View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

“The Federal Reserve Act”
By CH ARLES S. HAMLIN
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury

An Address
Delivered Before the N e w Y o r k C r e d i t M e n ’ s A s s o c i a t i o n
at its Annual Mid-Winter Meeting and Dinner,
held at the Hotel Astor, New York City,
Thursday, January 15, 1914

Published by
NEW YO RK CREDIT MEN’S ASSOCIATION
320 Broadway, New York







“ The Federal Reserve Act.”
Mr, Chairman and Gentlem en:

I cannot tell you what a pleasure it is to me to be able to come
here to-night and speak a few words to you on the subject of the
United States Treasury.
First, I want to express the very deep regret of the Secretary
of the Treasury, Mr. McAdoo, that he could not be here this evening
and speak to you himself, but I think you must appreciate the labors
that he has been undergoing in the last few months. He is ju st
about starting on a tour practically of the whole United States in
connection with the Federal Reserve districts and banks, and it was
plainly impossible for him to leave Washington, and therefore he
delegated to me that duty.
When I was first asked I thought it would be impossible for me
to respond on account of a very pressing engagement, but, on
reflection I realized that an invitation from this body was a thing
which no man could refuse, a command which no man could refuse
to obey; and more than that, it was a command that it was a real
pleasure to obey, so consequently I have come here and have en­
joyed this dinner and these speeches immensely.
Now, I am sure all of you realize that the United States Treas­
ury is an immense institution, but I think you will be surprised when
you are told there are over 8 0 ,0 0 0 employees in the Treasury service
of the United States to-day. In the Customs service alone there
are over 8,000 men, and in the Internal Revenue service there are
about 3 ,600, and in other branches between 11,000 and 12,000.




3

There are 8,000 in the Executive Department of the Treasury alone
at Washington. I t costs between ten and eleven millions of dollars
a year to collect the customs revenue alone of the L nited States,
and nearly six millions of dollars to collect the Internal revenue.
The Treasury Department also has charge of the Public Health
Service* which embraces Quarantine and similar matters. It also
has charge of the Revenue Cutter service which enforeva the navi­
gation laws and rescues vessels in distress. It has charge of the
Life Saving service, a most important service. It has charge of
the construction and maintenance of every public building in the
United States and the appointment of custodians thereof, and I
am sure you will realize what work is involved there. It
has charge of the entire accounting system of the United States,
every dollar received and spent has to be examined and verified
and checked by the employees of the United States Treasury. It
has charge of the printing of the bonds and currency of the United
States. It has charge of the National Bank currency, and the notes
of the United States. I t is the fiscal agent of the Government for
the payment of the interest on the debt, the redemption of the
outstanding notes, and other obligations of the United States.
Now, excluding the postal revenues, there came into the
treasury last year over 700 millions of dollars, and in addition,
about 266 millions from the postal revenues were collected. From
customs taxes there were collected 318 millions, and 31V millions
of dollars from Internal revenue taxes. There was spent on the
civil establishment o f the Government about 170 millions; on the
military establishment 160 millions; on the naval establishment; 133
millions; and on Pensions about 175 millions of dollars. So last
year, the fiscal year ending June 30th. we had a surplus of about
41 millions of dollars, excluding Panama Canal disbursements, for
which, when the necessity arises, bonds can be issued.
I want to talk to you to-night briefly about some of
the measures which have been enacted into law by the present
Administration^ and I know the temper of those here well enough
to be sure that the Administration in Washington and the President
is recognized as representing the entire people and that you wish
him Godspeed in his every effort, as well as that of the Congress,
to help the people of the United States and improve our condition.
Our party went into power having made certain pledges,
and in the short ten months which have elapsed since, we have




4

carried out in part those pledges, and it is for the people of the United
States to say whether those pledges which have been carried out are
for the detriment or the betterment of the people. We believe that
they will be of inestimable benefit to the nation, but, of course, time
alone will tell.
In regard to the tariff, we made certain pledges that we carried
out. We made a reduction in customs taxation. Some thought
it was a too radical reduction and others thought it was not radical
enough. Some predicted disaster, but, my friends, the disaster has
not come. There has been no flood of imports into the United
States such as many feared and predicted. The revenues are keep­
ing up well and I think they will at least equal the estimates.
I believe on the other hand that we can see signs of increas­
ing efficiency on the part of the manufacturers in the United States
who are making an examination into the cost of production and are
making efforts to lower the unit cost, replacing old by new
machinery, and I am sure that in a very few years we will have
demonstrated that, man for man, product for product, the cost of
production in the United States will be the lowest of any nation in
the world. (Applause.)
And this leads up to the other question of which I want to
speak ju st a moment to-night, and that is the new financial bill
which has ju st been enacted into law. Now, that was a party
measure, and I believe that, in this country, in order to have progress
you have got to have a party government. When, however, I say it
was a party measure I do not mean that it was a partizan measure.
I t was far from that. I t represented the best thought of the people
of the United States crystalized into action, into legislation by our
Representatives. You may remember also that it was the product
of a Democratic caucus— that is true in a large measure— but that
caucus was undoubtedly influenced by the many men in the minority
in Congress, patriotic men who criticised what they believed was
subject to criticism, who stood manfully for their beliefs, and who
undoubtedly had an influence, ju st as did this great Association, in
the recommendations which they made, and unquestionably exercised
influence upon the Democratic majority acting through the Demo­
cratic caucus. When that bill came to the floor of the Congress it
was supported by the Democratic caucus and, modified in some de­
gree as it was by the opposition, when the bill became law, it really
did, I believe, represent the best thought of the people of the United




5

States, and many of the men in the opposing parties showed their
independence, their fearlessness, their disinterestedness o f purpose
by joining in voting for it. I refer especially to one, the jun ior
Senator from Massachusetts, Mr. Weeks. He said that bill, I think,
was 75 per cent, good and that he should vote for it. Hut, my
friends, on a question of financial legislation, do you realize how
rare it is in the world that you can get any measure, the result of
compromise, that will contain much more than 75 per ccnt. o f what
all the people believe to be good, wise and ju st in it? I think 75
per cent, of good in a measure is a hopeful average and experience
will soon enable us to make any needed changes in that bill.
Now, that bill brought out some great speeches of great men
who were primarily responsible for bringing it through the Demo­
cratic caucus and passing it in the House and Senate. There was
Representative Carter Glass, of Virginia. 1 think the painstaking
care that that man gave to the bill is worthy of a monument. There
was Senator Owen, of Oklahoma, and his speeches arc classics on
this great question. I think the speeches of these men will go down
in history along with some of the great speeches of Daniel W ebster,
the great defender of the public cred it There was also prominent
the brilliant genius of the Secretary of the Treasury. William
McAdoo, a great builder of public monuments, a man of mavelous
mtutition and skill, of a fertile imagination, and one who has demon­
strated the ability to project his imagination into the stern reality
of successful fact and successful accomplishment; there was also
the powerful influence of that eminent Democrat, the Sccrctarv of
State, William J . B ry an ; and, last but not least, there w a s ' the
President of the United Staes, Woodrow Wilson, a man who has
demonstrated not only in that bill but in the Tariff hill, and in other
measures, his capacity as a great leader, a great intellectual power
not only m leadership but in statesmanship. There were also the
members of the opposition who rendered invaluable service in
S

T

*

0 0 0 1(1

f M e

* *

r e n ,e d ic d

a n d

*

h c "

b i»

w a s

finally perfected who showed their patriotism by rising up and,

law

1Dg *

part,Zan cons,derations, voting to enact that bill into

That -«**1,

*s esscntially a bill for the business man.

e ff^ a l£ \ t
A^
t0
bMincSS
to obtain more
:“
oV fe r
^ Which the'V mHSt h- e
the successful
P secntion of the.r business. I t was intended to remedv certain




defective conditions which all agreed to exist, although there was
a difference of opinion as to how they should be remedied.
The first difficulty was that of the independent treasury system,
created in 1846, by which the Government revenues were taken out
of circulation and put in Government vaults, and which, modified
though it was by the National banking depository system, does keep
out of the marts and channels of trade money available as reserves,
and which will greatly benefit the business men of this country by
restoring it into circulation. That was the first condition to be
remedied.
The second was to diminish, if possible, the commercial stringen­
cies and panics which occur in this country, and which are much more
severe than in other countries and are much more intertwined with
the general banking situation in this country than in most
of the great European countries. We feel and know that in time
of panic and stringency we have a harder time than the European
nations or the Dominion of Canada.
There was also recognized another condition, that when the great
crops of the country are moved we have financial uneasiness, and the
cost of credit increases to the business man as well as those who are
trying to move the crops. The banks begin to call in their reserves,
and the commercial credit demands are necessarily restricted to pro­
tect those reserves. They have to pull back, some times con­
tract, instead of expanding, as we all wish they could, and as the
banks would themselves like to do.
We have also other conditions: the greater our prosperity, the
greater the amount of crops to move; the greater the businss success
of our enterprises and genius, by so much greater is the contraction
of credit. When these crops have to be turned over and distributed
we know that our National Banking currency does not expand ac­
cording to the needs of trade; we know that when there is a great
demand for commercial credits the National Banking currency ex­
pands sluggishly, and conversely when commercial credits fall off
we see our National Banking currency often expanding rather than
contracting.
Now, the average life of a National bank note is about one year,
whereas the average life of a note under the old Suffolk banking
system in Massachusetts, generations ago, was only about one month,
when it was returned and speedily redeemed.




7

Now, there are other conditions. We hare no discount market in
the United States as there are in other countries. Wc know we
cannot bring gold into the United States by reason of the discount
rate, because that rate is fixed by the loan market, and it would be
very foolish for gold to leave its place of security and come over to the
United States in response to some feverish speculation of the call
loan market.
These are some of the difficulties which have been facing the
people of the United States, and for which wc desire remedies. We
have seen violent fluctuations in rates in the United States. Wc
have seen that rates have depended on speculation rather than on
commercial conditions. In Europe it is otherwise.
We see
stability of rates in Europe and instability in the United States,
and that was one condition we desired to have improved. W c see that
the reserve money of the United States is not used as a reserve at all.
We know country banks can deposit part of their reserve with
the reserve city banks. They in turn can deposit half of their re*
serves with the Central reserve Banks and these deposits are in large
part devoted to call loans in the speculative market.
The financial bill is an honest endeavor to remedy that
condition of affairs. I t provides, as you know, for Federal Reserve
banks. I want you to remember that the capital of these reserve
banks, is to be paid in gold or gold certificates, so we shall have
Federal Reserve banks every dollar of the capital of which is in gold
or gold certificates. In addition they will have perhaps a hundred or
one hundred and fifty millions of dollars of Government deposits,
and in addition to that a certain proportion of the reserves o f the
member banks. Thus we will have an immense reservoir of money—
Government money, reserve money and capital the sole purpose of
which is to help the business men of the United States, through the
banks, and not one dollar of which will be put out except for real
commercial purposes as distinguished from speculative or invest­
ment transactions. I am confident you can see that banks of that
character will, in a few years, prove of inestimable value to the
business people of the United States.
In addition to that
the Government receives the profits of those reserve banks above a
certain limited rate of return and a certain amount in surplus. The
Government will have the most careful supervision over those banks
and every National bank as well, and I believe out of that can
only come the greatest of advantage to the American people.




8

Now, what will be the result of this system of banks? I be­
lieve it will lower the rate of interest generally over the United
States. I believe that the phenomenon of a tight money market
is going to disappear in the United States under the operation of
this Act as soon as it can be safely installed and in good working
condition. I t will encourage investments by banks in quick com­
mercial assets, in commercial paper, the safest and soundest of
assets in the world. I t will create a discount market for notes
in the United States and your notes can be sold in any part of
the United States as if they were cotton or corn or wheat, because
of the provisions in this Federal Reserve Act for the re-discounting
of these notes. You may say that an endorsement of one bank may
not be as good as that of another bank, but the examination
and supervision by the Federal Reserve Board will remedy this.
I believe it is safe to say that we will have a universal discount
market for commercial paper over the whole of the United States,
and you all know what an advantage that would be to-day to the
business man.
We will mobilize the reserves of the United States. The
Reserve Board will be brought in to assist any bank at any time,
and a bank can come and get a re-discount without creating the
slightest suspicion. I t is simply obeying the laws of the United
States when doing it.
Now, there are reserve notes also that may be issued by the
reserve banks. A great many people believe that these notes
should not be issued directly by the United States Gov­
ernment.
I do not believe there is any practical difference
whether these notes are bank notes or Government notes.
I have heard it said that they are greenbacks, as if they
were a forced loan. Going back to the time of the green­
backs of the Civil W ar, my friends, the greenback was a forced
loan, it was paying a debt with a piece of paper or a promise,
and the promissor could make as many more promises of the same
kind as he cared to make, and the result was that we saw general
depreciation as compared with gold in this country. But that is not
the case with the Federal Reserve notes.
Do you realize, gentlemen, that not one note can be issued by
the Government of these Federal Reserve notes that would not have
been issued by the banks if they alone issued them ? The Government
has no power to issue one of these notes except when called upon by




9

an individual bank, and that bank wants that note for its own pur
pose in helping its own customers whose duty it is to assist. Th<
amount is fixed by the commercial demand for th at sort o f pape]
in the United States.
I believe there is not a note in the United States* ir
the world rather, as well secured as those o f the F ed eral Reserve
B a n k s. W hat is the security they have? Th ey have behind them
one hundred per cent, collateral in liquid commercial p a p e r; thev
have the guarantee of the bank that endorses th em ; they have the
reserves of the banks that are in the Federal Reserve hanking sys­
tem ; they have a Government lien on the assets o f the h an k; they
have the stockholders liability and, in addition, they have the whole
pow er o f the United States behind each and every one.
T h e United States, by this bill, is given absolute power
to raise as much gold as it needs to redeem these notes by the issue
o f short term notes or by the issue o f gold bonds; the holders have
the absolute assurance that these notes outstanding will be redeemed
on demand by the Government, in gold, backed tip by the first lien
on the Federal Reserve banks* assets, together with the cap ital o f the
reserve bank, also the reserve deposited by the N ational banks
and the individual liability o f every member bank. C a n there exist
in the world a note stronger than these Federal R eserve n o tes?
There are many other benefits to be derived from this Act that
I have not time to dwell upon here to -n ig h t T h e banks are given
a limited power to assist our import and export trade, and all o f you
know what a power that is, and you also know th a t it can be used
in the furtherance o f that trade.
The lessened reserve requirements o f all N ational hanks will
also release a large amount o f loanable capital. I feel certain that
every one o f those reserve notes will be promptly and speedily
redeemed. They have got to be redeemed. Any p’ederal Reserve
bank taking such a note has got to send it back to the bank that
issues it. I feel there is not the faintest danger o f fea r o f inflation.
Inflation is caused primarily by no lim itation o f the a m o u n t
o f notes, i f we speak o f inflation o f notes rather than credit. It
is also caused by improper laws as to reserves, and y e t on a ll these
questions the Federal Reserve Board is given absolute power. It
has the power first as to whether the note shall he issued in response
to the request o f the reserve banks. I t has the power to charge
interest on those notes. I t has the ultimate power to fix the rate




of discount; and there is a provision, as you know, in the bill, by
which, when the reserves fall below a certain amount they are auto­
matically taxed. I feel further confident that these notes, redeem­
able in gold, will not result in the expulsion of gold as do the Na­
tional bank notes to-day. With all these provisions in the bill I
feel that the circulation will expand and contract in absolute pro­
portion to the legitimate needs of the business of the country.
There is no question but that the credit facilities under our
system have been outgrown and that they are not responsive to
the demands of trade. The people of this country at certain periods
of the year are in a straightjacket, so far as credit facilities are
concerned, and the object of this bill is to so loosen that jacket as
to permit the credit of the country to expand, but to contract the
circulation when the necessities and best interests of trade demand
that it should be contracted.
No doubt there are some people who fear the great power that
has been given to the Reserve Board. But, gentlemen, you cannot
accomplish reforms without giving power to individuals. These
individuals will be men sworn to protect the Constitution and the
laws of the United States. They will hold their great office in
trust to do what they believe to be wise for the best interest of the
people of the United States. They are justly given great powers
and are charged with great responsibilities; but, until you trust
somebody and give somebody power in this country you cannot carry
out any great reforms.
I believe that under this new legislation every man who de­
serves credit will be able to obtain credit. I believe that under it
the business men of this country will have the present commercial
shackles stricken off, which have been put upon them by our
antiquated laws and our unsound financial system.
Gentlemen, I believe the result of this bill will be for the
greatest good o f the greatest number of the people of the United
States. (Applause.)




11