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The Postwar Foreign Lendine Propr-am r>f t.ha TTw-ited States

It must be a familiar fact that today America is the economic
giant of the world.

We emerged from the war with tremendous productive

power far surpassing anything in our previous peacetime history.

At

the same time, large parts of the rest of the world, as a result
of the destruction and disruption wrought by the war, found themselves
economically crippled.

Fundamentally we are a healthy giant and much

of the rest of the world is sick.

Whereas before the war our physical

production amounted to around 25 per cent of the world total, today
our factories, mines, and farms are probably turning out more physical
production than all the rest of the world combined.
To a lesser degree, this same situation prevailed during the
war.

American productive power, shared with our Allies through the

Lend-Lease program, was the decisive factor in the defeat of the Axis
powers.

Our Allies in Europe and in the Far East came to rely heavily

upon the supply line to America in carrying out their war effort.
But the war ended suddenly, and with it the pipeline of LendLease supplies^ran out/

Now the demand in the Allied countries was

for relief and reconstruction, but as a result of the war they were in
m

-á u / p n j

no position to produce for export an amount sufficient to aaaw/their
urgent import requirements.

The enemy countries themselves, shattered

by the effects of war and defeat, became public charges of the occupying




-2 -

powers.

We have had to feed them and now find it necessary to supply

them with raw materials and equipment to reactivate their in­
dustrial machines so that they may again produce to meet the needs of
a distressed world.

Even the countries in this Hemisphere which had

largely escaped the physical destruction of the war had great deferred
demands for consumer goods and capital goods which were available only
from the United States.
It should come as no surprise, therefore, that there have
been immense and pressing foreign demands upon our economy from abroad
during the postwar period.

Since at the same time foreign countries

have been physically unable to produce even a normal volume of exports
to the United States, these demands could not have been met unless
dollar financing had been provided on a veiy large scale.

Since

private sources of capital could not be expected to carry the burden
of this financing, the task has fallen to the United States Government,
and in the period since the end of the war we have seen a tremendous
out-pouring of Federal funds for grants and loans to foreign countries.
Before giving you a brief review of what has been done to
date and of where we now stand, let me say a word as to the objectives
of the foreign lending program.
venture in the usual sense.

Obviously this is not a business

We are not lending money abroad for the
We are not lending

money abroad in order to develop markets and create employment in our
export industries.




We have simply faced the fact that unless credit

-3was prorided on a selective basis to permit the flow of American produc­
tion to the distressed areas of the world, large portions of Europe
and Asia would have been reduced to starvation, unemployment, and
widespread social unrest.

We have had to recognize that such condi­

tions would have constituted a major threat to the attainment of the
objectives for ’which we fought the war.
Our war aims can be simply stated.

We seek a stable peace­

ful community of nations in which the peoples of the world can devote
their talents and resources to their common welfare.

We have been

seeking through the United Nations to establish a political framework
for such a world community, and our foreign economic policy has been
directed to the same end.

But political, economic, and social stability

are all one, and none can be achieved without some measure of~economic
recovery in the war-stricken areas to which we have been directing
the bulk of our foreign aid program.
I want to emphasize our stake in world stability because
of some very mistaken notions held by some people in this countiy and
widely exploited in Russian propaganda.

One of these notions is that

the capitalist economic system in the United States depends for its
successful operation upon the constant stimulus of a huge export surplus.
Accordingly, the view is expressed that we are the real beneficiaries
of our foreign lending program, and that we should be pleased that

/¿Of
foreign countries are prepared to borrow moj/ej^and spend it here.
follows, of course, from this argument that if there is a let up in




It

-4 -

our foreign lending program our economic system will be condemned to
unemployment and collapse.
So far as the development of our economy since the war is
concerned, nothing could be further from the truth.

We have been

engaged in a constant struggle with domestic inflationary pressures
arising out of the shortage of goods in comparison with the tremendous
current and accumulated purchasing power of the American people.

The ship­

ment of vast supplies to foreign countries, while it cannot be said to
have imposed any serious deprivations upon our people, has nonetheless
added markedly to the inflationary pressure.

There have been times,

and there may again be times, when the problem of our economic system
is to find markets for our production.
recent years, nor is it true today.

This has not been true in

And when and if this situation

again develops, it can be dealt with just as effectively through the
extension oJ
upon our pe<

me or by reducing the taxes.which bear
case for foreign lending must rest upon

our foreign policy objectives and our long-term interests in develop­
ing a healthy and prosperous world economy rather than upon any
specious argument of short-term economic advantage.
Altogether since the end of the war the United States Gov­
ernment has authorized foreign grants and credits of about 16-1/2
billion dollars.

The principal instruments in the postwar foreign

loan program have been the Export-Import Bank, the lending power




-5of -which was increased from 700 million to 3-1/2 billion dollars in
July 1945» the special loan to Britain of 3-3/4- billion dollars granted
in December 1945} the delivery on credit terms of certain categories
of Lend-Lease goods amounting to 1-1/2 billion dollars; sales of
military surplus on credit terms, amounting to 1 billion dollars;
and the special 350 million dollar appropriation for Greece and
Turkey which is being advanced this year.

„ ,^

In addition, the United
A

States Government has contributed over 3 billion dollars of relief
supplies to UNRRA and in connection with the post-UNRRA program
being carried out this year; we have promised large grants to the
Philippines, although these have not yet been used; and we have been
supplying some three-quarters of a billion dollars worth of goods
annually to Germany, Japan, and other areas occupied by our armed
forces.

^Although thporetirally. ffupplieo bu oe.cupl»d STeas are'ttu.uiohed

>jm-^edltr~tems7”"the prospects of repayment a r e ^ ^ utffiyrtaln Slml .....—
practical^iiTT^offfiTrTrerYegaJ^'them as d<w^ons« Jl

‘

Drafts upon these grants and credits, plus substantial
liquidation of foreign gold and dollar reserves, have provided the
means for financing a great export surplus from the United States.
In 1946 our total exports of goods and services amounted to 15 billion
dollars and total imports to 7 billion, leaving 8 billion as the net
export surplus which had to be financed.
was covered

Of this amount, 3 billion

by donations, 3 billion by credits, and 2 billion by the

liquidation of foreign gold and dollar resources*




The credits were

-6 -

made available almost entirely by the United States Government, and
so were the donations (mostly through UHBRA and the occupied areas
programs), except for 700 million dollars of private relief ship­
ments and remittances in 1946.
In the first half of 1947, total exports were running
at the annual rate of over 20 billion dollars, and imports at the
rate of less than & 'billion dollars, with the result that the net
export surplus Vas running at the annual rate of over 12 billion dolUrtLq %
lars, or over half again as much as in 1946* This has put a heavy
>

strain upon available financial facilities, especially since thé
amount of Government donations declined somewhat with the wind-up
of USERA activities.

During the first half of the year foreign

countries speeded up the

11imiuu^'Tfiji'i

of their credits with the United

States Government to a rate of 5 billion dollars a year, while drafts
upon their existing gold and dollar resources reached an annual rate
of 4-1/2 billion dollars.
It is perfectly apparent that unless new programs of foreign
financial aid are launched on a large scale, foreign countries cannot
much longer maintain this rate of deficit financing in their trade
with the United States.

Furthermore, there is little prospect

that United States imports, will expand greatly during the next year
or so.

As a result, the 20 billion dollar rate of American exports

is going to have to decline unless new measures are t a k e n

f

Under present programs, foreign countries will have available
only about 6-1/2 billion dollars of grants and credits for expenditure




,

-7in the United States during the coming fiscal ye
amount to well

its may again

efvej* 2 billion dollars, made up principally of the sup­

plies to occupied areas, and private relief shipments and remittances.
However, drafts on existing U.S. Government Gredits and on those
which may be provided by the International Fund and Bank, plus some
small private investment abroad, are not likely to provide more than 4
billion dollars as compared with the annual rate of 5 billion reached
in the first half of this year.

While the International Fund and

Bank, to which the United States has subscribed nearly 6 billion dol­
lars, are now coming into active operation, they are not set up in
such a way as to provide really large-scale assistance at the present
time.

The function of the Fund is to provide short-term credits,

while the present demand is for long-term assistance.

The Bank, on

the other hand, is limited in the scope of its immediate operations
since the bulk of its funds must be borrowed in the private market
and it must proceed with caution in order to retain the confidence
of the investing public,
There remain

f
available to fill/the "dollar gap" the gold

and dollar reserves of foreign countries; which under existing pro­
grams would have to provide some 5 billion dollars during the caning
year if the 20 billion dollar rate of exports were to be maintained.
Clearly this is not feasible.

It is true that these reserves^ amounted

to over 15 billion dollars at the middle of this year, and that in
addition private citizens in foreign countries held some 3 billion




-8 -

dollars of dollar balances plus several billion dollars of long-term
investments in the United States.

But a large part of these assets is

either not available to foreign governments (many of which still retain
respect for private property rights) or must be conserved as reserves against
currency in circulation in foreign countries or as "last ditch" reserves
against international contingencies.

More importantly, however, the

aggregate figures are misleading, since the so-called "dollar shortage",
while widespread, is nonetheless heavily concentrated in a few countries.
Even though the total figures for available dollar assets in foreign
hands may seem large, certain countries will still find themselves
badly squeezed.

Any extension of our foreign lending program must

therefore be thought of in terms of meeting the acute situations of
particular countries.
Similarly, on the export side, it is not very meaningful
to talk in terms of aggregates, and to discuss whether or not from the
point of view of foreign countries it is necessary to maintain the
20 billion dollar annual rate of exports reached in the first half
of this year.

It may well be essential to the attainment of our for­

eign policy objectives to maintain the flow of our trade to some
areas, but it is equally clear that some countries have been purchas­
ing more goods in the United States than were required to meet their
essential requirements.
commodities.




The same can be said with respect to different

On the whole, our exports of food, fuel, and raw materials

-9have been meeting truly essential requirements.

On the other hand, we

have been exporting great quantities of non-essential manufactures,
especially to countries in this Hemisphere.
The countries to which we have been lending on a large
scale have, for the most part, confined their expenditures to essential
goods, but our markets have also been open to countries which could
afford to spend accumulated gold and dollar reserves upon non-essential
goods.

We have been unable to check this tendency since our direct-

controls over exported commodities have been largely dismantled.

In

the first quarter of this year, for example, we exported 63,000 pas­
senger cars, 49,000 electric refrigerators, and 430,000 radio receiv­
ing sets, representing around 8 to 10 per cent of our output in
these lines.

While possibly some of these items were used to meet

essential requirements, most of them must be regarded as needless
frills.

We need not become too concerned if ,sjuch exports decline

when foreign countries use up their freely available purchasing power.
As you know, a series of studies is now being prepared for
the United States Government on the subject of our foreign aid program,
both with respect to foreign requirements and with respect to the
capacity of the American economy to produce goods for export.

In

particular the United States Government has indicated its readiness
to consider further aid for reconstruction in Europe if the foreign
countries themselves present a plan which includes a maximum degree
of European self-help and which promises to put them on their feet again




- 1 0 -

within a reasonable period of time.

We all recognize in the words

of the President’s Midyear Economic Report to Congress that "the cost
of effective foreign aid programs will be only a veiy small fraction
of the cost of winning the war, and they are vital to the winning of
the peace".