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October 20, 1950

Bear Tom;
Thanks very much for yours of
the eighteenth, enclosing me & copy of the
letter which you had sent to John Snyder. I
hope that matters can be worked out to the
satisfaction of both of you.
Sincerely yours,

Honorable Thomas B . McCabe
Chairman
Board of Governors of the
Federal
Reserve System'7
■

........ ..........

ashmgton, D. C.




BOARD OF G O VERNO RS
OF THE

FE D E R A L R E S E R V E S Y S TE M
W A S H IN G T O N
O F F IC E O F TH E C H A IR M A N

October 18, 1950.
FTPRMlMESi
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-iv s

_

Ifcr dear Mr, Presidents
I am sure that you -will be interested in
reading the enclosed copy of my letter to John Snyder.
The letter will show you that I followed your sug­
gestion in initiating further conferences with John
and that I took great pains, over a period of two
weeks, to give him our point of view and to seek his
reactions and recommendations.
Since it was the unanimous opinion of the
Federal Open Market Committee that we should vigorously
follow your anti-inflationary policy, we felt that we
must go ahead as indicated in the letter.
I am deeply grateful to you for your patience
and sympathetic understanding of our problem and for
your continued expressions of confidence.
Respectfully yours,
g hS
sERV
slcrr
*
V#

Thomas B. McCabe.
The President,
The W aite House.
Enclosure




October 16, 1950#

Honorable John W. Snyder,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington 2£, D. C.
Dear John:
Two weeks ago Mr. Sproul and I discussed with you the
problems of the Treasury and the Federal Reserve System in the
fields of debt management and credit policy, as parts of the
broader anti-inflationary policy and program of the Government.
At that time, the Federal Open Market Committee was in session
and we conveyed to you its thinking on open market operations, as
well as the thinking of the Board of Governors on reserve require­
ments and selective controls. Your views, which you then expressed
to us, were in turn conveyed to the Federal Open Market Committee,
as was your suggestion that you would like a couple more days to
think over the matters we had talked about.
The Federal Open Market Committee, in response to our re­
port of our conference with you, asked its Executive Committee to
carry forward these discussions, and it was in response to this di­
rection that Mr. Sproul and X again sought a conference with you be­
fore a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Federal Open Market
Committee on October
In that conference, we told you of the
unanimous view of the Federal Open Market Committee, and of the Board
of Governors, that further action should be taken in the field of gen­
eral credit control to put a brake upon the prevailing ease with which
banks can obtain reserve funds for further credit expansion. You told
us of your concern about the success of the forthcoming Savings Bond
Campaign and of the discussions which have been started to put in motion
voluntary action by the commercial banks to restrain credit expansion.
At that meeting you also said that you would like to have an opportunity
to talk with me again on the following Monday.
You and I have since talked two or three times on the tele­
phone and, in the light of these conversations and of our earlier con­
ferences, a meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee was called
for Wednesday, October 11. At that meeting your views, as they had
developed in our talks, were given fully and frankly to the Committee.
As you know, the Committee also expressed its willingness to have you
present these views in person if you so desired. You decided, and I
think properly, not to deviate from the established procedure which we
have adopted for mutual consultation.




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2

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After giving thoughtful consideration to your views, the
Committee again canvassed the business and credit situation as de­
veloped by the reports and studies of its research staff and through
the contacts of members of the Committee in various parts of the
country. It seemed clear to the Committee that, despite some signs
or prospects of moderate abatement of inflationary pressures which
might be detected in certain fields, the underlying forces in our
economy are still strongly inflationary and -will be accelerated by
increasing Government expenditures as the rearmament program really
begins to bring its huge demands upon our economy, unless stem fiscal
policies such as you have advocated and further credit restraints are
adopted.
The President announced the anti-inflationary policy of the
Government when, in the Midyear Economic Report, he stated that:
’’First of all, for the immediate situation, we
should rely in major degree upon fiscal and credit
measures. These general measures can be helpful not
only in restraining inflationary pressures, but also
in reducing the civilian demand for some specific
products, such as automobiles and housing, thus mak­
ing available for necessary military use a larger
proportion of an already short supply of some crit­
ical materials. The more prompt and vigorous we
are with these general measures, the less need
there will be for all of the comprehensive direct
controls "which involve the consideration of thousands
of individual situations and thus involve infinitely
greater administrative difficulties and much greater
interference with individual choice and initiative.11
In the light of this policy and of the statutory responsibility of
the Federal Open Market Committee, which provides that the time,
character, and volume of open market operations shall be governed
with a view to accommodating commerce and business and with regard
to their bearing upon the general credit situation of the country,
the Committee felt that it had no option but to proceed with the
action we had advised you orally, two weeks ago, that it had in mind.
Since the Treasury will have no refunding operations until December,
the present is an especially propitious time for the System to proceed
with this somewhat more restrictive open market policy, even though
the action results in a moderate increase in short-term rates. Any
resultant increase in the costs of carrying the public debt will be
dirfectly saved, many times over, if it helps to curb the rising costs
of Government procurement, and the benefits to the people of the
country, of course, will be greatly multiplied.




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We realize that the action we are taking in our open market
operations will need to be supplemented in order to exercise effective
restraint on the mounting inflationary pressures that threaten the
economy. Consequently, we are unanimous in the conviction that we can
only meet our responsibilities by going ahead with the weapons at our
command, including increases in reserve requirements, application of
real estate credit controls, and tightening up of consumer credit
regulations. We sincerely believe that the combination of these re­
straints on credit expansion will have a profound effect in the effort
to hold the line until the heavier taxation promised for next year be­
gins to bite into incomes*
We can assure you that these actions will not affect the
maintenance of the 2 1/2 per cent rate for the outstanding longest
term Government bonds, and we are convinced that this further evi­
dence of a resolute will to fight inflation and to protect the pur­
chasing power of the dollar will promote, not discourage, the sale
of E bonds* No one knows better than you that confidence in E bonds,
as well as all other types of savings, is based on confidence in the
purchasing power of the dollar*
Although \in this instance we have not been able to bring
about a complete meeting of minds in our discussions with respect to
System policy and debt management, we have both thoroughly considered
all of the aspects of the difficult problems confronting us and we have
earnestly sought to achieve that accord which I know you desire as much
as we do in meeting our respective responsibilities. At your con­
venience we would like to sit down with you to explore further the
problems for which we both seek solutions that are in the best interests
of this country*




With warmest regards, I am
Sincerely,
(Signed) Tom.
Thomas 6* McCabe
Chairman*