Distribution of remainder to shareholders in gold or in currency
requested.

F. Accounts in new international currency units.
G. Board of Directors.
1. Membership of one member and one alternate allotted to
each shareholding government.

2. Term of office.
3. Powers exercised by majority vote.

a. Selection of President of Corporation, and vice-presidents.
b. Selection of heads of departments.
C. Appointment of advisory committees.

151

-24. Powers exercised by two-thirds majority.
a. Loans.

b. Assumption of guarantees.

C. Acquisition and sale of securities.
d. Discounting and rediscounting of paper.
e. Issuance of debentures and other securities.

f. Selection and removal of presidents and vice-presidents.
5. Delegation of specified powers -a. To Executive Committee, by four-fifths vote, temporarily.

b. To President, by four-fifths vote, temporarily.
C. To special committees, by four-fifths vote, temporarily.
d. To officers and committees, with limited authorization
to make loans, by four-fifths vote.

152

G

153

G.

Dependent Upon Progress of Other
Committees

G. Sub-Committee on the preparation of organic laws for the
Bank and for the Fund.

154

This report has been prepared at the

request of Secretary Morgenthau that I draft

a plan for an International Stabilization
Fund and an International Unit of Currency.

He felt that the requirements of furthering the war effort and preparing for the
financial needs of the reconstruction period
called for the preparation and study of preliminary proposals.
H. D. W.

155

Strictly Confidential

PRELIMINARY DRAFT

UNITED NATIONS STABILIZATION FUND AND
A BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF THE
UNITED AND ASSOCIATED NATIONS

H.D. White
Washington, D. C.

March, 1942

156

CONTESTS
INTRODUCTION

Page

Suggested Plan for a United Nations Stabilization
Fund and a Bank for Reconstruction of the
United and Associated Nationa
Specific Plans must be formulated now

1

Specific Proposals will help win the war

3

Two international government agencies must be

established-- a Stabilization Fund and a
Bank for Reconstruction

4

Proposals must be drafted by experts of foreign
governments meeting for that purpose

Proposals for prior examination by experts would
expedite the work of the conference.

6

7

Willingness to depart from tradition and break
new ground is essential if meaningful results
are to be obtained

7

PART I
FRAMEWORK OF REQUISITE INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES

Stabilization Fund of the United and Associated
Nations.

10-20

A Bank for Reconstruction of the United Nations
and Associates

21-30

PART II
A STABILIZATION FUND OF THE UNITED AND ASSOCIATED
NATIONS
I.

1-6

Purposes of the Fund

II. Powers of the Fund

7-35

Technical Operations
Limited purchases of member currencies.
Additional purchases of member currencies

Unfreezing of blocked funds
of

The Borrowing fixing from rates the

18-30
31

Fund

Borrowing by the Fund
Other powers.

7-8
8-13
13-17

Constant value of total assets.

31-32
32

33-34

34-35

157

-2Page

III. Eligibility for Membership
Abandonment of unnecessary foreign
exchange control.

Stability in exchange rates.
Control of undesirable capital imports
Avoidance of bilateral clearings or

preferential exchanges.
Avoidance of self-generated changes in
net balance of payments
Gradual reduction of trade barriers.
Avoidance of default
Avoidance of export subsidies.
Restrictions on membership

IV. Composition of the Fund
V.

(36-37)
(50-76)
50-54
54-59
59-61
61-63
63-66
66-71
71-72
72-75
75-76
77-81

82-86

Management

PART III
A BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF THE UNITED NATIONS
AND ASSOCIATES

I.

1-4

Purpose

II. Powers

5-33

Loans to member Governments and political
subdivisions.

Guarantees of private loans

Restrictions on loans to defaulting
Governments
Favorable terms for loans of gold to
be held as reserves
Issuance of notes in new international
currency.

Limitations upon use of funds by borrower.

Division of loan receipts between local
currency and international monetary units
Authority to deal in gold and securities
of member Governments

Organization of a corporation for
international development of
essential raw materials

Organization of an international commodity

stabilization corporation

Rediscount of assets with member Governments

III. Capital Structure

5-9

9-10

10-12
12-13

13-24
24-25
25-26
26-27
27-29
30-31
32-33

34-35

158

-3Page

IV. Eligibility for membership
Membership in Stabilization Fund of
United and Associated Nations
Subscription
to "Magna Charta of the
United Nations"
Peaceful relations with member countries
V.

Management.

36-39
36-37
37-38
38-39
40-41

VI. Distribution of profits

42

VII. Reports and information

43-44

159

INTRODUCTION

160
Suggested Plan for a United Nations Stabilization
Fund and a Bank for Reconstruction of
the United and Associated Nations

It is yet too soon to know the precise form or the
approximate magnitude of post-war monetary problems. But

one thing is certain. No matter how long the war lasts
nor how it is won, we shall be faced with three inescapable
problems: to prevent the disruption of foreign exchanges
and the collapse of monetary and credit systems; to assure

the restoration of foreign trade; and to supply the huge
volume of capital that will be needed virtually throughout
the world for reconstruction, for relief, and for economic
recovery.

If we are to avoid drifting from the peace table into
a period of chaotic competition, monetary disorders, depres-

sions, political disruption, and finally into new wars within as well as among nations, we must be equipped to grapple
with these three problems and to make substantial progress
toward their solution.
Specific plans must be formulated now.

Clearly the task can be successfully handled only through
international action. In most discussions of post-war problems this fact has been recognised, yet to date--though a
number of persons have pointed to the solution in general

terms--no detailed plans sufficiently realistic or practical
to give promise of accomplishing the task have been formulated

or discussed. It is high time that such plans were drafted.

-2-

time

161

It is imporative that detailed and workable plans be prepared providing for the creation of agencies with resources,
powers and structure adequate to meet the three major postwar needs.

Such agencies should, of course, be designed to deal

chiefly with post-war problems. But their establishment must

not be postponed until the end of hostilities. It takes many
months to set up such agencies. First, a plan has to be
perfected. Then it has to be carefully considered by a number of countries. In each country, again, acceptance can
follow only upon legislation. That alone will consume many
months and possibly longer. And even when the plan is finally accepted, much time will be further consumed in the collection of personnel, and the performance of the preliminary
ground work which must be done before effective operations

can begin. Altogether, a year may be required before a proposal can be transformed into an operating agency.
Obviously, therefore, even though no important immediate
ends will be served by having such agencies functioning during

war time, it will be an error to wait until the end of the
war is in sight before beginning serious discussion of plans
for establishing such agencies. No one knows how soon the

war will end, and no one can know how long it will take to get
plans approved and the agencies started. Yet, if we are to
"win the peace", which will follow the war, we must have
adequate economic instruments with which to carry on effective

work as soon as the war is over. It would be ill-advised, if
not positively dangerous, to leave ourselves at the end of the
war unprepared for the stupendous task of world-wide economic
reconstruction.

162
Specific proposals will help win the war.

But there is an additional important reason for initiating at once serious discussion of specific proposals.
Such discussion will be a factor toward winning the war.
It has been frequently suggested, and with much cogency,

that the task of securing the defeat of the Axis powers
would be made easier if the victims of aggression, actual
and potential, could have more assurance that a victory by
the United Nations will not mean in the economic sphere, a
more return to the pre-war pattern of every-country-for-

itself, of inevitable depression, of possible wide-spread
economic chaos with the weaker nations succumbing first

under the law-of-the-jungle that characterized international
economic practices of the pre-war decade. That assurance
must be given now. The people of the Anti-Axis powers must

be encouraged to feel themselves on solid international
ground, they must be given to understand that a United Nations

victory will not usher in another two decades of economic uneasiness, bickering, ferment, and disruption. They must be
assured that something will be done in the sphere of international economic relations that is new, that is powerful
enough and comprehensive enough to give expectation of suc-

cessfully filling a world need. They must have assurance
that methods and resources are being prepared to provide them

with capital to help them rebuild their devastated areas,
reconstruct their war distorted economies, and help free them
from the strangulating grasp of lost markets and depleted

reserves. Finally, they must have assurance that the United
States does not intend to desert the war worn and impoverished

-4-

163

nations after the war is won, but proposes to help them in
the long and difficult task of economic reconstruction. To
give that assurance now is to unify and encourage the anti-

Axis forces, to greatly strengthen their will and effort to
win.

Nor will the effect be on the anti-Axis powers alone.
Whether within the Axis countries the will to fight would
be weakened by such arrangements is not certain, but assur-

edly it would not be strengthened. And certainly the people
in the invaded countries, and the wavering elements in the
Axis-dominated and Axis-influenced countries would be given

additional cause to throw in their lot more definitely and
openly with the anti-Axis forces if there is real promise
than an orderly prosperous world will emerge from a United
Nations victory.
Two International Government Agencies must be established-- a

Stabilization Fund and a Bank for Reconstruction.

A vital part of that promise rests on international monetary and banking collaboration. The United Nations and the
Nations associated with them must undertake cooperatively two

tasks as soon as possible: first, to provide an instrument
with the means and the procedure to stabilize foreign exchange
rates and strengthen the monetary systems of the United Nations;
and second, to establish an agency with resources and powers

adequate to provide capital for economic reconstruction, to
facilitate rapid and smooth transition from war-time economies

to peace-time economies, to provide relief for stricken peoples
during the immediate post-war period, to increase foreign

trade, and permanently increase the productivity of the United
Nations.

-5

These two tasks should be kept distinct. Though in
some of their facets and in many of their consequences
there is considerable interdependence and interaction, the
two are different enough to call for separate instrumen-

talities. Each is sufficiently specialized to require
different resources, different responsibilities, and different procedures and criteria for action. To supply the
United Nations with necessary capital not otherwise available except possibly on too costly terms should be the

function of a bank created for that specific purpose;
whereas monetary stabilization--a highly specialized function calling for a special structure, special personnel,
and special organization--would best be performed by a

stabilization fund created to perform that special function.
It is therefore recommended that immediate considera-

tion be given to formulating plans for the establishment of
two separate institutions:
1. A United Nations Stabilization Fund, and
2. A Bank for Reconstruction of the United and
Associated Nations.

While either agency could function without the existence of
the other, the creation of both would nevertheless aid

greatly in the functioning of each. Doubtless one agency
with the combined functions of both could be set up, but it

could operate only with a loss of effectiveness, risk of
over-centralization of power, and danger of making costly
errors of judgment. The best promise of successful opera-

tion seems to lie in the creation of two separate institutions, linked together by one or two directors in common.

164

165
Proposals must be drafted by experts of foreign governments
meeting for that purpose.

It is hoped that some time soon, representatives of
vari ous interested governments will meet in conference to

explore the possibility of working out a plan for the
establishment of an international stabilization fund and
bank. To facilitate the preliminary work of such a committee, and to provide the Treasury officials of the interested governments with a proposal set in specific enough

terms to encourage and justify fruitful discussion prior to
a meeting, the following report has been prepared. It contains a suggested plan for a fund and for a bank, and also
some discussion of the various points involved.
Any one familiar with the task of setting up new and
complex organizations such as the two envisaged will fully
appreciate that no single person, no matter how well informed

on the subject, can hope to draft a plan completely adequate

for the purpose in view. This is especially true of a proposal calling for international collaboration and requiring
acceptance by several governments. To draft a plan that is

likely to meet with approval of various governments is a task
beyond the competence even of a group of economists from a

single country. The provisions of any plan submitted for
consideration would have to be subjected to careful evaluation and examination by a number of men, some of whom should

be expert in the handling of international economic problems
and monetary theory, and others at home in related fields.
In addition to monetary problems, questions of sovereignty,

of national interest, and of broad economic policy are

166
7-

involved in some of the more important provisions, and
these inevitably must be the subject of controversy and
compromise. They are also matters that must be discussed

in detail and at length by high officials whose responsibilities include the shaping and administration of monetary
and financial policy.
Proposals for prior examination by experts would expedite
the work of the conference.
The proposals and comments that follow are submitted

solely for the purpose of providing a starting point for
intelligent discussion, and in order to call attention to
many of the difficulties which would have to be satisfactorily
met before a workable and acceptable plan may emerge. This

report will have served its function if it stimulates discussion by informed persons, and if it helps to crystallize
opinion so that the work of a committee called to consider
the matter may proceed rapidly. The proposals have, there-

fore, been set forth only in outline and for the most part
only those points are included in the outline which are
essential to an understanding of the plan. Any attempt to
couch the plan in the elaborate and carefully worded form
characteristic of final drafts has been purposely avoided.

Preparation of a formal charter or agreement is a task for
a committee of lawyers and economists to be fruitfully undertaken only after agreement has been reached on the essential
points.

Willingness to depart from tradition and break new ground is

essential if meaningful results are to be obtained.
It will perhaps help toward understanding and induce a
more sympathetic approach to the proposals which follow

state at the outset that something much more than the usual

0-

-8-

167

banking and stabilization functions are envisaged in the

plan. There is urgent need for international agencies
which will pierce at the weakest points the type of extreme
economic nationalism which has proved so catastrophic in

its ramifications. There is desperate need for instruments
which will pave the way and make easy a high degree of

cooperation and collaboration among the United Nations in

economic fields hitherto held too sacrosanct for international action or multilateral sovereignty. A breach must
be made and widened in the outmoded and disastrous economic

policy of bach-country-for-itself-and-the-devil-take-the
weakest. Just as the failure to develop an effective League
of Nations has made possible two devastating wars within one
generation, so the absence of a high degree of economic

collaboration among the leading nations will, during the
coming decade, inevitably result in economic warfare that

will be but the prelude and instigator of military warfare
on an even vaster scale.
The Fund and the Bank described in the following pages
are envisaged as economic instruments that most easily and

effectively can serve to bridge the gulf between shortsighted, disastrous economic nationalism and intelligent

international collaboration. It is for this reason that
the resources, powers, requirements for membership, accorded

both agencies go far beyond the usual attributes of banking
and monetary stabilization.
It is certain that some of the powers and requirements

included in the outline of the Fund and the Bank will not
survive discussion, compromise, prejudice and fear of departure

168

-9from the usual. Some may not stand the test of political
reality, and some may be unacceptable on technical grounds,
while others may be generally regarded as going too far

toward "internationaliem". Yet most of them listed appear
as desirable objectives in most writings or conferences on
post-war economies, and are worth considering.

It is my conviction that the long-time effectiveness
of both agencies will be measured by the degree to which

boldness is displayed in their organization and objectives.

Part I, which follows, consists of an outline of (1) a
United and Associated Nations Stabilization Fund, and (2) of
a Bank for Reconstruction of the United and Associated Nations.

Part II consists of a brief explanation and discussion
of the proposed Fund, and Part III of the proposed Bank.

169

PART I

10 -

PART I

A. SUGGESTED OUTLINE OF A UNITED AND ASSOCIATED NATIONS
STABILIZATION FUND.

I. The Purposes of the Fund are:

1. To stabilize foreign exchange rates of the United
Nations.

2. To encourage the flow of productive capital among
the United Nations.

3. To liberate blocked balances.
4. To help correct the maldistribution of gold among
the United Nations.

5. To facilitate the settlement and servicing of
international debts--both public and private.
6. To shorten the periods of disturbing disequilibrium
in the international accounts of member countries

and help stabilize price levels.
7. To reduce the necessity and use of foreign exchange
controls.

8. To eliminate multiple currency practices and bilateral clearing arrangements.
9. To promote sound note issuing and credit policies
and practices among the United Nations.

10. To reduce barriers to foreign trade.
11. To promote more efficient and less expensive

clearings of international exchange transactions.
II. Powers.

To help attain the objectives listed above, the
Fund shall have the following powers:

170

- 11 -

1. Buy, sell and hold gold, currencies, foreign
exchange, bills of exchange, and government bonds

of the "member" countries, and act as a clearing
house for international movement of funds, balances,
checks, drafts, acceptances, gold.
2. The Treasury of each member country shall have the

privilege of purchasing from the Fund the currency
of any member country which the Fund holds, provided:

a. The currency demanded from the Fund is required
to meet adverse balance of payments to the
country whose currency is being demanded.

b. The sum in the Fund of the currency of the country making the purchase shall be, after adding
the sum proposed to be purchased, not more than

100 percent of the total sum--gold currency and

notes--originally contributed to the Fund.
C. The rate of exchange shall be the one determined
by the Fund.

3. Should a country wish to sell its currency to the
Fund in an amount in excess of 100 percent of the

total of its original contribution, approval by
four-fifths of the member votes would be required,
The Fund could decide to purchase the excess of

the currency in question if:
a. It is believed the anticipated balance of payments picture of the country in question were
such as to warrant the expectation that the
"excess" could be disposed of within a reasonable
time, or

171

e
- 12 b. The country in question had gold holdings which
together with gold it expected to accumulate
within a reasonable time was adequate to replace
the excess, and

C. The country in question agreed to adopt and carry
out measures designed to correct the disequilibrium
in the country's Balance of Payments, which the
Fund recommended--after careful examination of the

situation.
4. The governments of member countries may sell to the
Fund, blocked foreign balances acquired from their

nationals, provided all the following conditions are
met:

a. The foreign balances were in member countries and

were either partly or wholly blocked.
b. The foreign balances were included in the sum re-

ported (for the purpose of this provision) by the
member governments as blocked on date of its
becoming a member.

C. The country a elling the blocked balances to the
Fund agreed to begin repurchasing 40 percent of

the amount sold to the Fund, at the price received,
and at a rate not to be less than 2 percent a

year. The repurchases to begin not later than
three years after date of sale, and the currency
to be used in repayment to be either the currency
received or the local currency, as desired by the
Fund.

d. The country in which the blocked balances are held
agrees to transfer those balances to the Fund, and
retransfer back 40 percent of them from the Fund,

-13-

173

at the rate of 2 percent a year, beginning not
later than three years after the date of transfer. The Fund may accept government bonds pay-

able in gold in lieu of part of the blocked
balances, and shall be free to sell such bonds

if it wishes.
e. The country selling the blocked foreign balances
to the Fund needs the proceeds received from the

Fund, in the form in which the country requests
payment by the Fund, for the purpose of meeting
adverse balance of payments arising from any cause

except acquisitions of gold, or accumulation of
foreign exchange balances.

f. The country in which the blocked funds are kept
agrees not to impose any restrictions on the installments of the 40 percent gradually to be repurchased by country holding blocked balances.

g. A charge of 1 percent, payable in the currency of
the country paying shall be levied against the
country selling its blocked funds, and a charge
of 1 percent payable by country in which blocked
account exists.
h. The Fund shall determine from time to time what
shall be the maximum proportion of the blocked

balances it can afford to take over under this
provision.

1. The Fund on its part agrees not to sell the blocked
balances acquired under the above authority, except

with the permission, or at the request of the country in which blocked balances are being held but

-14. -

174

5. The Fund would fix the rates at which it will exchange
one member's currency for another, and the rates at

which it will buy and sell gold with local currencies.
The guiding principle in the fixing of such rates shall
be stability in exchange relationships. Changes in
the rates shall be made only when essential to correction of a fundamental disequilibrium, and only with
the consent of four-fifths of member votes.
6. The Fund shall have authority to deal only with the
Treasuries of the participating countries, or with

official stabilization funds of those countries, and
with the bank designated by participating government

as its fiscal agent, and with international banks owned
by governments.

7. The Fund shall not have the authority to engage in any
transactions within a member country, or with any

corporation or part of the government of that country
without the consent of the Board representative of that
country.

8. The Fund shall have the authority to buy and sell
currencies of non-member countries, but shall not be
authorized to hold such currencies beyond sixty days

after date of purchase, except with the approval of
four-fifths of the member votes.
9. The Fund shall have the authority to borrow, at such
rates as the Fund may recommend, the currency of any

country, provided four-fifths of the member votes
approve the terms, amount and condition of such borrowing.

- 15 -

175

10. The Fund shall have the authority to invest any currency it holds in "short-term" securities--commercial
or government-- of the country of that currency provided a four-fifths vote of the member votes shall
approve, and provided further that the approving votes
shall include those of the country in which the investment is to be made.

11. The Fund shall have authority to sell the obligation
it holds of the member countries provided four-fifths
of the member votes approve, and provided the repre-

sentative of the country in which the securities are
to be sold approves.

12. No sale of any currency from the Fund shall be made to
a member without approval of four-fifths of member

votes when the currency so sold is to be used or is to
make possible adjustment of a government foreign debt
which had been defaulted.

13. Any member country can borrow local currency from the

Fund for one year or less up to 75 percent of the
currency of that country held by the Fund, provided
such loan is approved by three-fourths of the member
votes.

A country borrowing such funds shall pay to the
Fund an interest rate of 1 percent a year. Revenue

from such loans shall constitute a reserve for the Fund
which can be drawn upon to meet expenses or losses of
the Fund.

14. A very moderate service charge shall be made by the
Fund on all exchange and gold transactions.

- 16 -

176

III. Eligibility for Membership.
Any member of the United or Associated Nations is

eligible for membership in the Fund provided it agrees:
1. To abandon, not later than one year after joining the
Fund, or after the cessation of hostilities, which-

ever is later, all restrictions and controls over
foreign exchange transactions with member countries,
except with the approval of the Fund.

2. To alter exchange rates on the currencies of other
countries only with the consent of the Fund and only
to the extent and in the direction approved by the
Fund.

3. (a) Not to accept or permit deposits or investments
from any member country except with the permission

of the government of that country, and
(b) To make available to the government of any member

country at its request all property in form of
deposits, investments, securities, safety deposit
vault contents, of the nationals of that member
country.

4. Not to enter upon any bilateral clearing arrangements.
5. Not to adopt any monetary or general price measure

or policy, the effect of which, in the opinion of a
majority of the member votes, would be to bring about
sooner or later a serious disequilibrium in the balance

of payments, if four-fifths of the member votes of the
Fund submitted to the country in question their disapproval of the adoption of the measure.

-17-

177

6. To embark upon a program of gradual reduction of

existing trade barriers-import duties, import quotas,
administrative devices--and further agree not to
adopt any increase in tariff schedules, or other
devices having as their purpose higher trade obstacles,
without giving reasonable opportunity for the Fund to
study the effect of the contemplated change on exchange

rates and register its opinion. In rendering its
opinion, the Fund will make recommendation to which
the member governments agree to give serious consideration.

7. Not to permit any defaults on foreign obligations of
the government, Central Bank or government agency with-

out approval of the Fund.

8. Not to subsidize--directly or indirectly--the exportation of any commodity or services to member countries
without consent of the Fund.
IV. Composition of the Fund.
1. The Fund shall consist of gold, currencies of member
countries, and member government securities in such

amounts as shall be indicated by a formula set forth
in the agreement.

The total subscription to the Fund shall be the

equivalent of at least $5 billion. The Bank of the
United Nations should subscribe $100 million to the
Fund.

2. The contribution of each country shall consist of 25
percent cash and 25 percent in interest-bearing govern-

ment securities (interest and principal payable in
gold or its equivalent). The remaining 50 percent to

-18-

178

be paid in such installments and in such form as
shall be determined from time to time by the Fund.
The initial payment of 25 percent cash shall

consist of at least one-half in gold, the remainder
in local currencies.
V. Management.

1. The management of the Fund shall be vested in a Board

of Directors consisting of the representatives appointed
by the member governments. Each government shall

appoint one representative.

2. The Board shall elect a chairman and a small operating
committee. The Chairman shall be chief of the operating committee. The members of the operating committee

should devote full time to the management of the Fund,

should be assisted by an appropriate technical staff,
and should receive an adequate salary. The Chief of
the operating committee with the approval of the Board
shall appoint the heads of the departments.

3. In all voting by the Board each representative shall
have one hundred votes, plus one vote for every million
dollars of gold (computed at $35 an oz.) turned over
to the Fund by his government, plus one vote for the

equivalent of every $2 million of local currency
originally turned over to the Fund.

4. A country c an replace, wholly or in part, its bonds or
currency with gold. The number of votes its representative can cast will alter accordingly.
5. A country can, with the approval of the Fund, increase
its contribution of gold and wi th it the number of its
voting shares.

- 19 -

179

6. All decisions, except where specifically provided
otherwise, shall be decided by the majority of the
votes cast.

7. The President of the Bank for the United Nations shall
be a member of the Board and shall have 100 votes. He

shall have no additional votes notwithstanding the
Bank's participation in the Fund.
VI. The rules and regulations regarding the type, amount and
conditions of day-to-day transactions to be handled by the
operating committee, shall be promulgated by four-fifths
of the member votes.

VII. No change in the gold value of any currency of the participating countries shall be permitted to alter the gold value
of the total currency holdings in the Fund. Thus, if the
currency of any of the participating countries should
depreciate, that country must deliver to the Fund an amount
of its local currency equal to the decreased value of that

currency held by the Fund. Likewise, if the currency of a
particular country should increase, the Fund must deliver
to that country an amount (in the currency of that country)
equal to the resultant increase in the gold value of the
Fund's holdings. This provision does not apply to currencies
acquired under paragraph 4 under section on "Powers".

VIII. A country failing to contribute to the Fund sums due the
Fund shall be dropped as a member, provided a majority of
the member votes so decide. Any member dropped shall have

returned to it an amount (in its own currency) equal to
its contribution minus any sum due by that country to the
Fund.

180

- 20 -

IX. Net profits earned by the Fund shall be distributed in
the following manner:

1. 50 percent to reserves until the reserves are equal
to 10 percent of the assets of the Fund.
-

2. 50 percent to be divided each year among the members

in formrecure
of the local currency. That is, each country
shall distribute its dividends in its own currency.
X. The member governments agree to furnish the Fund with

all information it needs for its operations, and to
furnish such reports as it may require, in the form and
at the times requested by the Fund.
The possession by the Fund of adequate, timely and

appropriate information is a vital necessity to its

transfer

proper functioning. The Fund should have the authority

to require that all members file with it a quarterly
itemized balance of payments. This balance of pay-

ments record--which is of particular importance in
the operation of this Fund--should be standardized

in form, and carefully designed by the technical staff
of the Fund.

P.

- 21 -

181

B. SUGGESTED OUTLINE OF A BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF THE UNITED
AND ASSOCIATED NATIONS.

I. The objectives of the Bank are:
1. To provide capital for the economic reconstruction
of the member countries.

2. To facilitate a rapid and smooth transition from a
war-time economy to a peace-time economy in the
member countries.

3. To supply short-term capital for the financing of
foreign trade among the member countries--where such

capital is not available from private sources at
reasonable rates.

4. To help strengthen the monetary and credit structures
of the member countries by redistributing the world
gold supply.

5. To eliminate the danger of world-wide crises that
are financial in origin, and reduce the likelihood,
intensity and duration of world-wide economic depressions.

6. To help stabilize the prices of essential raw materials
and other important commodities.

7. To raise the producitivity and hence the standard of
living of the peoples of the member countries.
8. To promote a greater degree of economic cooperation
and collaboration among the member countries.

9. To make easier the solution of many of the economic

and political problems that will confront the "peace
conference".

- 22 -

182

10. To enhance the opportunity throughout the world for
a healthy development of democratic institutions.

11. To provide for the financing and distribution of
foodstuffs and other essential commodities needed

for the relief of populations devastated by war conditions.
12. To promote an equitable access to scarce essential
raw materials.

II. To help carry out these objectives, the Bank shall have
the power to:

1. Make short-term and long-term loans to any participating government and to any political subdivision or
business enterprise therein, provided:
a. The servicing of the loan is fully guaranteed by
the national government.

b. The funds cannot be borrowed from private investors

except at high rates of interest.
C. The loan is made only after a careful study and
written report by a competent committee on the

merits of the project and the loan.
d. Only when the committee's report definitely indicates that the loan would serve directly or in-

directly to permanently raise the standard of living
of the borrowing country, except where the purpose

of the loan is to provide emergency relief for
devastated areas of war-impoverished inhabitants.

e. Only at very low rates of interest--preferably
not higher than 3 percent, with a schedule of
repayment appropriate to the project.

- 23 -

183

2. Whenever possible the Bank should guarantee loans

made by private investors, instead of making the
loans directly, provided:

a. The rate of interest is not in excess of (say)
4 percent, and

b. Not more than 80 percent of the principal and
50 percent of the interest is guaranteed.
C. The loan is not for the purpose of repayment of
an old loan.

3. Issue its own demand currency notes against a 100 per-

cent par value of the obligations of a participating
government, or against obligations guaranteed by the

participating government, provided there is maintained

in the Bank a gold reserve of fifty percent of the
notes issued. The obligations of, or guaranteed by,
any single participating government shall not
constitute backing for more than 10 percent of the
maximum amount of notes that can be issued. The
notes should be redeemable in gold on demand only
by member governments.

The gold equivalent of the international unit
shall be fixed by the Bank, and can be changed only

by approval of at least 90 percent of the member
votes.
4.

No extension of credit shall be extended by the Bank
to any country, the national government of which is

in whole or partial default of a foreign loan, unless
a. The defaulted loan was made between Allies in a
common war, or

- 24 b. The defaulted government has agreed to renew

service of the defaulted debt on a basis worked
out by a special committee appointed by the
Bank for that purpose, or
C. Ninety percent of the member votes approve the
loan.

5. Loans made for the purpose of providing metallic
reserves or otherwise strengthening monetary systems

of the borrowing country shall bear lower rates of
interest and have longer terms of repayment than loans
made for other purposes.

6. The Bank shall impose no condition upon an extension

of credit or loan as to the particular country in
which the proceeds of the loan must be spent.

7. No loans or extension of credits shall be made when
the funds are to be used for acquisition of armaments or war material.
8. When a loan or credit is extended to a member country,

the Bank shall divide the loan into two parts: local
currency and international units, according to an
estimate of the portion of the loan that is to be
spent at home and abroad. Service of the loan shall

be either in the identical currency borrowed, or in
the New International Unit or gold.
9. The Bank can organize and finance an International
Essential Raw Material Development Corporation for

the purpose of increasing the world supply of
essential raw materials and assuring member countries

an adequate supply at fair prices, provided:

184

185
- 25 a. Three-fourths of the member votes approve each
separate project and amount invested.

b. The product is sold to member countries on equal
terms.

10. The Bank can organize and finance an International
Commodity Stabilization Corporation for the purpose

of stabilizing the price of important commodities,
provided:

a. At least five governments participate directly
in the management and operation of the corpora-

tion and subscribe to part of the capital of
the corporation.

b. The corporation will undertake to stabilize the
price of any specific commodity only with the
consent of the Bank.

C. The policy governing the operations of the
Corporation gives, in the opinion of the Board,
proper weight to the interests of world consumers as well. as producers.

11. Boy, sell, hold and deal in gold, and in the obligations and securities of any participating government.
Act as a clearing house of funds, balances, checks,

drafts and acceptances for the account of participating governments or their fiscal agencies, and
accept demand, time and custody deposits and accounts

from participating governments and their fiscal
agencies and central banks.
12. Discount and rediscount bills, acceptances and other

obligations and instruments of credit of participating
governments and fiscal agencies and central banks.

- 26 -

186

13. Act as agent or correspondent for any participating
government and for fiscal agencies, central banks
and political subdivisions.
14. Rediscount with any government or fiscal agency or
central bank bills, acceptances and other instruments

of credit taken from the Bank's portfolio.
15. Issue or sell debentures and other securities and
obligations of the Bank to obtain assets for the
purposes of the Bank.

16. Deal only with (a) the governments of members of the

Bank, and (b) with the central banks or fiscal agents
of those countries only wi th the consent of the
Minister of Finance of the country in question, and
(c) with the United Nations Stabilization Fund, and
(d) with any international bank owned jointly by
some of the member governments.

17. Engage in financial and economic studies and publish

reports thereof.

III. Capital structure.
1. The capital stock (expressed for convenience in terms
of United States dollars) shall be authorized up to

$10 billion, consisting of 10,000 shares having a par
value of $1 million each. The shares purchased are

to be paid for in gold and local currency. Fifty percent of the issue price of each share purchased shall
be paid up at the time of subscription and the remainder

as and when called for by the Bank. of the initial
50 percent payment, half shall be in gold and half in
the currency of any participating country.

187
- -27-

2. The shares are non-transferable, but the Bank, with

the approval of four-fifths of the Board of Directors,
can, under certain conditions, buy back shares offered

to it.
3. Each eligible government can subscribe to as many
shares of stock as it wishes but the maximum vote permitted any government is 25 percent of the total,
irrespective of the sum subscribed. Each government

must subscribe to at least a number of shares equal to
2 percent of its annual national income, estimated to
the nearest hundred million.
4. Each member of the Bank shall be able to cast 50 votes
plus one vote for each share of stock held. Thus a
government owning one share shall be able to cast 51
votes, while a government having 1,000 shares can cast
1,050 votes.

5. The United Nations Stabilization Fund should subscribe
to 100 shares but should be able to cast only 50 votes.

IV. Eligibility for Membership.
1. To be eligible for membership a government must:
a. Be a member of the United Nations Stabilization
Fund.

Subscribe publicly

to

the

#Magna

Garba

of

the

United National
b. Be at peace with member countries.

2. Any government that withdraws or is expelled from the
Fund gives up its membership ipso facto in the Bank.
3. Any member that is held by two-thirds of the members of
the Board--not member votes--to have undertakan an act

of military aggression against any other member of the

- 28 -

188

Bank shall forfeit its membership in the Bank. Its
holdings of S tock shall be repurchased by the Bank

at a price fixed by the Board.
V. Management.

1. The administration of the Bank shall be vested in the
Board of Directors composed of one director and one

alternate appointed by each participating government.
Each government shall appoint its director and alternate

in a manner to be determined by it. Such director

shall serve for a period of three years, subject to
the pleasure of his government.

2. The Board of Directors shall select a president of the
Bank who shall be the chief of the operating staff of
the Bank and also shall be ex-officio chairman of the
Board, and one or more vice presidents. The president

and vice presidents of the Bank shall hold office for
two years, shall be eligible for reelection and may
be removed for cause at any time by the Board.

3. The departmental organization of the Bank shall be
determined by the Board of Directors. The heads of

departments and other similar officers shall be
appointed by the Board on the recommendation of the

president. The remainder of the staff shall be
appointed by the president.
4. The Board of Directors may also appoint from among
its members an executive committee. A member of the

B oard of Directors of the Fund, elected by that Board,
shall be a member of the executive board of the Bank.

The Board may at any meeting, by a four-fifths majority

- 29 189

vote, authorize the president or the executive committee or any other committee of the Bank to exercise
any specified powers of the Board; provided, however,
that such powers shall be exercised only until the
next meeting of the Board and shall be exercised in a

manner consistent with the general policies and practices
of the Board. The Board may also, by a four-fifths
majority vote, delegate to designated officers and com-

mittees of the Bank, for such periods as it may determine, power to make loans and extend credit in such
amounts as may be fixed by the Board.

5. The Board of Directors may appoint advisory committees
chosen wholly or partially from persons not regularly
employed by the Bank.

6. Except where otherwise provided, decisions of the
Board of Directors shall be by simple majority of the
votes cast. When deemed by the president to be in

the best interests of the Bank, decisions of the Board
may be made, without a meeting, by polling the

directors on specific questions submitted to them in
such manner as the Board shall by regulations provide.
7.

Authorization or approval by two thirds majority vote
of the Board of Directors shall be required for the
making and granting of intermediate and long-term
loans and credits. including the assumption of the

obligation of a guarantor on intermediate and longterm loans and credits; the acquisition and sale of,
and dealing in intermediate and long-term obligations
and securities; the discounting and rediscounting of

190

- 30 intermediate and long-term - paper; the issuance of

debentures and other securities and obligations of
the Bank; the selection or removal of a president,
the vice presidents.

VI. Distribution of profits.
1. The yearly net profits shall be applied as follows:
a. Twenty-five percent of the profits shall be applied
to surplus until the surplus shall be equal to
20 percent of the paid-in capital, after which

all profits shall be distributed in proportion
to shares held.

b. Profits shall be payable in gold or any currency
the shareholders shall elect.

C. Profits and accounts shall be recorded in terms
of the New International Units. The rates of
exchange between member country currencies shall

be those used by the United Nations Stabilization
Fund.

VII. If a member country elects to withdraw or is expelled from
the Bank its shares of stock shall, if the Bank has a

surplus, be repurchased at the price paid. If the Bank's
books show a loss the departing member country shall bear

a proportionate share of such loss.
If a member country withdraws or is dropped from the

Fund, it also forfeits membership in the Bank unless fourfifths of the member votes favor its remaining as a
member.

191

PART II

IN
II-1

192

Part II
Suggested
Outline of aFund
United Nations
Stabilization

I. Purposes of the Fund
The various purposes enumerated below are to a considerable extent interdependent and overlapping and in some

instances may even represent apparently conflicting tendencies.
Yet, progress in the attainment of almost any one of them

facilitates progress toward the attainment of many of the
others. Each of them represents a different phase of international monetary arrangements and calls in the main for
different procedure, different powers, and in some cases,

different kinds of resources.
The fact that some of the objectives may be at times
harmonious and at other times conflicting, indicates that
the management of an international stabilization fund cannot
be reduced to a matter of simple rules. The successful

operation of the Fund calls for constant examination of a

large variety of pertinent factors and the continual
evaluation of various effects which might be expected to

follow any particular action or failure to act.
Stabilization of foreign exchange rates.
The advantage of obtaining stable exchange rates are
patent. The maintenance of stable exchange rates means the

elimination of exchange risk in international economic and

financial transactions. The cost of conducting foreign
trade is thereby reduced, and capital flows much more easily

to the country where it yields the greatest return because

II-2

193

both short-term and long-term investments are greatly
hampered by the possibility of loss from exchange depre-

ciation. As the expectation of continued stability in
foreign exchange rates is strengthened there is also more

chance of avoiding the disrupting effects of flights of
capital and of inflation.
Altogether, if the Fund were successful in bringing
about a much greater degree of stability in foreign exchance
relationships than existed during the 'twenties and 'thirties,

it will have justified its existence on that score alone.
Flow of productive capital, blocked balances, and redistribution of gold.

The desirability of encouraging the flow of productive
capital to areas where it can be most profitably employed
needs no emphasis. The Fund can help encourage that flow

by reducing exchange risks, and also by making the imposi-

tion of restrictions on exchange transactions less likely
to happen. Finally insofar as the Fund can help strengthen
the monetary and banking system of the country, it increases

that country's attraction to funds of private foreign
investors.

Balances owned by residents of another country which

have been blocked because holdings of gold and other liquid
foreign exchange assets are inadequate (this does not apply
to the United States where restrictions have been imposed

wholly for political reasons and not because of any scarcity

of gold reserves) will constitute after the war one of the
danger spots to monetary stability, and to resumption of

liberal trade policies. If the Fund can eliminate that

11-3

danger spot it will have justified its existence--even if
it were to accomplish nothing else.

The Fund has the possibility of utilizing more effectively the gold resources of any given country, and thereby
encourage countries to hold larger gold reserves. By
facilitating an easier adjustment of the international
balance of payments, it reduces the volume of hectic gold
movements. Machinery can be developed under the aegis of

the Fund, with which countries can more easily develop a
favorable balance of payments vis-a-vis the gold-holding
and producing countries. The Fund can also encourage the

return flow of gold from the United States to countries
that formerly suffered from substantial flights of capital
by providing strength to countries with weakened economic
and credit systems.

Servicing of international debts.
The reduction in risk of exchange loss and progress

toward elimination of restrictions on foreign exchanges
should make easier debt adjustments of foreign debts - both

public and private - now in default and continued servicing
of debts not in default.

To help stabilize price levels.
Any development which would contribute toward stability

of price levels is greatly to be welcomed. One of the
destructive elements in domestic as well as international

trade is wide swings in price levels. An intelligent use
of an international stabilization fund could contribute
something toward reducing the fluctuations, and even the

cyclical movements, of prices within a country and in the
relationship of price levels between countries.

194

195
II-4
To reduce the necessity and use of foreign exchange controls
Foreign exchange controls usually constitute an inter-

ference with trade and capital flows. Unfortunately, such
controls are too often preferable to the alternatives fac-

ing a particular country. Insofar as an international
stabilization fund can reduce the necessity for such controls
and can prevent the use of such controls where they are not

necessary, it will serve to substantially increase foreign
trade of nations and encourage the flow of production capital.
To eliminate multiple currency practices and bilateral
clearing arrangements.

The development in the 'twenties and 'thirties of multiple currency devices and bilateral clearing arrangements
served to disrupt trade, increase economic difficulties in
some countries, and stimulate the worst kind of competitive
practices among countries seeking to increase their foreign
markets or protect the foreign markets they already have.

These practices frequently arise from difficulties which
are subject to correction by an appropriately handled sta-

bilization fund. It is expected that an international stabilisation fund with ample resources and broad powers could

do much to eliminate the justification for resorting to
these trade practices that are an obstacle to a high level
of foreign trade for all countries. The Fund might also help
to attain that desirable objective by discouraging through
drastic means if necessary resort to such practices among
its members.

II-5

196

Promotion of sound note issuing and credit policies and
practices.

The sounder the monetary and banking policies of govern-

ments, the less sensitive are they to economic disturbances,
and the quicker will be the recovery from any depression.
There are numerous ways in which an international stabiliza-

tion fund could add to the strength of monetary systems of
member governments.

Reduction of trade barriers.

The existence of high tariff policies and other obstacles
to trade and the tendency during the post-war period to
heighten those barriers, are serious barriers to recovery
and maintenance of a high level of economic activity among

countries. It will be readily admitted that if an international stabilization fund can bring about a reduction in
the unnecessary barriers to international trade, it will
have performed a very valuable service toward maintaining
business recovery after the war.

The establishment of an efficient clearing house for international monetary transactions.
The advantage of providing such a clearing house could

be substantial, particularly among countries who transact a
small volume of business with each other. The spread between

the buying and selling rates of some foreign currencies is
much larger in some countries than it should be. Thus transactions between those countries are subject to handicaps

that are unnecessary. It is impossible to measure the gains
that accrue from more efficient handling of clearances, but
they could be substantial.

197

II-6

Can these objectives be reached?

If the Fund is to make much progress toward achieving
the objectives enumerated in the previous pages, it must
have broad powers and courageous and intelligent direction.

Each of the objectives listed, 1f achieved, would help in
some degree to restore world prosperity. In fact some of
the objectives are so important that it might be fair to
say that sustained world prosperity is impossible unless
considerable progress is made toward their attainment.

It is a task that is surely within the competence of the
present generation.

II-7

198

II. Powers of the Fund
The Fund should have the power to buy, sell and hold gold,
currencies. foreign exchange, bills of exchange. and govern-

ment securities of the "member" countries, and act as a clearing house for international movements of gold and the Fund.
The purchase and sale of gold would be an essential part
of the operations of the Fund. The Fund might well become

the most attractive depository for earmarked gold, and be the
means of greatly reducing the need for physical transfers of
gold among members.

To promote the practice of "earmarking" gold its storing
and transfer could be made without charge to members, and
agreement between countries could accord a maximum of legal

security to such holdings. It should even be possible to
secure written assurance by the government of the country
where the gold was to be held that such gold would not be

subject to any controls. Earmarked gold could be given a
special status so that courtries could unhesitatingly earmark
large amounts with the Fund and still record such gold as
part of their own reserve. The Fund might find it convenient
to have a branch office on each continent. This would still
further out down gold shipments. It would also speed up other
kinds of transactions.
Dealings in foreign exchange would constitute, of course,

the chief business of the Fund. It is through such transactions that the Fund would be expected to carry out many of

its objectives. It might therefore be helpful if this part
of the Fund's operations were described with little more

II-8

199

detail. Unfortunately for the layman discussion of foreign
exchange transactions is not easy to follow even though care

is exercised to exclude technical terminology. Yet unless
this part of the Fund's activities are understood it is impossible to properly evaluate the role an international
stabilization fund can play.
In the several pages which follow the exchange operations

with which the Fund would be chiefly occupied are briefly
described.

The Treasury, or its fiscal agent, of each member country
shall have the privilege of purchasing from the Fund the
currency of any member country which the Fund holds, provided:
(a) The currency demanded from the Fund is required to meet
an adverse balance of payments to the country whose
currency is being demanded.

Since the Fund would deal only with and for Treasuries

(or their fiscal agents and the Bank) the regular private
channels through which foreign exchange transactions are now

consummated by private banks would continue to serve. It is
presumed that the Treasuries would deal in foreign exchange
only when exchange situation warranted government operation.
They might also employ the Fund to transact foreign exchange
business between governments.

Certain restrictions on operations are necessitated by

the wide differences in the strength of the various currencies.
If any country could purchase from the Fund as much of any

currency it pleased at a fixed rate without reducing the
supply of the strong currency available in the open market,

II-9

200

countries with weak currencies would be tempted to accumulate

stocks of strong currencies. The Fund's supply of gold and
strong currencies would soon be depleted and in their place
would be weak currencies, i.e. currencies of countries which

prefer other currencies to their own. Some restrictions are
therefore necessary.

The first condition of purchase might be that the
currency purchased must be needed to meet an adverse balance
of payments to the country whose currency is being demanded.

Thus, a country could not obtain gold or other currency from
the Fund if the direct result were to increase the gold or
foreign exchange holdings of the Government, its Stabiliza-

tion Fund, or fiscal agent, except, of course, possibly for
short periods.
There would be no justification for a member government

to use the Fund's assets as a means of converting its currency

into gold or foreign exchange, unless it needed that gold
or foreign exchange to meet immediate or imminent claims or

liabilities. It is quite true that one of the possible
reasons why a government would need more foreign exchange

might be that its nationals were building up their foreign
balances, or increasing their foreign investments. That,
however, is a quite different matter than the government
or Central Bank building up its foreign balances. The Fund
might wish to supply the foreign exchange when the demand

arises from the movement of private funds. Whether or not
it would wish to do so depends on a number of factors. Each
episode would have to be considered on its own merits. It

is important that when there is present in the balance of

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II-9a

payments of the country in question substantial outflow of
capital the Fund have the authority to provide the exchange

or not, as it sees fit. It would have this authority in
any case, as indicated below, if the country in question
had already obtained its maximum quota of foreign exchange,

but the Fund should also have the privilege of not responding to demand for exchange, even before the quota was reached,
where capital movements are involved.

What this matter boils down to is that the Fund should
have the authority to determine whether the transactions
causing a balance to turn unfavorable include such as the
Fund would judge "illegitimate" under the circumstances.
There are times when some types of capital outflow for some
countries would be considered "legitimate", whereas the

same type for other countries would be regarded as "ille-

gitimate." There might also be instances in which all types
of capital outflows might be considered "illegitimate",
whereas for another country, all types might be considered

"legitimate." No generalization can be made without all
the circumstances being given. It is necessary only that
the Fund have authority to make the decision on this matter

and, further, as explained later, that the Fund has the
authority to request the kind of information which would
enable it to make an intelligent decision.
To aid in the settlement of international balance is
the legitimate use of the Fund and this use is in no way

interfered with by the above restriction. Better information

202
II-9b

on foreign balances and volume of exchange transactions

than is now available in most countries will be necessary
before it will be possible for the Fund to operate without
error underthis restriction, but the development of such

statistical data should not be difficult, especially because
of the prevalence of exchange controls in most countries.
(b) The sum in the Fund of the currency of the country mak ing
the purchase shall be, after adding the sum proposed to be
sold to the Fund, not more than 100 percent of the total

sum (currency, gold and notes) originally contributed to
the Fund.

The restriction that the foreign exchange should be needed
to meet adverse balances is not enough, however, to protect

203
II-10

the strong assets of the Fund. If that were the only restriction imposed, a country could continue for a long time to permit an unfavorable balance of payments without calling forth

the usual restraints. Without additional restrictions the
Fund would in effect be placing the entire gold and foreign
exchange assets at the disposal of any member country. The

purpose of the Fund could not be to supply an unlimited amount
of foreign exchange to any country which might not wish to
adopt the proper measures to correct a prolonged disequilibrium

in its transactions with foreign countries. A quantitative
limit is therefore also necessary on the amount of foreign exchange a country could purchase from the Fund, without special
action.

What limit it were best to set is difficult to decide, of
course. It should be large enough to take care of fluctuations
in the country's balance of payments that occur within a year or
two, but should not be 80 large as to make it unlikely that it
would be repurchased by the country in question within a

reasonable time. It is suggested that a country should be able
to purchase with its currency any other country's currency 80
long as the Fund's holdings of the purchasing country 18

not more than 100 percent of that country's original total
contribution to the Fund. Since one-fourth of the original

contribution was in form of gold (plus 1/4 in local currency
and 1/2 in notes or bonds) the 100 percent increase in the
holdings of the Fund actually represents an increase of
200 percent of the local currency subscribed. In other words,

11-11

204

a country subscribing $100 million, consisting of $25 million
gold, $25 million local currency, and $50 million obligations
would be able to buy with local currency as much as $75 million
of any currency needed. That may seem small and doubtless is

for some countries. However, it should be noted the limit is

not a rigid or final one. It is supplemented by an important
qualification, to be described in a moment.
How the transaction would work out may be more easily

understood by following through the steps of a transaction

using a simplified illustration:
The Government (or fiscal agent) of Country A finds that
the demand by its nationals for foreign exchange, arising out

of trade and service transactions, is increasing relative to
the supply, to the point where it must (a) give up more gold

than it feels desirable, or (b) impose restrictions on imports
--either through exchange controls or import controls, or

(c) permit its currency to depreciate. In that situation,
being a member of the Fund, it turns to the Fund for the

assistance it is entitled to receive.
It purchases from the Fund as much of the types of our-

rencies it needs, paying for it with its own currency. This
it can do as its right so long as the sum of its currency
which the fund possesses is not in excess of 100 percent of

Country A's original total contribution.
The Fund can obtain the currency of Country A only from

Country A. Therefore, if Country A's balance of payment

position does not long remain in disequilibrium, other countries will sooner or later turn to the Fund to buy currency
of Country A, and Country A will again be able to buy other
currencies from the Fund if necessary.

11-12

205

If the balance of payments position among all the
member countries did not stray from equilibrium by large
amounts (relative to their foreign exchange assets) or for
long periods, then the Fund would serve as a sort of reserve
pillow absorbing the shook of pressures on exchange rates,
thus safeguarding trade from unnecessary restrictions and

exchange from unnecessary fluotuations. But it would be
unwarranted to expect all the balance of payments situations

to return quickly to equilibrium. For some countries it
would frequently happen, and for almost all countries it
would sometimes happen that an adverse balance of payment

situation would persist. There are a number of reasons for
this, but it would take more space to explain them than is

justified in this report. Suffice to say that it would be
wholly to be expected that some member countries would fre-

quently find they have sold 80 much of their currency to
the Fund that the Fund held the maximum 100 percent excess.

When that point will have been reached by any country it
will have already obtained substantial assistance.
Let it be assumed, for example, that Country A had

originally contributed $100 million to the Fund, and due
to the development of an adverse balance it has sold to the
Fund $75 million in addition to the $25 million originally
subscribed. When that point is reached Country A will have
received what is virtually a costless "loan" of $50 million

of other countries' currencies. It really is not a loan
since Country A has given its own currency in exchange, yet

Country A has been able to buy $75 million of foreign exchange
with its own currency, whereas without access to the Fund
it would have had to use gold or other foreign exchange

11-13

resources. Since Country A has subscribed $25 million in
gold to the Fund which it otherwise could have used to purchase foreign exchange, the gain it is able to make through
its membership in the Fund is the use of an additional
$50 million. That, however, need be only the beginning.
There is a provision which permits the Fund to increase
its purchase of Country A's currency after the above-described
maximim is reached, as follows:
A country can exceed the limit imposed by the regulation

provided it can obtain approval of four-fifths of the member
votes.

This approval should be given only if four-fifths of the
member votes were of the opinion that (a) the anticipated
balance of payments picture of the country in question were
such as to warrant the expectation that the "excess" could

be disposed of within a reasonable time, or (b) if the
country in question had gold holdings which together with
the gold it expected to accumulate within a reasonable time
was adequate to replace the excess, and (o) if the country
in question agreed to adopt and carry out measures designed

to correct the disequilibrium measures which the Fund either
approved or suggested.

This provision gives the desired flexibility. No country need suffer from lack of foreign exchange necessary to
meet temporary drains. It need not even suffer from shortage
of foreign exchange during a prolonged period of disequilibrium provided the Fund was satisfied proper steps were being

taken to restore equilibrium.
Admittedly the operation of that flexible provision
would call for technical knowledge, careful examination and

206

II-14

207

good judgment by the Fund's staff. It is hoped that the
technical staff which the Fund would gradually develop would

be the most competent available in that special field. It
would need to be because the problems it will have to deal

with are difficult and because the success of the Fund in

reducing fluctuations in foreign trade and in preventing
monetary disturbanoes will depend largely upon the wisdom

of the technical staff's advice. The Fund would doubtless
be free from political pressure from any one country in its
decisions, and should be able to make recommendations more

apt to be in the long-run interest of the country concerned,
than would likely be the case where decisions are dominated

by short-run considerations or by domestic political
considerations.

To what extent the Fund will be called upon to purchase
and accumulate cannot be forecast. It depends on a number

of changing factors, such as: how many countries will
participate in the Fund, and how much each will invest; how
rapidly foreign exchange controls will be eliminated; how
much capital will be available for foreign investment, and

finally, the pattern of world trade which will emerge shortly
after peace is resumed.
Much also will depend on the extent to which some of

the countries have foreign balances to which they will pre-

for to resort when experiencing adverse balances. That will
mean that the Fund will not be able to convert some of the
currencies which it had acquired as rapidly as would seem to

be called for by the then-prevailing pattern of trade.
Thus, for example, the Fund may accept sterling from England

208
II-15

because England has turned to the Fund to meet an adverse

balance of payments. Other countries, however, later developing adverse balances with England might not turn to the

Fund for sterling. They might utilize sterling balances
which they already have, or dip into ample gold holdings.
The Fund would in that case be unable to diminish its holdings
of sterling and therefore England would not be able to sell
the Fund more sterling later if necessary except by action
under the flexible provision.
THE

The fact that the countries which will participate to
the largest extent in the Fund are likely to be those least
in need of resorting to the Fund for assistance of the
character indicated above, would make it possible for the
Fund to help most where it would be most needed. Only experience can show how far the Fund could go in eliminating
fluotuations in exchange rates and in making the imposition

of exchange and trade controls unnecessary. It is certain
that the Fund cannot perform miracles, nor solve all problems
involved in the maintenance of equilibrium in international

accounts. It cannot and should not make it possible for

countries to ignore the cardinal principle of international
economic relations, namely, that a country must in the long
run buy only as much goods and services as it sells. An
important exception, of course, is a country which has a
balance due it on capital@account, but sooner or later even

that country will have to sell more than it buys in order
to pay interest and principal on its borrowings. To be sure,
the country which has foreign exchange resources, in the form

of gold or income from foreign investments, can continue to
buy more than it seels so long as those resources last, but
for most countries these resources are not present in

II-16

209

abundance, and hence for most countries the Fund can operate
to make their path much smoother provided the countries them-

selves approach their own balance of payments problem intelligently.

Even if countries ignore the basic limitations set upon
any country's ability to buy more than it sells, the Fund
can exercise considerable influence in helping them to correot this situation in time, and in ways which will oreate
the smallest amount of destruction to worldtrade and least
disturbance to their own economy.

It may be that experience will demonstrate that the

limitations set upon the Fund's authority to agree to purchase currencies offered it are too strict. It may be that
the commercial policies pursued by numerous countries, includ-

ing more liberal tariff policies, will reduce the length of
time in which countries are apt to experience adverce balance
of payments. If so, the Fund can undertake much greater

obligations. In any case the Fund is well protected against
loss.

It should be remembered that the Fund in its operations

is not undertaking the same risk of loss that would be
involved in a usual extension of credit. The Fund gets foreign
exchange in return for the currency it gives up, and each
member government is required to make good any exchange loss

suffered by the Fund through depreciation of its currency.
Thus, the Fund not only has the foreign exchange which is

always worth something, but it also has the obligation of
the government to make good any exchange loss that might

result. More than that, each government has invested with

II-17

210

the Fund gold, currency, and its obligations, which the Fund

would, in effect, have as collateral against potential
exchange losses.

The Fund would receive additional protection against
loss from the fact that a member government not meeting its
obligations to the Fund could be dropped. Without knowing
how many members will participate or how influential the
Fund will become, we cannot say how serious a punishment

being dropped from the Fund would be, but it is not unlikely
that it would be serious enough to induce any country to make

good its obligations to the Fund, difficult though that might
prove to be.

Because the Fund will be undertaking 80 little risk, it
can go much further in the assistance it gives to foreign
countries than would be the case were the risk of loss great.

Should the Fund find itself pressed for certain kinds of
currencies, it has of course both assets and borrowing power
which can, if necessary, be used to purchase the desired
currencies.

The power of the Fund to deal in the bonds of participating government is an important one. It makes it possible
for the Fund to come to the aid of any country which is being
subjected to pressure on its exchange under circumstances that

the Fund might wish to correct. The Fund could, of course,
buy the currency of the country but the circumstances might,
under certain conditions, be better handled by buying bonds
and it might even help countries which for one reason or
another do no have or cannot exercise adequate open-market
powers and whose money market has become unduly tight.

11-18
11-18

Unfreezing of Blocked Funds

Special powers are called for to deal with the problem
created by the growing magnitude of blocked balances. The

countries in which large totals of balances are blocked are
the United States and England (Germany 18, of course, excluded) whereas the countries to whom those balances belong

include almost the rest of the world.
The balances blocked in the United States present no

monetary problem. They were blocked for political reasons

and will be unblocked as rapidly as the political situation
permits. There will doubtless be many cases in which for
political or legal reasons, unfreezing will be delayed, but
the cause of the delay will not be any scarcity of gold
which may safely leave the country. There are more than one

billion of earmarked gold, two billions of deposits, and
possibly several hundred million of short-term investments,
the withdrawal of which has been placed under some restric-

tions. A rapid withdrawal of any part of it, or all of it,
can be handled with the utmost ease by the United States

because of its large gold reserves. At most, it may prove
necessary to lower reserve requirements to prevent a

tightening of the credit situation here--should the outflow
be great enough. With the cessation of war the release of
dollar funds (equivalent to gold) capable of purchasing
goods anywhere will prove a very important factor in stimu-

lating trade and aiding reconstruction. The trouble, if any,
is apt to be that nationals and governments of foreign coun-

tries will not elect to withdraw their funds from the United
States rapidly enough.

211

II-19

The situation with respect to blocked balances in
England is quite different. The gold and foreign exchange
reserves which England will have at the close of the war

are certain to be far too small relative to the sterling
balances blocked there to permit England to remove restrictions on the withdrawal of funds by foreign owners. England
may end the war with more than 5 billion dollars of deposits

belonging to residents of other countries, while her liquid
foreign exchange resources are not likely to be 80 much

as a fifth of that. Moreover, England will need whatever
gold she will be able to accumulate, and indeed should
have more foreign exchange available than she 1s likely

to have, in order to operate properly even were the total
of foreign balances in England much smaller. Most of these
balances belong to the Dominions who would wish to keep

substantial sums in England in any case--unless there was

imminent danger of sterling depreciation. Against some of
the remainder there are offsetting blocked currencies.
Nonetheless, the drain on British foreign liquid exchange
reserves could easily be greater than England could safely
permit.

The unblocking of these sterling funds is highly to
be desired. Probably, no single action would do more to
stimulate world trade, prevent pressure on numerous exchanges, and reduce the probability of widespread deprecia-

tion of currencies. The restoration of confidence in the
soundness of British currency, the assurance that interna-

tional monetary problems are to be intelligently handled,
and renewed hope that currency stability will be achieved

212

II-20

after the war that would follow a successful unfreezing

of sterling, would alone justify every effort to solve
through international action the problem of blocked balances in Britain.
The Fund would seem to be the appropriage agency to

use for the solution of that problem. The method that
could be employed to accomplish this is a bit complicated
to describe but the importance of the subject warrants the

attempt to outline it.
To accomplish a maximum of results with a minimum of

risks the Fund should be given the power to purchase ster-

ling, or any other currency offered to it, from any country other than the country whose currency is being purchased, provided:

a. The government selling its foreign balances (blocked
in another country) to the Fund under this provision
guarantees to repurchase 40 percent of the currency

from the Fund at the price paid. The repurchase to
begin after 3 years and to be made at the rate of not
less than 2 percent a year of the amount acquired by
the Fund under this authority.

b. England, on its part, (or whatever the country whose
local currency belonging to residents of another
country is being offered for sale to the Fund) agrees

first to transfer title to the balances from the
foreign nationals to the Fund, and to begin 3 years
after sale to repurchase from the Fund 40 percent of

the sterling acquired under this provision at a rate
of not less than 2 percent a year, at the purchase price.

213

II-21

214
0. Not more than 20 percent of the currency offered

should be paid for by the Fund with gold, half of
which should be exempt from the condition imposed
in paragraph d below.

d. The particular currency paid over by the Fund in
exchange for the currency offered should be needed
by the country to meet an adverse balance of payments.

Thus, for example, if Canada wishes to sell to the
Fund some of its blocked sterling balances in exchange
for United States dollars, the Fund would have to be
assured that Canada needs the United States dollars

to make payments to the United States (for trade,
services, interest payments, or even investments) and
not to make possible an increase in Canada's gold
holdings or an increase in her United States dollar
exchange. In other words, if Canada wished to use

the sterling accumulated by herself, or her nationals,
to convert into funds to be spent in United States, or
in Mexico or in Netherlands, the Fund could make that
possible without, on the one hand, putting any strain
on England and, on the other hand, without denuding

the Fund of its gold assets. In fact, Canada would
be able, according to the above provision, to add
to her gold holdings by 10 percent of the blocked balances she sold to the Fund.

e. If the Fund's stocks of sterling or other currencies
should decline the Fund can offer to reduce the rate
of repurchase required of both governments as specified

above, but should it do 80, the countries involved

II-22

215

must be relieved by the same percentage, and shall
be deemed to have repurchased the amount by which

they are 80 released.
Perhaps the operation would be more easily understood

if the specific steps were outlined which a country would
have to go through under the plan suggested here to realize
on its blocked funds.

For convenience of illustration, let us take a specific
case. Let us assume that China, England, United States and
Mexico are involved in the transaction and all are members
of the Fund. Let us assume that the Chinese Government

has L 50 million blocked in England and wishes to utilize

L 10 million of it in the ensuing quarter. The steps would
be as follows:

1. China makes application to the Fund. The Fund after

investigation is satisfied that the use of at least
90 percent of the L 10 million is not to accumulate
gold or foreign exchange. China can if it wishes add
the million dollars of gold to her holdings.
2. The L 10 million is transferred by the British banks
from the Chinese Government to the Fund. The Chinese

Government pays 1 percent (in yuan) to the Fund and

the British pay 1 percent (in sterling) as a "service"
charge.

3. The Fund gives to China

a. the equivalent of L 1 million in gold (if China
wishes it), and

b. the equivalent of L9 million in one or more currencies needed and requested by China--say, $12

11-23

million in United States dollars and 120 million Mexican pesos. If the Fund doesn't have
enough Mexican pesos, it purchases what it needs.

4. After three years from the date of the transaction:
a. China begins to repurchase from the Fund each year
$800,000 worth (2 percent of 40 percent of 40

million dollars) of British sterling, at the same
rates of exchange she received, paying for the
sterling either in yuan or other currencies she
received, depending upon the wishes of the Fund.

b. England begins to repurchase the same amount of

sterling each year, paying for the sterling
either gold or "New International Units".
C. China is free to do what she likes with her repurchased sterling, England having agreed in the

first place that there would be no restrictions
on its withdrawal.

5. Not later than 23 years After the transaction the situation would be as follows:

a. China would have utilized the L 10 million, while
her balance of payments would be burdened by not

more than 1-3/4 percent of the L 10 million a year
after three years.
b. England would have been able to unfreeze China's
balances, while imposing no burden on her (England's)

foreign exchange resources for the first three
years, and from then on 1-3/4 to 3-1/2 percent a
year (2 percent of from 40 to 80 percent), depending upon what China elects to do with her repurchased 2 percent.

216

217
II-24

C. The Fund will have first exchanged $4 million
of her gold assets, or possibly more if she had
to purchase currencies with gold to satisfy China's
demands, and will have exchanged the remainder of

the $40 million of various currencies for sterling.
Then the Fund would get back each year gold

from England to a sum not less than 2 percent of

$18 million until the Fund will have received $18
million in gold. The Fund would also get $18

million of certain currencies from China, leaving
the Fund with 2 million pounds sterling.
The Fund will also have earned 2 percent

(1 percent in yuan and 1 percent in sterling) in
the transactions, and some interest on her investment of sterling balances in British Government
securities.

At the end of 23 years--or sooner if England
permits--the Fund could sell the remaining L 2
million of sterling and the transaction would be
complete.

The above is the transaction under most unfavorable con-

ditions. A more likely outcome is that either or both China
and England could purchase back the sterling from the Fund

a great deal sooner than 23 years. Nonetheless, a long
period is permitted to assure an easy adjustment for hoth
England and China in the event the situation would not be

favorable to a rapid adjustment. The illustration has been
that of Government-owned funds.

II-25

If, as is equally likely, the British sterling balances
were owned by nationals of China instead of the Government
of China, the general process would be the same but some

details would differ.
First, the Chinese nationals would have to indicate
to their Government that they wished their blooked balances
released and also state what currency they wish in exchange

and the purpose. If they wish yuan currency no purpose
need be indicated, but should they wish dollars or pesos,

it would have to be for reasons other than merely building
up peso or dollar deposits, or accumulating any other
foreign exchange. The Chinese Government would then make

the arrangements with the Fund, after which the Chinese
Government would transfer to its nationals the money which

the Fund puts at China's disposal in exchange for their

sterling balances. Title to the sterling balances would
be transferred to the Fund.
Arrangements for the transaction would take some time,

but for the individual holder of the blocked balance the
powers would be simple. After the initial arrangements had
been completed, the transactions between the Fund and the
two Governments involved would assume an almost routine

character. Careful watching of the balance of payments of
the various countries concerned in the transactions would
be necessary continuously. That task, however, would be one

of the important current responsibilities of the Fund's
technical staff at all times-and with all countries. The
condition and movements of the international accounts of
the member countries would be to the Fund's research staff,

218

II-26

what the thermometer, stethescope, x-ray, and microscope,

etc., are to the diagnostician. Without a carefully drawn
up and compiled quarterly balance of payments account of

member countries the technical staff of the Fund would be
greatly handicapped in their recommendation of decisions

and policies. With adequate data in their hands they would
be in a position to know and understand what was going on

in matters pertinent to the work of the Fund.
To return to the question of how much the Fund could

be expected to do with blooked balances, it might be that
the sum of blocked balances which the Fund would be called

upon to purchase would be greater than the Fund felt it

could afford to take. If, for example, it were asked to
absorb two billion dollars of blocked balances it might
well hesitate if such assets were not to be liquid. It
might be three years before they could sell any of it, and
even then they might not be able to sell it at a faster
rate than 4 percent a year. The Fund could, it is true,
invest the assets in interest-bearing Government obligations

(of the country in which the currency 18 blocked), but they
could not convert those into gold or other currencies without

either risking a loss on the transaction or adding to the
possible drain of gold from the country whose obligations
they were selling.

If the Fund attempted to sell a substantial amount of
(say) British Government obligations payable in sterling
to residents of United States, the price the Fund would get
might be substantially less than what the Fund paid for the
bonds.

219

II-27

220

Moreover, if the Fund invested the blocked sterling in
British Government bonds, and then sold them in New York,

and later the American sold the bonds in London getting
sterling which would not be blooked, the end result would
be that England would be subjected to the drain on her
foreign exchange resources which she wished in the first

place to avoid. It is clear, therefore, that if the Fund
invests its sterling in British Government obligations,
it should not be permitted to sell them except as England
repurchased them according to the schedule, or unless the
British Government approved the sale.
Yet the Fund would like to take over as much of the

blocked balances as possible, but on the other hand could

not tie up too much of her liquid resources in frozen currencies. A way out of the dilemma might be to permit the
Fund to borrow in New York (or anywhere else except England)

using as collateral the British Government bonds. With

that possibility for converting a frozen asset into a liquid
resource the Fund could afford to take more blocked balances.

It might even be feasible to arrange that the bonds be
special ones payable in either gold or sterling (at the

holder's will), in order to increase their collateral value.
Since 40 percent of the blocked sterling the Fund acquires
would have to be repurchased with gold anyway, this latter
possibility might be acceptable to the Government concerned.

The end result of the exercise of this authority should
be:

1. Private holders of blocked sterling balances should be
able to convert them at once into their local currencies

221
II-28

by selling them to their Government. With that ourrency nationals, as distinot from the Government,
could purchase any currency they wished.

2. Their Government would be in possession of sterling
which at only a small risk of exchange it could sell
to the Fund for any currency it wished.
3. England could at once remove restrictions on the withdrawal of foreign-owned sterling balances without fearing any serious drain on her gold or other foreign
exchange assets. She would have to purchase back only

40 percent of the funds withdrawn under this authority
at the rate of 2 percent a year, beginning after three
years.

Two gains would quickly emerge: one, the demand

for withdrawal would be greatly lessened by the fact
that foreign holders would have no reason to hurry
their withdrawal, and two, the post-war pressure against

sterling would be dissipated and hence the sterling rate
could be more easily maintained.

If adjustment of the price of sterling in terms
of other currencies were later justified by a basic
unbalance, then only 40 percent of the resultant exchange loss would be borne by England, and not more

than 40 percent by the country having blocked balances,
and 20 percent by the Fund.

4. Finally, foreign purchasing power would be released to
be spent wherever desired, and one of the potent obstacles to a return to fair trade practices removed.

222
II-29

This provision on blooked balances is definitely not
proposed as a method of freeing balances which might accu-

mulate currently after the war. Unless the funds to which

this particular power is to apply is clearly delimited, the
provision would overlap and largely nullify other provisions
contained in the proposal specifically designed to meet
current and developing situations in a country's balance of
payments. The provision we have been discussing above 1s

not intended to make it possible for owners of foreign balances--whatever the source of these balances may be--to

withdraw those balances at will at the expense of the Fund's

assets. It is hoped that the Fund will make it possible
for all countries to remove restrictions on exchange transactions, but this particular provision should be used as
the vehicle to free only blocked balances in existence at
the date the country joins the Fund.
It is for the purpose of clearing up the present bad

situation with respect to blocked currencies that this

provision is included. In the event a similar situation
develops in the future, authority is granted to the Fund
provided four-fifths of the member votes approve to initiate
a similar program which would apply to the then-existing
balances.

To provide the data necessary for the operation of
this provision each member country should be required to

file with the Fund a record of the balances in its country
owned by residents of foreign countries, and also a record
of the balances of its nationals held abroad. These

11-30

balances should be broken down in the significant categories

as required by the Fund. A quarterly report should be filed
keeping the information up to date.

The fact that each of the parties concerned, 1.0. (1)
the country in which the balances are blocked, (2) the
country whose nationale own the balances, and (3) the Fund--

will be undertaking an exchange risk should help prevent

undesirable practices or misapplication of this provision.
In evaluating the effectiveness of this provision to
liberate blocked balances, it must be borne in mind that
the mere existence of this power will remove much of the

eagerness to withdraw funds in the near future. That reaction would in turn make it easier for England (and other
countries) to remove exchange restrictions. Even though
the blocked balances in various countries outside of the

United States may be as high as 6 billion dollars, only a
portion of that would be called upon unless there were

strong fears of depreciation of sterling-- development
the Fund could do much to prevent. The greater the assur-

ance that foreign exchange rates will be stable, and the
knowledge that large portions of the funds will be unblocked periodically would encourage holders of these balances to diminish their withdrawal requests.
However, since the amount that the Fund might be

called upon to absorb might be larger than it wished to
handle at the beginning, the Fund is given the authority
to set a maximum percentage of blocked balances that could

be handled through this provision in any given period. It
would be easy enough to adjust that percentage upward if
circumstances indicated it could be safely done.

223

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224

The Fixing of Rates

The Fund would fix the rates at which it will exchange
a member's currency for another, and the rates at which it

will buy and sell gold in exchange for local currency.
The guiding principle in the fixing of such rates should
be stability in exchange relationships. To assure the maximum stability in rates, it is suggested that alterations in
rates set by the Fund beyond the range of narrow fluctuations

applying to all rates be permitted only with the consent of
4/5 of the member votes. If a country does not wish to accept or pay the rate fixed by the Fund, it can, of course,
attempt to complete its transactions through other channels.
Nonetheless the authority to set the rates of exchange at
which the Fund is willing to operate can be an important and
probably a decisive influence on the rate at which transactions
are made outside of the Fund.

The service charge for exchange transactions should be as

little as necessary to cover the direct costs of the operations.
Borrowing from the Fund

Any member country can borrow local currency from the

Fund for one year or less up to 75 percent of the currency of
that country held by the Fund, provided such loan is approved
by 3/4 of the member votes.

A country borrowing such funds shall pay to the Fund an

interest rate of 1 percent a year. Revenue from such loans shall
constitute a reserve for the Fund which can be drawn upon to
meet expenses or losses of the Fund.

11-32

225

The object of the provision permitting any member country

to borrow looal currency from the Fund for one year or less up
to 75 percent of the currency of that country held by the Fund,
provided such loan 18 approved by 3/4 of the member votes, is
to make it possible for a member country to reduce the burden

of participation on its budget. Some of the countries may at
times be confronted with deficits, and the investment that they
would have in the Fund should be a source to which they could

turn in time of need to borrow at very low rates of interest.
It may well prove to be the case that every country operating
at a deficit would prefer to borrow up to the maximum of its
local currency, at 1 percent, rather than go into the market
and possibly pay 2 or more percent. Inasmuch as a fund
could, if necessary, always obtain such local currency by rediscounting the paper in that market, there would seem to be
no reason why the Fund should object to such practice on the

part of those countries wishing to avail themselves of the low

rate of interest. Aslo, from the Fund's point of view, it
would be desirable to permit such loans since it would prove
a source of revenue with which to meet expenses or losses of
the Fund.

Borrowing by the Fund

It is suggested that the Fund should have authority to
borrow at such rates as the Fund may recommend, the currency of
any country, provided 4/5 of the member votes approve the
terms, amount and conditions of such borrowing.

This provision gives the Fund power to obtain any our-

rency it may feel it will need only for a short time. It
also makes it possible for the Fund to expand its resources
to meet short-term special demands.

II-33

226

Currency sold to a Government in Default
No sale of any currency from the Fund should be made to a
member without approval of 4/5 of the member votes when the

sale of such currency 80 sold is to make possible adjustment of
a government foreign debt which had been defaulted. This

provision is probably necessary in order to prevent utilizing
the Fund for the purpose of servicing a foreign debt. The
resources of the Fund should be used for such purpose only when

most of the Board feels that the borrowing for debt adjustment
18 temporary, or when they are convinced that basic adjustments.

Accept deposits, act as clearing house for international movements of funds, balances, checks, etc.
The power to accept deposits and perform clearing functions

would enable the Fund to operate more efficiently in its foreign
exchange operations. It is not intended that the Fund shall
perform banking functions other than those supplementary to the

task of foreign exchange stabilization.
Deal only with (a) the Treasuries of the participating countries,
or with the official stabilization funds of those countries, and
(b) with the bank designated by the participating government as

its fiscal agent, and (c) with international banks and international
corporations owned by at least five governments.
The Fund is envisaged as an intergovernmental agency which

should interfere as little 88 possible with the operations of
private banks, brokers and dealers. It is only when the supplydemand relationship of exchange arising out of usual transactions through the customary channels are causing pressure in an
undesired direction, that the Fund begins to operate.

11-34

227

The Fund will also wish to deal with the B.I.S. and the
Inter-American Bank should the latter be in existence.
The Fund shall have the authority to invest any currency it
holds in "short-term" seourities--commeroial or government--

of the country of that currency provided a 4/5 vote of the
member votes shall approve and provided further that the approving votes shall include those of the country in which the
investment is to be made.

The Fund shall also have authority to sell the obligation
it holds of the member countries provided 4/5 of the member
votes approve, and provided the representative of the country
in which the securities are to be sold approves.
No sale of any currency from the Fund shall be made to a
member without approval of 4/5 of member votes when the our-

rency 80 sold is to be used or 18 to make possible adjustment
of a government foreign debt which had been defaulted.
Value of Total Holdings Should Remain Unchanged

No change in the gold value of any currency of the partici-

pating countries shall be permitted to alter the gold value
of the total currency holdings of the Fund. Through the dayto-day operations of the Fund, the proportion of various local
currencies held by the Fund will constantly change, but the
book value of the total assets would remain the same in terms

of the unit of account (presuming the small service charges
and interest revenue would cover operating expenses). The
unit of account used should either be gold dollars or a new

international unit defined in terms of gold. If the currency
of any of the participating countries should depreciate, that
country must deliver to the Fund an amount of its local ourrency equal to the decrease in the value of that currency held

II-35

228

by the Fund. Likewise, if the currency of a particular country should increase, the Fund must deliver to that country an
amount (in the currency of that country) equal to the resul-

tant increase in the gold value of the Fund's holdings.
An exception to the above would be the blocked balances

purchased by the Fund under provision described earlier. Those
currencies could be kept in a separate account until repurchased

or sold. The only portion upon which there might be a loss is
in the 20 percent portion the exchange risk on which is borne
by the Fund. The sole justification for placing that exchange
risk on the Fund is the desire to spread some of the risk of
sterling accumulations resulting from the war on all nations
benefiting by the successful outcome. Of course, if that is
not considered adequate justification, the Fund can be relieved
of any risk.
The only serious bookkeeping loss that could be experienced

would be in the event the unit of account--either a new interna-

tional unit fixed in terms of gold or the dollar having a fixed
gold content--were to appreciate in terms of all or most of the
currencies. That is equivalent to saying that all other ourrencies depreciated in terms of the unit of account. There
is no way to avoid that possibility unless the unit of account
were defined in terms of an index of other currencies--a

complicated device and of doubtful utility.
A country failing to contribute to the Fund sums due the
Fund shall be dropped as a member, provided a majority of the
member votes 80 decide. Any member dropped shall have returned

to it an amount (in its own currency) equal to its contribution
minus any sum due by that country to the Fund.

229
II-36

Eligibility for membership.

The conditions selected to be fulfilled before any country can be eligible for membership in the Fund constitute an

important part of the plan. It will also prove to be one of
the most disputed parts. Serious differences of opinion as
to the wisdom of including many of the conditions listed are

certain to exist. It will be said of some of them that they
embrace far too wide an area of economic policy. Others on

the list will be opposed on the grounds that they involve
policy decisions which cannot be shared by or delegated to any
combination of nations. And against some of the conditions

listed opposition will arise because there will be different
views as to the economic soundness of some of the requirement,

and of the political feasibility of others. Finally some of
the requirements for eligibility listed may be very difficult
for many countries to accept because acceptance would involve

abandonment, or rather suspension, of certain legislative
powers. Nonetheless, the list is submitted because the chief

purpose of this report is to suggest possibilities and stimulate
discussion.

It is vital to the success of any international stabilization fund designed to play a really useful role that there be a
suspension of certain economic elements of national sovereignty

in favor of international collaboration. It is well to recognize
at the outset that unless there is willingness to keep dormant,

for a trial period at least, certain rights to unilateral economic
action which directly affect other countries, there is no hope

0950 follow 230
II-37

that any international instrument can be devised to help bring
about the kind of collaboration among nations essential to a
properous and peaceful world. If no government is prepared

to sacrifice for the sake of a larger though possibly a less
obvious good what it regards as an advantage when that advantage
is obtained at the expense of some friendly power then the

world will revert to the barbario international economic rela-

tionships of the 'twenties and 'thirties.