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AMENDMENT OF SECTION 14(b) OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE ACT

HEARING
BEFORE

THE

COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND CURRENCY
HOUSE OE REPRESENTATIVES
EIGHTY-FIFTH
SECOND

CONGKESS

SESSION

ON

H. R. 12586
J U N E 12, 1958

P r i n t e d for the use of the Committee on B a n k i n g and Currency

UNITED
GOVERNMENT
27348




STATES

PRINTING

OFFICE

W A S H I N G T O N : 1958

COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND CURRENCY
B R E N T S P E N C E , Kentucky, Chairman
P A U L B R O W N , Georgia
W R I G H T P A T M A N , Texas
A L B E R T R A I N S , Alabama
A B R A H A M J. M U L T E R , New York
H U G H J. A D D O N I Z I O , N e w Jersey
W I L L I A M A . B A R R E T T , Pennsylvania
L E O N O R K . S U L L I V A N , Missouri
H E N R Y S. R E U S S , Wisconsin
M A R T H A W . G R I F F I T H S , Michigan
T H O M A S L . A S H L E Y , Ohio
C H A R L E S A . V A N I K , Ohio
J A M E S O, H E A L E Y , N e w Y o r k
J. T . R U T H E R F O R D , Texas
M E R W I N C O A D , Iowa
L B R O Y H . A N D E R S O N , Montana
J . F L O Y D B R E E D I N G , Kansas

H E N R Y O. T A L L E , Iowa
C L A R E N C E E . K I L B U f c N , New York
G O R D O N L ; M c D O N O U G H , California
W I L L I A M B . W I D N A L L , N e w Jersey
J A C K S O N E . B E T T S , Ohio
W A L T E R M . M U M M A , Pennsylvania
W I L L I A M E . M c V E Y , Illinois
E D G A R W . H I E S T A N D , California
P E R K I N S BASS, N e w Hampshire
H O R A C E S E E L Y - B R O W N , JR., Connecticut
E U G E N E S I L E R , Kentucky
J O H N E . H E N D E R S O N , Ohio
C H A R L E S E . C H A M B E R L A I N , Michigan

ROBERT L . CARDON, Clerk and General Counsel
JOHN E . BARRIERS, Majority Staff Member
ORMAN S. FINK, Minority Staff Member
ROBERT R . POSTON, Counsel

(1




CONTENTS
H . R . 12586. A bill to amend section 14 (b) of the Federal Reserve Act, as
amended, to extend for 2 years the authority of Federal Reserve banks
t o purchase U n i t e d States obligations directly from the Treasury
Statement o f —
Baird, Julian B., Under Secretary of the Treasury for Monetary
Affairs




ra

1
1

AMENDMENT OF SECTION 14 (b) OF THE FEDERAL
RESERVE ACT
THURSDAY,

JUNE

HOUSE
COMMITTEE

OF

12,

1958

REPRESENTATIVES,

ON B A N K I N G

AND

CURRENCY,

Washington, D. O.
T h e committee met, pursuant to notice, at 9:30 a. m., Hon. Brent
Spence (chairman) presiding.
Present: Representatives Spence (presiding), Brown, Patman,
Rains, M u l t e r , Addonizio, Barrett, M r s . Sullivan, Messrs. Reuss,
Ashley, Vanik, Healey, Rutherford, Coad, Anderson, Breeding, Talle,
Kjlburn, Widnall, Betts, M u m m a , M c V e y , Hiestand, Bass, SeelyBrown, and Henderson.
T h e CHAIRMAN. T h e committee w i l l be i n order.
W e are meeting to consider H . R . 12586, a direct-purchase authority
bill. T h e witness is M r . Baird, the Under Secretary of the Treasury
for M o n e t a r y Affairs. W e w i l l be glad to hear you, M r . Baird.
If y o u want to proceed without interruption, y o u may now read your
statement.
M r . BAIRD. T h a n k you, sir.
T h e CHAIRMAN. YOU w i l l then be subject to any questions the
members may have.
(The b i l l H . R . 12586 follows:)
[H. R . 12586, 85th Cong. ,2d sess.]
A B I L L To amend section 14 (b) of the Federal Reserve Act, as amended, to extend for two years the
authority of Federal Reserve banks to purchase United States obligations directly from the Treasury
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, T h a t section 14 (b) of t h e F e d e r a l Reserve A c t ,
as a m e n d e d ( U . S. C., 1952 edition, supp. V , t i t l e 12, sec. 355), is a m e n d e d b y
s t r i k i n g o u t " J u l y 1, 1958" a n d inserting i n l i e u thereof " J u l y 1, I 9 6 0 " a n d b y
s t r i k i n g o u t " J u n e 30, 1958" a n d inserting i n l i e u thereof " J u n e 30, 1960".

S T A T E M E N T OF J U L I A N B. BAIRD, UNDER SECRETARY OF T H E
T R E A S U R Y FOR M O N E T A R Y A F F A I R S
M r . BAIRD. M r . Chairman, I believe there has been distributed to
each member of the committee a copy of this prepared statement, but
w i t h your permission I w i l l read it.
I am glad to have this opportunity to appear before y o u today to
present the views of the Treasury Department i n support of H . R .
12586. T h i s b i l l w o u l d extend until June 30, 1960, the present authority of the Federal Reserve banks to purchase public-debt obligations directly from the Treasury i n amounts not to exceed $5 billion
outstanding at any one time.




1

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The Treasury Department recommended that the proposed Financial Institutions Act, pending before this committee, be amended to
include a provision which would accomplish this 2-year extension.
I n view of the fact that the Financial Institutions A c t has not yet
been enacted and in order to avoid the lapse of this authority, we are
requesting your consideration of H . R . 12586 at this time. T h e
extension has been endorsed by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System.
I am sure you are familiar with the purposes and the background
of this legislation. Y o u will recall that the Federal Reserve banks
under the original Federal Reserve A c t had authority to purchase
Government obligations either in the market or directly from the
Treasury without limitation on their holdings up until 1935. T h e
Banking A c t of 1935 limited this authority, however, to open-market
transactions. I n 1942 the Second W a r Powers A c t restored the
authority of the Federal Reserve banks to make purchases directly
from the Treasury up to $5 billion outstanding at any one time.
This authority, which was initially granted only through December
31, 1944, was subsequently extended by Congress from time to time.
I t will expire June 30, 1958, unless it is extended further by the
Congress.
This direct-purchase authority permits the Treasury, in cooperation
with the Federal Reserve System, to smooth out the effect on the
economy of short-run fluctuations in its cash receipts and disbursements. This is especially important at the quarterly tax dates. T h e
short-run fluctuations involve large figures. F o r example, total deposits into the Treasury from all sources this month are estimated to
exceed $13 billion, of which $11 billion will be concentrated in the
last half of the month. During the fiscal year 1957, the total of all
cash funds paid into the Treasury and out of the Treasury on all
accounts, including budgetary operations, trust-fund activities, and
public-debt issues and redemptions, exceeded $400 billion. These are
tremendous amounts to deal with and the Treasury must have tools
to operate efficiently and effectively. Sound financial management
requires that the disturbing effect of such a tremendous flow of funds
be held to a minimum. This direct-borrowing authority is one of
the tools that the Treasury and the Federal Reserve System use for
this purpose. The authority is used only occasionally and for short
periods. I t was used last on M a r c h 17 and 18, 1958. O n M a r c h 17
the Treasury borrowed $143 million from the Federal Reserve banks,
and on M a r c h 18 we borrowed $64 million. These amounts were
repaid on M a r c h 19 from collections of the M a r c h 15 installment of
corporate income taxes. There have been other quarterly tax dates
when our advance estimates indicated there would be some necessity
of utilizing this direct borrowing authority, but when the actual flow
of receipts and expenditures was more favorable than had been estimated, the need for direct borrowing did not materialize. T h e
attached table indicates the amount o i direct borrowings from the
Federal Reserve banks since January 1952.
During the wartime period of low and controlled interest rates the
Treasury paid interest at the rate of one-fourth of 1 percent on these
direct borrowings. Since the authority was so infrequently used, this
rate carried over after the war without any change. Recently, however, the Treasury agreed with the Federal Reserve System that the




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ACT

rate on these special borrowings should be a more realistic rate. Effective i n November 1957, the rate was fixed at one-fourth of 1 percent
less than the rediscount rate at the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York. Currently this will involve a rate of 1% percent as against the
rediscount rate of 1% percent now i n effect at that bank.
T h e direct borrowing authority is an essential tool to meet our temporary requirements in connection with the day-to-day operations of
the Treasury. W e should not overlook the fact also that it is a safeguard that could be used in the event of any sudden nationwide emergency requiring heavy cash payments from the Treasury before publicdebt obligations could be .sold in the public markets to provide such
funds.
There is always a delay of a week or 10 days i n order to get out a
public offering, I may say.
I t has been the Treasury's policy never to use this borrowing authority on other than a temporary basis, and we have no intention of
changing this policy. W e recognize that we are dealing with powerful forces because selling obligations of the Government direct to
Federal Reserve banks creates high-powered money, and it is for that
reason we think the Treasury should make a biennial accounting to
the Congress of the manner in which it has exercised this borrowing
authority. The authority has been used, as the record shows, with
great restraint, but it is the kind of thing that carries the possibility
of abuse.
I t has never been necessary to use as much as $5 billion but nevertheless we recommend continuation of the present $5 billion limitation to give the Treasury and the Federal Reserve System sufficient
flexibility to cover emergency situations if they should arise. A n y
borrowing under the authority is, of course, subject to the statutory
debt limit.
Now, if you will turn to the table, then, that is appended, you will
notice that the longest period of time since 1942 that it was used at
one time was 28 days, back in 1943. I t was used once for a continuous 20-day period in 1953, or a 13-day period in 1954. It was not
used at all in 1955, 1956, or 1957. A n d it was used twice—no, it
was used once, excuse me, in 1958 for a period of 2 days.
Direct

borrowing

Year

1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956.
1957
1958

-




Federal

Days used

-

*

from

—

-

-

19
48
None
9
None
None
None
2
2
4
30
29
15
None
None
None
2

Reserve

banks

Maximum
amount at
any time

Number of
separate
times used

Maximum
number of
days used at
any one time

Millions
$422
1,320

4
4

6
28

484

2

7

220
108
320
811
1,172
424

1
2
2
4
2
2

2
1
3
9
20
13

207

1

2

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T h a t concludes my statement, M r . Chairman.
The CHAIRMAN. Y o u are only asking for the extension of present
authority without any amendments, just the laws that now exist?
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is correct, sir. I t has been extended successively
since 1942, and as I indicated before, we think it is well to have this
reviewed b y Congress every 2 years, because the powers could be
abused by an administration of the Treasury or an administration of
the Federal Reserve, and the Congress should review the way they
have performed under these powers.
T h e CHAIRMAN. When was this power first given to you?
M r . BAIRD. T h e original act, Federal Reserve Act, gave the power
without limit. Then it was repealed i n 1935, and i n 1942, the war
being on, this special $5 billion power was given for 2 years and has
subsequently been renewed for 2-year intervals, always after the
Treasury's report to Congress.
The (CHAIRMAN. SO the Treasury is the only Department that is
asking for this?
M r . BAIRD. T h e Treasury is the only Department that is asking
for it. T h e Federal Reserve Board has indicated that they approve
of it as a good procedure.
The CHAIRMAN. T h e Treasury makes the request?
M r . B A I R D . Y e s , sir.

The CHAIRMAN. HOW many years have you had this power and
failed to use it?
M r . BAIRD. Well, this chart that is appended shows that since 1942
there have been 7 years i n which it was not used at all.
The CHAIRMAN. YOU have no intention of using it for anything
except to meet the deficiencies that may exist by reason of the shortage
of funds?
M r . BAIRD. That is correct. We would be very much opposed to
using it for anything but this temporary purpose.
I would give you an analogy. This is a dangerous kind of a drug
to use. A doctor can use drugs under prescription once i n a while to
the great benefit of the patient. B u t we don't want to get to be an
addict, because there are many governments around the world—
many treasuries have gotten into difficulty and have i n this last year,
due to the fact that the central bank authorities have permitted the
treasury officials to finance deficits by direct borrowing and it reaches
a point where there is no restraint and it destroys the integrity of their
monetary system.
The CHAIRMAN. I will call the committee on the 5-minute rule.
Dr. Talle.
M r . TALLE. Thank you, M r . Chairman.
Reviewing the history of this proposed legislation, M r . Baird, I
might say that the Federal Reserve A c t enacted i n December 1913,
and put into effect the following year left this wide open, so that the
Treasury could have recourse either to the Federal Reserve banks or
to the open market; that is correct, isn't it?
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is correct, sir.
M r . TALLE. A n d that prevailed until 1935.
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is correct, sir.
M r . TALLE. Then it was changed and for 7 years the recourse was
only to the open market.
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is correct, sir.




5 AMENDMENT

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M r . TALLE. A n d not to the Federal Reserve banks.
Following that, in 1942, this method has been employed, up to $5
billion. A n d I note that your table points out how sparingly the
authority has been used.
Now, I would like to quote a few statements from your testimony.
I quote now:
T h i s direct purchase authority permits the Treasury i n cooperation w i t h the
Federal Reserve System to smooth out the effect on the economy of short-run
fluctuations i n its cash receipts and disbursements.

I t is obvious to everyone that the inflow to the Treasury is irregular.
However, the Government must pay its bills. If it doesn't, the people
will quickly know about it and the reaction will not be favorable.
I t seems to me it is quite necessary that you do have this authority.
I quote again from the same page, No. 2 :
Sound financial management requires that the disturbing effect of such a tremendous flow of funds be held to a minimum.

E v e n such a thing as weather, M r . Baird, can influence the Treasury
situation, can't it?
M r . BAIRD. I t surely can.
M r . TALLE. A heat wave i n the M i d d l e West would affect it,
wouldn't it?
M r . BAIRD. That is right, and if airplanes are held up for a few
days, where there is a holdup of heavy tax receipts, it can make a
difference of hundreds of millions i n our cash position.
M r . TALLE. T h a t is right. I know that in some years you have
not used the authority at all. While it was necessary to use it last
March, you used it for only 2 days.
M r . B A I R D . Y e s , sir.

M r . TALLE. SO it is a very convenient way of meeting a situation
which must be met unless the Government runs the risk of very bad
public psychology.
I t seems, therefore, most reasonable that this should be extended,
and so far as I am concerned it is the kind of bill that could very well
go on the Consent Calendar, except for the fact that we do have in the
House a limitation of $1 million on Consent Calendar bills. If they
amount to $1 million or more, we don't consider them on the Consent
Calendar. W h i c h is quite all right. I don't criticize that. I t is
good policy and good practice.
T h a n k you very much for your testimony.
M r . BAIRD. Thank you.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . B r o w n .

M r . BROWN. NO questions, M r . Chairman.

T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . K i l b u r n .

M r . KILBURN. I would like to have your reaction to the amendment
M r . Reuss proposes to your bill. D i d you see it?
M r . BAIRD. I just had an opportunity before the meeting. M r .
Reuss handed me a copy of his amendment. I have studied it very
briefly. M y observation on it would be this: If that bill were enacted, it would not make one whit of difference in the way the Treasury or the Federal Reserve would handle this.
W e are so imbued with the idea that we are dealing with a powerful
drug here and it should be used with such great restraint that we
would not handle it in any other way. B u t I feel very strongly that
27348—58




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whatever the intention of M r . Reuss in putting this amendment in
is—and I am sure it is a worthy intention—I think it is the kind of
thing that would be construed by the financial community i n this
country and abroad as being the opening wedge and as an expression
of the Congress that they didn't treat this device with quite the same
seriousness that they have i n the past, that under this amendment,
as I read it, it would be perfectly permissible for the Treasury to place
$1 billion over in the F e d if they are going into open market purchases
i n the next 6 months to that extent—I am not suggesting they will,
but if they were they could take the billion directly from the Treasury
and let it lodge there until the 2 years have elapsed.
Now, you can argue that there isn't much difference whether the
Treasury sells Treasury bills in the open market and F e d goes and buys
them in the open market. B u t that is one of the fetishes that has
grown up in the financial community. A n d as I said earlier, the
world—in L a t i n America and many of the countries of Europe,
there has been abuse of the privilege of the central bank taking directly
from the treasury of those countries their bills. A n d it has caused
these gross inflations. They have lost control of their monetary
situations.
So that idea has been built up i n the minds of the financial community. A n d I think the enactment of that amendment would cause
consternation.
There are certain people who represent a group of very conservative
economists over the country who think we should not have the power
at all to do it.
Y o u can make an excellent case for that, if there is any chance of
its being abused.
The Treasury likes the idea of the 2-year extension as a precedent
because there will be other administrations, of both the Treasury
and the Federal Reserve, in times to come. We think the Congress in
a matter as important as this should review this each 2 years and force
the Treasury to account for the way it has behaved.
Now, I mention that because I am trying to show the sensitivity
of the financial community over the world to this idea of putting
direct Treasury obligations into the Fed. A n d when reasons are
cited of economy or in interest rates or that it would help in fighting a
recession or any of those reasons, thfey just say, "Yes, that is the
first step. If $5 billion, why not $10 billion next time? A n d why
not, instead of 2 years, let it ride?" Those are the dangers people see.
Now, that is a long answer, M r . Kilburn, but that is the Treasury's
reaction to that amendment.
M r . KILBURN. I certainly didn't mean to steal anything from M r .
Reuss, because, of course, I know that his offering of the amendment
is absolutely sincere, and he wants to do the best job he can. A n d I
didn't know how it affected the Treasury. I thank you very much
for your reply. This is all, M r . Chairman.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r .

Patman.

M r . PATMAN. M I . Baird, the $143 million and $64 million transactions; were they handled by the N e w Y o r k Federal Reserve Bank?
M r . BAIRD. Yes; they were all handled by the N e w Y o r k Federal
Reserve Bank.
M r . PATMAN. D i d you actually issue the securities of the Treasury
and deliver them to the N e w Y o r k Federal Reserve Bank?




7 AMENDMENT

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ACT

M r . BAIRD. Yes, sir; we have a sample of the security we issued here.
M r . PATMAN. I wish you would file that for the record.
M r . BAIRD. W e will file that for the record.
(The document referred to appears on p. 8.)
M r . PATMAN. L e t me see it. D o you have somebody around here
that can hand it to me?
Thank you.
Now, did they handle it through the open market, or direct?
M r . BAIRD. They handled that transaction direct; the one that we
are talking of.
M r . PATMAN. Handled direct, under this law, which requires it to
be direct.
M r . BAIRD. I t doesn't require it to be direct.
M r . PATMAN. What is that?
M r . BAIRD. I t permits it to be direct, M r . Patman.
M r . PATMAN. I thought it was compulsory. I t just permits it,
then?
M r . BAIRD. Oh, no. The Federal is operating in the open market
all the time.
M r . PATMAN.

Yes.

M r . BAIRD. B u t it does give them the power to buy up to $5 billion
from the Treasury.
M r . PATMAN. T h a t is right. D i d the Federal Open Market Committee handle it then, or did the N e w Y o r k bank handle it?
M r . BAIRD. The Board of Governors
M r . PATMAN. The manager of the account of the N e w Y o r k bank
for the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee handled it, I assume,
then.
M r . BAIRD. It is handled by the N e w Y o r k bank under instructions
from the Federal Reserve Board.
M r . PATMAN. F r o m the Federal Reserve Board. Well, did they
handle i t — d i d the manager of the account of the Open Market Committee handle it, or did the Federal Reserve bank handle it?
M r . BAIRD. The Federal Reserve Bank handled it.
M r . PATMAN. The Federal Reserve Bank handled it.
A l l right.
Now, we are keeping from $3 billion to $6 billion in the commercial
banks at all times, interest free, upon which the people are paying the
interest all the time and getting nothing for it, and this money can't
be checked on by the Treasury. It has to be transferred to the Federal Reserve bank before checks can be given.
Have you given consideration to using this $5 billion authority to
smooth out the rough places with the banks and not keep deposits in
these commercial banks?
M r . BAIRD. W e think it would be unwise, M r . Patman, to use this
device frequently, unless we are almost compelled to do it.
M r . PATMAN. YOU state it is high-powered dollars.
M r . B A I R D . Y e s , sir.

M r . PATMAN. Well, you have ways of offsetting the high-powered
dollars. The Federal Reserve Board has ways of raising reserve
requirements, doesn't it?
M r . BAIRD. T h e y can't whip reserve requirements up and down.
M r . PATMAN. T h a t is right.




8

amendment




of

the

federal

reserve

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M r . BAIRD. F r o m week to week.
M r . PATMAN. I n other words, if they buy—if you sell direct to the
Federal Reserve banks and the high-powered dollars are in play 6 to 1,
the Federal Reserve Board can offset that by raising reserve requirements if they want to, can't they?
M r . B A I R D . Y e s , sir.

M r . PATMAN. I n other words, there couldn't be any danger if they
did that.
M r . BAIRD. Well, it is not a facile tool. Y o u raise reserve requirements with notice and you do it infrequently. B u t you can't adjust
from day to day and week to week b y moving reserve requirements up
and down. I t is not a practicable method, M r . Patman.
M r . PATMAN. M a y I keep this, or do you have an extra copy?
M r . BAIRD. Can he keep it?
M r . PATMAN. Or is this for your files?
M r . BAIRD. Y O U m a y keep it.

M r . PATMAN. A l l right.
Now, i n connection with the use of this, you are not objecting to
any policy that Congress fixes. If Congress wants to fix the policy,
you carry it out. Y o u would be glad to do that, wouldn't you?
M r . BAIRD. If you granted us the authority that this amendment
did, which means that you thought it was all right if we left half a
billion or 1 billion or 5 billion i n the Federal for up to 2 years, the
present administration of the Treasury would not use it, M r . Patman.
M r . PATMAN. Would not use it.
M r . BAIRD. Would not use it.
M r . PATMAN. Well, suppose Congress passed the law, a directive
to use it
M r . BAIRD. If Congress passes a directive I think any Secretary of
the Treasury would follow that directive.
M r . PATMAN. Certainly you would have to follow out the directive.
A n d if Congress wanted to pass an amendment like M r . Reuss' or one
even stronger—I agree with you it is not too strong, but I think it does
leave the impression that you don't have to be so strict with this as
you have been i n the past, and it could be used a little bit more in the
public interest and save the taxpayers more money than as it has been
used in the past.
The Federal Open Market Committee, then, doesn't have anything
to do with these direct purchases?
M r . BAIRD. N o t to my knowledge.
M r . PATMAN. Is that right or not?
( M r . B a i r d confers.)
M r . BAIRD. They are acquainted with it, but
M r . PATMAN. They are acquainted with it.
M r . BAIRD. The Board of Governors passes a resolution and sends
it to the Federal Reserve Bank in N e w York, which stands
M r . PATMAN. B u t you realize, M r . Baird, the Federal Open Market
Committee is separate and distinct from the Federal Reserve Board.
M r . BAIRD. I do.

M r . PATMAN. A n d it is separate and distinct from the Federal
Reserve System.
Y o u see, those 12 members of the Federal Open Market Committee—the members of that Committee are not sitting there because 7
of them are members of the Board or because 5 of them are presidents




10

AMENDMENT

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THE

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ACT

of banks. They are sitting there because they have been designated
by the statute passed by the Congress of the United States, designating
them, 12 members, as the Open M a r k e t Committee, and they are
under no obligations to carry out instructions as members of the Board
or as presidents of banks. Is that your understanding?
M r . BAIRD. They have a good deal of independent authority.
I think I should say here: I am not positive that the directive to the
Federal Reserve bank is not by the Open Market Committee. I
have never looked into it. They advise us that they have approved
this procedure. M r . M a r t i n has told me that.
M r . REUSS. M r . Chairman, would the gentleman yield?
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r .

Betts.

T h e CHAIRMAN. M r .

MULTER.

Mr.
made,
Mr.
Mr.

BETTS. I just want to ask one question: Whatever borrowing is
it has to be within the debt limit in the Treasury Department.
BAIRD. T h a t is correct, sir.
BETTS. That is all.

M r . MULTER. M r . Baird, I don't think you answered one of M r .
Patman's questions, and I would like to get an answer to it, if I can.
H e stated, with which I believe you agree is a fact, the United
States Government carries average daily balances in the private banks
of the country, running from $3 to $6 billion. T h a t is an accurate
statement, is it not?
M r . BAIRD. NO; I won't consider that an accurate statement. I t
goes much below $3 billion. There were times last year when it got
down to less than one billion and a half.
M r . MULTER. Well, what do you say
M r . BAIRD. This year.
M r . MULTER. W h a t do you say the average daily balance is? I
didn't ask for the lowest, nor did M r . Patman. W e are talking about
the average daily balances.
M r . BAIRD. Three to three and a half billion, I would guess, is the
average, M r . Multer.
M r . MULTER. Right.
Now, why shouldn't that three and a half billion dollars of average
daily balances be kept i n the Federal Reserve banks, which are owned
by the United States Government, and checked out by the Treasury
through the Federal Reserve banks rather than through the private
banks of the country.
M r . BAIRD. Well, there has been a great deal of testimony before
this committee, and I will reiterate it, that if we were to shift these
large amounts of money, $13 billion this month, out of the banking
system into the Federal Reserve, we would cause a distortion that
would prevent the banking system performing its legitimate function.
W e must remember, always, that these deposits that you speak of
that are in the commercial banks are not deposited by the Treasury
in the banks.
If John Jones in the First National Bank of Podunk makes a check
for $1,000 to buy a bond, or if a corporation pays $25,000 of taxes,
instead of that money being drawn out of that bank that day and
taken to the Federal Reserve bank it is placed to the credit of the
Government on the books of the bank until the Government directs
the bank to move it to the Federal Reserve bank.




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B u t the monetary operation of the Federal Reserve bank—the
Federal Reserve Board—can't be carried on unless they have some
constant amount of reserves available to the banks. A n d the method
you suggest would cause serious strains on the reserves of banks.
M r . MULTER. YOU read into the question something that is not in
the question, either of M r . Patman or of myself. Nobody said—
neither he nor I suggested you do it today or tomorrow or do it all
at one fellswoop.
The question is why shouldn't this money be i n the Federal Reserve
banks, in the Government's bank, because it is the Government's
money, and checked out by the Treasury as they need it, rather than
checking it out of the private banks?
I am not suggesting that we take it out tomorrow or take it out
at one time. B u t if taking this $3% billion of the Government's
average daily balances out of the billions of demand deposits, leaving
aside the time deposits, in the private banks—if it is going to have
such a tremendously bad effect on the banking system of the country,
we don't have to take it out at one time.
B u t I don't agree it would have a bad effect if you drew out every
dollar from the private banks of the country, particularly today when
the reserve requirements have been reduced and the Federal Reserve
Board tomorrow can reduce them again and make many more times
reserves available for use by the private banking system, than results
from leaving this $3K billion with the private banks. I still would
like to have a reason as to why the Treasury Department can't check
out Government moneys through the Government bank, that is, the
Federal Reserve banks. I know, as everybody here has heard time
and time again, that most of the Government money that goes into
the private banks, comes from the tax and the loan accounts—the
bond accounts. A s that money comes into these private banks from
day to day, why can't they immediately remit it to the Federal Reserve
bank to the credit of the Treasury, instead of letting it lay there in
the private banks to the credit of the Treasury? W h y can't you
withdraw it except on notice? T h e Treasury presently has agreed
not to withdraw such moneys except after notice. W h y should the
United States Government let the private banks use this money for
nothing? I n effect, they are time accounts. Every time account
bears interest. B u t because these are kept in a so-called category of
demand accounts, they bear no interest. Y e t they are time accounts
because they can't be withdrawn except upon notice.
M r . BAIRD. M y answer to your question would be this, M r .
Multer. The Treasury—you said "can they?" The Treasury could.
I think it would be extremely unwise.
Now, here is an illustration. On June 19, the date coming up, our
estimates are that the total receipts into the Treasury on that day
would be $1,510 million.
T h e Federal Reserve Open Market Committee as a matter of
policy has been keeping free reserves in the commercial banking system, in the general neighborhood of five to six hundred million dollars.
Now, if that were thrown in there on that day, the free reserves
would go up that much.
Now, no money
(Mr. Heffelfinger aside.)




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M r . BAIRD. GO down that much, excuse me. It would put that
much strain on the banks because they would have to acquire free
reserves sufficient to cover the withdrawal of funds by the Treasury.
Now, I don't see how any open market committee can operate the
monetary system of this country having no power that it can maintain
from day to day the amount of free reserves or negative reserves it
wants to keep.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r .

Mumma.

M r . MUMMA. M r . Baird, I am very much interested in the way
you testify. I t is the first opportunity I have had to hear you.
I just wonder how much background you have in the situation that
you are discussing? Does your experience with the Treasury go back
to 1933?
M r . BAIRD. Well, M r . Mumma, I am a commercial banker. I spent
about 22 years i n the investment banking business and then in the
commercial banking business, but all with the same institution.
I am not a monetary economist. I wouldn't purport to be one such
as M r . Burgess was.
I have taken an interest i n central banking and government finance
because for the last 13 years I have been coming down to Washington
either on the Federal Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Board,
on which I served 2 terms, or for a number of years on the government
borrowing committee of the American Bankers Association which
comes i n to consult with the Treasury.
M r . MUMMA. Have you ever been a member of the Federal Reserve
Board?
M r . BAIRD. I have not.

M r . MUMMA. B u t your experience has been along the line you are
talking about?
M r . BAIRD. M y main experience has been as an investment banker
and a commercial banker.
I may have had a little more contact with this type of thing than
the average commercial banker for the reasons I stated.
M r . MUMMA* Isn't the bulk of this transient Government money
that is i n and out confined to much fewer banks than Government
depositories? N o t all your accounts are active, are they?
M r . BAIRD. Yes, they are all active.
M r . MUMMA. Well, I happen to have one i n mind, that is near a
big installation of the A i r Force, of some 10,000 people. They were
keeping maybe $75,000 i n that bank. T h e bank was cashing checks
for literally thousands of those people over a pay period. They felt
that they ought to have an additional Government fund i n return for
the service they were rendering, and the Treasury did give them. I
thought it was all right.
M r . BAIRD. There are two classes of accounts, as you understand.
Mr. MUMMA.

Yes.

M r . BAIRD. The big group is the tax and loan accounts. There are
11,000 of those banks, all of which are active. T h e class A's are less
active. They are the small banks. T h a t is because they are not
drawn on daily as the larger banks are.
M r . MUMMA. There would be an awful lot of bookkeeping to adjust
those every day.
M r . BAIRD. T h e other accounts are where services are performed
locally, that is, accounts maintained b y United States courts and




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others, and where the accounts are given based on the amount of work
and the volume of checks cleared b y the accounts.
I think the account you are talking about is one i n the latter kind,
and they aggregate altogether $314 million.
M r . MUMMA. I certainly am glad that you considered this proposition as sort of a sacred cow, intending to watch every different angle.
T h a n k you.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r .

Addonizio.

M r . ADDONIZIO. M r . Chairman, I don't have any questions, but I
yield my time to M r . Multer.
M r . MULTER. Thank you.
M a y I proceed, M r . Chairman?
M r . Baird, I have in front of me the M a y 1958 Federal Reserve
Bulletin. On page 608, Consolidated Condition Statement for Banks
and the Monetary System, shows on December 31, 1957, the total
deposits and currency in the banks of the System were $236 billion
plus. I t also shows on the same page for the year 1957 the lowest
balance was as of January 30, of United States Government balances
at commercial and savings banks, $1,900 million. O n February 27 it
was $2,800 million.
A n d for every other month of that year the amount varies from
$3,300 million to a top figure of $5,300 million.
Now, are you serious, sir, when you say that to take out the average daily balance of $3% billion from the private banking system of
the country and keep it in the Federal Reserve System—that that
would adversely affect the situation, w i t h a banking system that has
i n excess of $230 billion in total deposits and currency?
M r . BAIRD. I certainly am, sir, because you are talking about reserves. I t isn't just an ordinary deposit.
If you transferred those receipts immediately to the Federal Reserve Bank you are taking reserves out of the banking system and
that is high-powered money.
M r . MULTER. That high-powered money and those reserves are the
$3% billion of United States Government funds; is that what you are
talking about?
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is right.
M r . MULTER. That you call reserves; is that right, sir?
M r . BAIRD. Well, you are operating on reserves i n this whole area,
yes.
M r . MULTER. What I am trying to find out, sir: Whether or n o t —
you say the total amount of the deposits are the reserves.
M r . BAIRD. NO, I am not saying that total deposits are reserves.
M r . MULTER. The $3% b i l l i o n M r . BAIRD. I cited that exactly.
M r . MULTER. T h e $3% billion are certainly not the reserves.
M r . BAIRD. I cited

M r . MULTER. They are only a very small part of the total balances.
T o the extent that is fixed by law, the reserves of a rural bank or a
central reserve city bank or a reserve city bank, are a percentage of
the total deposits, a percentage of that amount is fixed b y the Federal
Reserve Board as a reserve requirement; isn't that so?
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is correct.
M r . MULTER. SO at most it is only a fraction of the $3K billion that
goes into the reserves?




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M r . BAIRD. NO; that is not correct, sir.
As I indicated on June 19, if that billion and a half of receipts that
the Government would get was to be deposited by the Internal R e v enue people directly to the Federal Reserve bank, that it would draw
down the reserves of the banks of this country by one billion and a half.
M r . MULTER. A l l right. So the private banks of the country, then,
would be prohibited from lending out to their customers that billion
and a half dollars.
M r . BAIRD. I t isn't just that billion and a half. I t is the leverage
on six times that.
M r . MULTER. A l l right, six times the billion and a half. T h a t
gives us approximately $9 billion of lending power, that would be
withdrawn from the banking system of the country.
M r . BAIRD. B u t it is withdrawn one day and restored the next
day, the way our deposits swing in and out, and no bank is going to
know a week ahead what its reserves are going to be.
M r . MULTER. Isn't that precisely what happens with the $236
billion that the banks have on deposit throughout the country?
M r . B A I R D . N O , sir.

M r . MULTER. W h y not?
M r . BAIRD. Because if you draw a check on your bank, it does not
operate on its central reserves. It merely reduces its deposits that
much and therefore decreases its liability for 12 percent or 18 percent
or whatever its reserve is that it holds.
M r . MULTER.

Y O U are assuming

M r . BAIRD. I t does not operate in reserves.
M r . MULTER. YOU are assuming that that check I draw will be
deposited i n another commercial bank?
M r . BAIRD.

Yes.

M r . MULTER. Suppose I buy Government bonds or I cash the check
and put the cash i n my pocket.
M r . BAIRD. T h e same thing is true.
M r . MULTER. I t does not affect the reserves of the bank?
M r . BAIRD. T h a t bank—the reserves are affected by only the proportion that the required legal reserve is to the amount you took out.
Now, if that were 12 percent and you took out $1,000, its reserves are
affected 12 percent.
M r . MULTER. M r . Baird, I must say that if what you say about
drawing down this average daily balance of $3K billion out of total
deposits of $236 billion, which is total deposits and currency, is that
it would upset the banking system of our country, this country is in a
terribly bad way, and I can't believe that is so.
T h e CHAIRMAN.

Mr.

McVey.

T h e CHAIRMAN.

Mr.

Barrett.

Y o u r time has expired, M r . Multer.
M r . M C V E Y , I have no questions, M r . Chairman.
M r . BARRETT. M r . Chairman, I am going to yield my time to
M r . Reuss, to give him an opportunity to explain his amendment.
M r . REUSS. T h a n k you, M r . Barrett.
M r . Chairman, first of all, M r . Baird is a midwesterner. I would
like to welcome you here. Very glad to have you, sir.
M r . BAIRD.

Yes.

M r . REUSS. F o r the record, he was president of the First National
B a n k of St. Paul, one of our oldest and finest banking institutions and
a very distinguished one.



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I also appreciated your taking the time to study my amendment
and as a result of the colloquy of m y colleague, M r . Kilburn, I think
the committee has a general idea of what it is all about.
However, let me very briefly summarize it so we are all talking
about the same thing.
First, let me ask you: The $5 billion direct purchase power for
which you ask extension for another 2 years is i n terms of the statute
wide open and untrammeled, is it not?
M r . BAIRD. That is correct.
M r . REUSS. Although if, as your testimony has indicated, you are
the fellow who has to administer it, you are going to administer it on a
cautious, short-term, no-more-than-necessary basis?
M r . BAIRD. That is right. I think there is a legislative record of
many years, of Secretaries or Under Secretaries of the Treasury testifying as to how they intended to use it.
M r . REUSS. Well, with all friendliness, there I do differ w i t h you
a little, i n that I do think Congress has a responsibility to use the right
words in its laws and shouldn't rely too much on what is said at committee hearings.
So we can agree at the start that this power i n legislative terms is a
completely broad one.
M r . B A I R D . I agree, s i r .

M r . REUSS. NOW, my amendment, M r . Kilburn, was drafted because I felt that we in the Congress have a duty to tell the Executive,
to whom we delegate our power over the money supply, exactly what
the criteria should be. A n d in my amendment, which M r . B a i r d has
already commented on, I set forth j ust two criteria which are to
govern the Treasury and the Federal Reserve i n their administration
of the $5 million direct-purchase power. Those criteria are set forth
under Arabic 2. A l l the rest of the statute is just as it is now.
Under Arabic 2, I say that those two criteria shall be (1), affecting
the maximum interest savings that are possible consistent w i t h the
other criterion, and (2) you are to utilize this power in consonance
with the general anti-inflationary or antirecession policy currently
adopted for good and sufficient other reasons by the Federal Reserve.
Now, I think, M r . Baird, that your understanding of what I am
trying to do is first rate, from your answer to M r . Kilburn, w i t h one
little particular that I would like to discuss w i t h you.
Y o u spoke of a hypothetical situation where the Federal Reserve
has decided for good and sufficient reasons that it wants to move to
ease credit. Y o u then envisaged a situation where the Treasury may
have been about to issue a long-term bond issue, as you did the other
day, of $1 billion at three and a quarter percent, was it something like
that?
M r . BAIRD. Three and a quarter percent, at par and a half.
M r . REUSS. Yes. Under such a situation you envisaged under m y
proposed amendment, the Treasury and the Federal would at least
have to explore whether this issue should be sold instead to the Federal
Reserve, the idea being that as long as the Federal Reserve held that
issue the taxpayers would save the interest charges which would otherwise have to be paid out of the Treasury.
Now, I think you were quite correct i n saying that under such a
situation serious consideration ought to be given to just that sort of
transaction.



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However, you talked about holding it, then, by the Federal for
2 years. There I would call your attention to the fact that my
proposed criterion talks not only about the expansion of the lending
power of member banks but the contraction of the lending power of
member banks. A n d just as I would want the Federal to expand
credit when that is called for, so I would want the Federal to contract
credit when that is necessary , and I would want and expect the Treasury to have about the same view.
So that when you say held for 2 years, that would be true only on the
assumption that a continuous policy of expanding credit prevails.
If we should then be visited with inflation, I think then both the
Federal and the Treasury would have to give serious consideration
to the Fed's getting r i d of that particular issue, just as the F e d i n its
open market policy, i n its rediscount policy, i n its reserve policy,
would pay similar heed to those anti-inflationary considerations.
W i t h that explanation b y me just now, do you feel that you understand what the amendment is all about?
M r . BAIRD. Yes; I believe I understand it.
I am sure your motive in introducing this is to try to be helpful,
M r . Reuss, because our conversation before the meeting indicated
that.
I won't enlarge on the point that I made earlier of this opening
wedge which the financial world would interpret as a weakening in
the policy that has been enunciated.
B u t I would point out that setting up as one of the criteria to effect
the maximum possible savings in interest charges on the national
debt is the kind of criteria which you can use to commit any kind of
abuses.
W e could put i n obligations at no interest or a tenth of 1 percent,
and on that guise people could argue, "Why, you just opened the floodgates," if that is the criteria.
I think that is the most dangerous part of your resolution.
M r . REUSS. Fine. Let's discuss that, because I think we have
sharpened the issue here, which is exactly what we want to do.
A s I see it, you make two points. One is sort of a psychological
opening wedge, "get your foot in the door."
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is right.
M r . REUSS. Take your hat off, open the floodgates, kind of
argument.
T h e other is more of an economic than a psychological argument.
Let's take the second, first. Is there one partical of difference from the
standpoint of inflation, from the standpoint of sound monetary
management, between the Government engaging in a direct purchase
transaction of $100 million worth of Government bonds to the Treasury, such as I freely concede would be permitted by my amendment,
and a similar sale of $100 million of Government bonds to the banks
financed b y credit made available through the Federal Reserve
System?
M r . BAIRD.

NO.

M r . REUSS. Is $1 more high powered than another?
M r . BAIRD. NO. If it is sold to the banks, yes. T h a t is not highpowered dollars.
B u t I can carry it even closer. This is how elusive this whole
subject is.




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M r . REUSS. M a y I interrupt you right there?
M r . B A I R D . Y e s , sir.

M r . REUSS. YOU say it is not a high-powered dollar when money is
created which the banks then use for buying?
M r . BAIRD. If the Treasury sells to the banks $100 million of bonds.
M r . REUSS.

Yes.

M r . BAIRD. Those are not high-powered dollars.
M r . REUSS. Well, what do the banks use to purchase the bonds?
M r . BAIRD. B y high-powered dollars I mean they have not the
multiplier of 5 or 6. B u t when the Treasury
M r . REUSS. M a y I stop you right there, because this is important.
I recall reading the hearings on the extension of just this same bill
back in 1947, on M a r c h 5, before this committee, when M r . Albert
Cole, now of F H A , who was a member of this committee, asked M r .
Mariner Eccles, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, this precise
question, as to whether there is any difference economically between
the direct purchase by the Treasury and open-market transactions.
M r . BAIRD. Oh, that is different.
M r . REUSS. A n d M r . Eccles said, no, there is absolutely not. I t
is inflationary to permit us to purchase indirectly and it is inflationary
to permit us to purchase directly. " T h e important question," said
M r . Eccles, "is are we at this given time being inflationary or deflationary." A n d he went on to say, and I quote here:
I f the U n i t e d States Treasury exercises its option to use the $5 b i l l i o n privilege
of selling securities directly to the Federal Reserve banks, the transactions w o u l d
not be any more inflationary than going through the open market.

M r . BAIRD. I quite agree with M r . Eccles. A n d my original statement was still correct.
A n d I started to elucidate. There is no difference whatsoever i n
the actual effect if the Treasury put out $100 million of Treasury
notes today to the banks and today the Federal bought it b y openmarket operations, or whether we sold it direct to the Fed's. B u t
your question was if the banks buy, and I assume retain, the $100
million, that is not high-powered money. If the banks sell it under
open market to the Fed, it becomes high-powered money.
M r . REUSS. B u t open market transaction is just as inflationary or
deflationary as a direct purchase transaction.
M r . BAIRD. That is right. A n d it is a very subtle difference here.
B u t human psychology the world over draws a real distinction.
T h e CHAIRMAN. Y o u r time has expired, M r . Reuss.
M r . REUSS. I will be back, I hope.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r .

Hiestand.

M r . HIESTAND. M r . Baird, I very much appreciate this statement.
I was much impressed by its forthrightness and its statesmanlike
attitude of the Treasury under the present policy. I t becomes
obvious that the Treasury realizes its responsibility to not only
finance the world's largest institution, the United States Government,
but also to protect the integrity of the currency.
I see no more sacred responsibility than that. I commend the
statement and the position of the Treasury. T h a n k you, M r .
Chairman.
M r . BAIRD. Thank you, M r . Hiestand.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . Ashley.




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M r . ASHLEY. M r . Chairman, I will yield my time to M r . Reuss, so
he can proceed with his questions, please.
M r . REUSS. T h a n k you, M r . Ashley, and M r . Chairman.
M r . Baird, we will return to our discussion.
I t seems then to boil down to psychological considerations—not
that those are not important, but I do want to try to identify them.
A s I understand it your position is that there is a subtle difference
between the Federal buying directly from the Treasury and the
Federal buying through the Open Market Committee, even though
i n the direct purchase case we have a stern statutory $5 million ceiling
whereas i n the Open M a r k e t Committee situation the sky is in very
truth the limit, and if I am not mistaken right now the Open Market
Committee's purchases i n the hands of the Federal Reserve banks
total something around $28 billion
M r . BAIRD. $23 billion plus.
M r . REUSS. $23 billion. A lot of money.
Now, what is the subtle difference?
M r . BAIRD. Well, it is subtle, and it is hard to explain. I t is one
of these things that is deeply seated in people's minds in the financial
world. Sometimes an analogy is the best thing to illustrate. T h e
only value gold really has is for filling teeth and making wedding rings
and so on. B u t people think it has monetary value, over the world.
T h e y have thought so for centuries. The whole thing is built on
what is i n men's minds.
Now, you can't prove that gold, as a metal, should have monetary
value where others do not. B u t the world thinks so.
Now, the world thinks that if treasuries deal directly with central
banks, the temptation to save interest and other temptations will
be such, based on the precedent of what happens in other countries—
they say, "just leave that alone, don't do it."
M r . REUSS. W h a t do you mean by the world? H o w many people
on the streets of St. P a u l or Milwaukee would have any knowledge of
the whole subject matter that we are discussing?
M r . BAIRD. N o t very many, until it was pointed out by some
people who become alarmed. I t is the financial community in the
first instance. T h e United States, whether it wished to be or not,
has become the world's banker. W e are watched very closely in
everything we do.
I happened to read last night a copy of the London Economist, that
circulates all over Europe, commenting on our recent financing, in
great detail, and what its effect is and what it indicated as to our
willingness to deal firmly with inflation that may come later.
Those things are watched.
T h i s thing would be printed in the financial press of the world if
the Congress of the United States said, "We've relaxed a little bit our
standards and if you find you can save some money, sell directly from
the Treasury to the Fed. We don't say keep it permanently, but we
won't be as exacting as just use it for a few days." T h a t would be
very bad news for the soundness of the American dollar, i n my
opinion, and I am quite sure the Secretary would agree with me.
M r . REUSS. NOW, let me ask you if you are familiar with the work
American Monetary Policy, published i n 1953 by the Committee for
Economic Development, and which was written by M r . E . S. Golden-




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weiser, who had been for many years head of economic research for
the Federal Reserve System?
M r . BAIRD. I am not familiar w i t h the book. I knew M r . Goldenweiser personally and had a very high respect for him.
M r . REUSS. I did, too. I think he was an absolutely first-rate
economist. What he had to say on this is rather interesting.
I
would like to read it to you. H e said—speaking of the proposal for
direct purchase as a method of saving taxpayers' dollars, he said:
T h i s is a rational and temperate proposal a n d properly administered w o u l d
introduce a useful device. However, if i t w o u l d lead to misunderstanding b y
some and to apprehension, no matter h o w i l l founded, b y others, i t might be wise
to pursue a more conventional course a n d to create the necessary residual money
b y borrowing from the commercial banks. I t would, to be sure, cost the T r e a s u r y
more i n interest.

Would you in general agree with that statement?
M r . BAIRD. I agree to that, sir; yes, sir.
M r . REUSS. I n other words, what he is saying is that these psychological factors are in the realm of mythology and are ill founded, but
nevertheless they exist and probably it wall be thought that they
should be observed even though it will cost the Treasury money.
M r . BAIRD. M e n act on what they think and what their attitude is,
and not necessarily on what the facts are. I n this whole realm, it is
very touchy and very sensitive. There is a code that has been built
up worldwide, among central bankers, in their attitude toward this,
and direct dealing by treasuries with central banks is frowned on.
M r . WIDNALL. W i l l the gentleman yield?
M r . REUSS. Certainly, I will yield to the gentleman from N e w
Jersey.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . Bass.

M r . BASS. NO questions; I will yield to M r . Widnall.
M r . WIDNALL. M r . Chairman.
M r . Baird, under the Reuss amendment there will be a limitation
of 2 years on the purchase of these obligations. B u t wouldn't it be
true that the $5 billion that might be purchased during that period
could be held in perpetuity?
M r . BAIRD. I think that is correct, but I want
M r . REUSS. AS the author of this language, I hope the gentleman
will yield to me so I can explain.
M r . WIDNALL. I can't yield, M r . Reuss.
M r . BASS. I yield to M r . Reuss.
M r . REUSS. I n response to the question, it is certainly the intention
of the author of this proposed amendment, myself, that this would not
be held in perpetuity, certainly not. T h a t is why the word "contraction" is i n there. A l l that this amendment does, M r . Widnall, is to
say that wherever the Federal Reserve is pursuing a policy of monetary
ease it should do so in a manner calculated to save the maximum number of dollars for the United States Treasury, a most modest proposal
as far as I am concerned. When the reason for monetary ease ceases,
then steps should be taken by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve
to undo the transaction. So that while it could be that for years the
Federal would be loaded up with these Treasury obligations, that
would only be true if for years there was a situation i n which the
Federal felt that there needed to be monetary ease and that that
amount of credit should be made available.




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M r . MULTER. M r . Chairman, before we pass from M r . Bass' time,
may we ask M r . B a i r d and his associate if they will comment on
M r . Widnall's question or answer it?
M r . BAIRD. I would be glad to comment on it.
There is nothing i n either the bill as the Treasury proposes it or i n
that amendment that expressly says that at the termination of 2 years
any indebtedness created pursuant to this authority must be retired.
I quite agree with M r . Reuss, that if the Federal were to reverse
its policy and they were selling in the open market the borrowing
might go out of the Fed. B u t there is nothing here i n either the bill
or the amendment to say that either these very temporary borrowings
which we propose or the somewhat more permanent borrowings over
a longer period that M r . Reuss would permit must be eliminated at
the end of the 2-year period. A n d if not at the end of 2 years, then
I say it is indefinite.
M r . MULTER. If M r . Bass would yield to me further, I would like
to make a comment that the statute says—and M r . Reuss' amendment does not change that provision of the statute, which provides
that up to the limit of this $5 billion, the bonds may be bought and
sold without regard to maturities.
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is the maturity
M r . MULTER. T h a t is i n the existing statute.
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is the maturity of the security that is sold.
M r . B A I R D . Y e s , sir.
M r . M U L T E R . Y e s , sir.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . Vanik.

M r . VANIK. M r . Chairman, this is a very worthwhile discussion.
I w i l l yield m y time to M r . Reuss.
M r . REUSS. T h a n k you, M r . Vanik.
M r . Chairman, I don't think I will take the full time that M r .
V a n i k has generously yielded, but I would want to ask a couple more
questions.
M r . Baird, you have given your objections to my proposed formulation very honestly and clearly, and have framed the issue between
us, which is exactly what I hoped would be done.
L e t me ask you this: Here, after all, you are coming up and asking
for a $5 billion direct purchase authority. I am sure you recognize
the duty and desire of Congress to give constructive guidance to the
executive branch—the Treasury and the Federal Reserve—on how
they shall handle the power we delegate to them, of managing our
monetary system.
Now, you have made objections, very sincere ones, to the criteria
I have proposed. W h a t criteria should we propose? Surely we
shouldn't just give an open end, wide open power to the Treasury
and the Federal. Sure, you have given us assurances, and I believe
them, that you aren't going to use it for inflationary purposes. I
don't know what is going to happen tomorrow, however. It seems to
me that we need to have something i n here to tie us down. What do
you suggest?
M r . BAIRD. M r . Reuss, I don't find any substantial quarrel with
your point of view.
I think this statute might have originally been drawn to point out
some criteria, that it was intended to be used only for short periods,




AMENDMENT OF T H E FEDERAL RESERVE ACT

21

under certain conditions. T h a t w o u l d have been all right. I t has
been i n this form. I t has gone o n this way.
If this committee has any feeling that either this administration or
the Federal Reserve or the Treasury i n this 2-year period to come
would abuse it, then we ought to scratch our heads and see if we
couldn't get up some language that w o u l d set up criteria to t r y to make
it conform to the standards I think y o u and I believe it is i n fact being
made to conform to.
B u t if y o u think we are not going to abuse i t this next 2 years, I w i l l
say that if I am still around i n 2 years, we w i l l propose the extension
the next time w i t h some of those criteria in, that carry out the beliefs
that we stand for.
M r . REUSS. W e l l

.

M r . WIDNALL. W i l l you yield to me, M r . Reuss?
M r . REUSS. If M r . V a n i k has the time, w o u l d y o u yield to M r .
Widnall?
M r . VANIK. Yes.
M r . REUSS. A l l right.

M r . WIDNALL. Isn't the report of the 12 Federal Reserve member
banks published every week showing the use of these funds?
M r . BAIRD. Yes; M r . Heffelfinger tells me*it is published weekly.
M r . WIDNALL. SO that Congress can k n o w almost immediately if
there is any abuse of funds.
M r . B A I R D . O h , yes.

M r . WIDNALL. W e don't have to w a i t u n t i l the end of the 2-year
period to find out what y o u are doing?
M r . BAIRD. NO; you do not. A n d each y e a r — y o u wouldn't w a i t
2 years i n any event. E a c h year i t is i n the Federal Reserve B o a r d
reports. NO; you could know week to week what we are doing.
M r . WIDNALL. A l l right.

M r . REUSS. I would say just this. I t is a little difficult to tell
whether there is any abuse of the power we give if we don't define w h a t
the power is, and I am seeking b y m y amendment or some improvement on i t to tell the Treasury a n d the F e d what we w a n t done. So
far I haven't heard any better criteria than save money a n d do your
best to avoid inflation or recession.
I yield back the balance of m y time.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r .

Seely-Brown.

M r . SEELY-BROWN. M r . Baird, this present l a w has been i n existence since 1942; that is correct, is i t not?
M r . BAIRD. B y successive reenactment; yes, sir.
M r . SEELY-BROWN. T h a t is correct. A n d during that time we have
h a d many Secretaries of the Treasury.
A n d i n each i n M r . BAIRD. W e have had several; that is righv.
stance, regardless of who was Secretary of the Treasury, the Treasury
has used that borrowing authority very sparingly.
M r . SEELY-BROWN. T h a t is correct.
M r . B A I R D . Y e s , sir.

M r . SEELY-BROWN. A n d would i t be because every Secretary of
the Treasury that we have had during that time has felt that a n y
time any central government tries to finance itself directly b y a central
bank, the end result is uncontrolled inflation, w h i c h is ruinous to
everyone?




22

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M r . BAIRD. I think that is true. There has been no administration
of this country yet that has stood for anything but sound money.
M r . SEELY-BROWN. T h a t is all, M r . Chairman. Thank you.
M r . BAIRD. I n its public pronouncements, at least. [Laughter.]
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . H e a l e y .

Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

HEALEY. N o questions.
PATMAN. Public what?
SEELY-BROWN. Public pronouncements.
PATMAN. What?
BAIRD. Public pronouncements.

T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . Henderson.
M r . HENDERSON. Y e s , M r . C h a i r m a n .

M r . Baird, would you once again set forth your objections to the
Reuss amendment? W e seem to have had a good bit of conversation
since you first set them forth. I would like to have them reexplained
to me.
M r . BAIRD. M r . Henderson, I think that the Reuss amendment
would be construed b y the financial community in this country and
abroad as permitting a retreat in the policy that has been pursued
b y the Treasury and b y the Federal Reserve.
Because i t raises a new criteria. If you can save some money, it is
all right to go to some direct borrowing for a while. A n d we would
hate to see that said b y the Congress.
I think i t would be construed as a weakening of the general policy
of never, except for very short periods, in case of an immediate
emergency, using the direct borrowing power between the Treasury
and the Federal Reserve System.
M r . HENDERSON. NOW, I believe that in answer to one of the
questions that was proposed, you indicated that there had been
examples i n other countries in which a similar policy has led to a
weakening of the financial structure. Maybe I misinterpreted your
reference, but I believe you said that.
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is correct.
I would have a harder time naming the countries that haven't
abused that privilege. A n d that is the part of the chaotic exchange
situations and currency situations we have over the world.
M r . HENDERSON. C a n you give us an example i n which there has
been an abuse?
M r . BAIRD. I can say this, that there has been no L a t i n American
country south of the isthmus, except possibly one, that hasn't abused
it, if that will answer your question.
M r . HENDERSON. I t does.

T h a n k you very much, M r . Chairman.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . R u t h e r f o r d .

M r . RUTHERFORD. NO questions, M r . Chariman.
T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . C o a d .

M r . COAD. N o questions.

T h e CHAIRMAN. M r . A n d e r s o n .

M r . ANDERSON. M r . Baird, your chief opposition to M r . Reuss'
amendment, as I understand it
T h e CHAIRMAN. W i l l you talk into the amplifier, M r . Anderson?
M r . ANDERSON. Is that there would be a fear, as you put it, of the
temptation to save interest.




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Now, i n this case the Government is the customer and the interest
of which you are speaking is the price for the use of certain money
that the Government uses.
Now, as I understood the testimony, part of this money, which is
i n the commercial banks and which may be borrowed b y the Government, belongs to the Government. I believe your testimony was that
there is an average of about $3 billion of Government money i n the
banks on which no interest is being drawn.
The question, then, it would seem to me, is who is entitled to the
interest? Is there anything morally wrong or financially wrong about
saying that if this is the Government's money, that the Government
should be entitled to the interest on at least that much of their money?
M r . BAIRD. I am not quite sure, M r . Anderson, what the connection
is with the interest on tax and loan accounts from the banks and this
question of direct borrowing. W o u l d you just elucidate that a little
bit more for me?
M r . ANDERSON. Well, I have the feeling that M r . Patman's questions concerning the amount of Government money which is i n the
commercial banks would be related to the amount that you would be
likely to purchase directly under the Reuss amendment.
M r . BAIRD. It seems to me a rather tenuous connection. If we
were to keep very much smaller balances in the banks and then run
i n and out of the F e d on direct borrowing, I suppose that could
operate that way.
I may say this. I am not clear—Mr. Reuss hasn't explained just
how this proposal of his would save any interest.
H e has very carefully said that he didn't want the F e d to use this,
except where they are expanding reserves. So it doesn't end up
with any more securities in the portfolio of the Fed. I n other words,
it is what was their source, primary source? Was it from the Treasury or the open market?
Now, they are buying securities in the open market, which are the
lowest rate securities. They are bearing less than 1 percent. I t is
mostly Treasury bills. They are buying those. A n y interest the
F e d gets, 90 percent of it comes back to the Treasury anyway, under
our agreement with them.
So I really fail to see where there is any interest saving involved in
this thing. But perhaps I am overlooking something.
M r . REUSS. W i l l the gentleman yield?
M r . ANDERSON. I will yield to tne gentleman from Wisconsin.
M r . REUSS. The interest saving, of course, would come i n situations where the Federal Reserve rather than the commercial banking
system came to own a given portion of the national debt. A s it is
now, the banking system I think owns some $58 billion of the national
debt. If in the case put the Federal Reserve owned $1 billion of
that and the banking system $57 billion, then the 3 percent annual
interest, coming to $30 million, would accrue to the Treasury, less, of
course, the small charge which the Federal Reserve retains.
M r . BAIRD. Yes, but, M r . Reuss, under your Arabic 2B, this would
only be utilized—
t o the extent to which the expansion or the contraction of the lending power of
t h e member banks is deemed advisable b y the Board.




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Therefore, it seems to me there is no net change involved i n your
suggestion i n the total amount of Treasury securities held b y the
Fed. I t is only whether they buy them i n the open market, if they
are expanding or whether they buy them direct.
M r . REUSS. Well, there would be, though, if i n the total composition, assuming there is $60 billion of the Federal debt which is held
on an inflationary basis—that is, by the banking system or b y the
Treasury—on a credit-created basis. If instead of $60 billion held
b y the commercial banking system and zero by the Federal there is
$59 billion b y the banking system and $1 billion b y the Federal, you
then save the interest charges on $1 billion, or 30 percent, which is
$30 million a year, and not hay as far as the taxapyers are concerned.
M r . BAIRD. T h a t is right. B u t you set up this point, that it isn't
going to change the amount they are going to have. They have about,
let's say, $24 billion now. If they want to expand to $25 billion in
the next year, they will buy either in the open market or from the
Treasury under your suggestion $1 billion. I n either event, we pay
interest on it. I n both cases we get back 90 percent of any of the
interest from the Fed.
M r . REUSS. A l l you are saying, M r . Baird, is that the Open M a r k e t
Committee may be doing all on its own exactly what I would have the
Treasury and the Federal Reserve Board of Governors do. T h a t is
perfectly true. If it is good for the Open Market Committee, it is
good for the Federal Reserve Board and for the Treasury.
T h e CHAIRMAN.

M r . Breeding

M r . ANDERSON. W i l l the gentleman yield?
M r . BREEDING. M r . Chairman, I yield my time to General
Anderson.
M r . ANDERSON. M r . Baird, I would like to continue the line of
questioning I was on at the time I yielded to M r . Reuss.
M r . Baird, aren't you being a little inconsistent i n saying first that
the weakness of this amendment is that it would provide a temptation
to save interest and then i n saying that you don't see how it would
actually save any interest.
M r . BAIRD. I think it is an apparent inconsistency, but we are
dealing i n the realms of psychology. I think if there is any interpretation b y the financial world of this thing, that it is i n the direction
of weakening, just a little, the compulsion that has been put on us not
to do direct borrowing from the Fed, except under exceptional and
unusual circumstances.
M r . ANDERSON. SO that you do agree, then, that there is an opportunity to save interest?
M r . BAIRD. NO; I don't agree there is an opportunity to save
interest, that is, if I understand it correctly. I hadn't seen this
amendment until today.
M r . ANDERSON. YOU say, " I f I understood it correctly." Now, if
this sort of thing is to be interpreted to the business community and
to the people b y the bankers, as you indicated, the interpretation that
the public is going to get is the interpretation that is going to be placed
on it b y the financial world, whom I judge are reasonably well educated. T h e n why do you say there would be a fear of the temptation
to save on one hand and then on the other say that there would be no
saving involved?




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M r . BAIRD. Because, M r . Anderson, if that amendment were
passed and the Treasury and the F e d were of the mood, i t would look
as if it were carrying out the intent of Congress, if the F e d decided
i t was expanding its open market operations b y $1 billion, if we sold
them $1 billion and it just lay there month after month, until they
reversed their policy.
Now, we don't want to give, we i n the Treasury, any impression
that we want to move in that direction, and we hope the Congress
won't want to give any intimation that it wants to move i n that
direction, because we think that is a thoroughly bad point of view.
M r . ANDERSON. What you spoke of as an apparent inconsistency i n
your testimony still looks to me like a very real inconsistency, M r .
Baird.
M r . Chairman, I yield back the balance of his time to M r . Breeding.
M r . BREEDING. T h a t is all, M r . Chairman.
T h e CHAIRMAN. The committee will adjourn and meet tomorrow
morning at 10 o'clock to vote on the bill.
(Whereupon, at 11:05 a. m., the committee adjourned to reconvene
at 10 a. m., Friday, June 13, 1958.)
X