" fyyw "'w w'flM1" W nwiWPiw&w111 ' :T '"V The Commoner VOL. 13, NO. 30 14 B. nry alone, thus conferring upon a single political appolntoo of the president tho tromondous re sponsibility, as well as tho great power, of dis pensing $500,000,000 of currency and, within his solo discretion, determining tho validity and sufficiency of $050,000,000 of commercial paper and othor securities. Among othor things, tho Vreoland-Aldrich bill, section 2, dealing with tho application of banks for curroncy, provides that: Tho comptroller of tho currency shall immedi ately tranomlt such application to the secretary of tho treasury with such recommendation as no thinks proper, and If, In tho Judgment of tho sec retary of tho treasury, business conditions In tho locality demand additional circulation, and If ho la satisfied that a Hon In favor of tho United States on tho securities so deposited ana on mo ubbuw of tho banks composing tho association will bo amply sufllclont for tho protection of tho United Statos, ho shall direct an issue of additional circu lating notes to tho association on behalf of such bank, etc. I bog theso critics to'noto tho language of tho statute: If in tho judgment of tho sccrotary of tho treas ury buslnoss conditions domand additional circu lation! And again: If tho secretary of tho treasury bo satisfied that tho securities deposited are amply suffi cient for tho protection of the United States. Could anybody conceive of power more arbitrary or of centralization more complete? There is nothing comparable to it in this bill, for here wo commit tho power to a board of seven, hav ing a trained and trusted representative at every point of origin, applying every precaution and going through every detail known to prudent banking processes. When this extraordinary power was conferred by this houso'fivo yearB ago on a single official of tho government and objection was mado by Mr. James, now a senator from Kentucky, tho loading republican member of the banking and currency committee, Mr. Burton, now a senator from Ohio, exclaimed with much feeling and effect: I say that for ono I favor lodging authority with tho secretary of tho treasury and allowing him, under tho great responsibilities of his position, to dotormino tho amount of Issues rather than to leave tho decisions to tho banks. With how much moro reason, Mr. Chairman, may wo who stand for this currency bill insist now that this power shall be lodged with a government board, composed of high and ex perienced men, four of them with long tenure of office and all of them, let us hope, keenly ap preciating their great responsibilities and courageously determined o do their duty as representatives of the American people. There is no politics in this matter; there can bo none. It 1b my earnest conviction, based upon long and serious reflection, that no man can conceiyo, as none has yet pointed out, how any part of this system can be perverted to political uses. In my judgment if the United States has ever had a president Ingenious enough to do UiIb evil thing, it has never had one desperate enough, and never will have one shameless enough, to thus betray tho confidence of the nation. I happened to be present when an eminent banker suggested such a possibility to the present occu pant of the executive chair, and heard this banker vainly challenged to show how it might bo done. I shall not soon forget tho emphasis with which tho president of the United States declared that no man would over bo found who would bo willing to imperil his reputation or tarnish his fame by so flagrant a prostitution of his high office! It brought to mind tho splendid declaration mado on this floor by Congressman Burton, of Ohio, five years ago in discussing this very topic, when ho compacted the whole thing in a single sentence, exclaiming: Thcro aro oxecutlvo acts which aro theorotically possible but which tho Incumbents, with their weighty responsibilities, would never daro perform, becauso they would know that If their courso was marked by favoritism or Injustice thoy would bo discredited while living and dishonored when dead. Tho X ray of publicity Is turned full upon tho operations of this federal reservo board. Thero can be nothing sinister about its transactions. Meeting with it at least four times a year, and perhaps oftener, will he a bankers' advisory council representing every regional roserve dis trict in the system. This council will have'ac cess to the records of tho board and is autho rized to give advice and offer suggestions con cerning its general policy. How could we have exercised greater caution in safeguarding the public interest? BANKING REFORM AND THE FARMER For a brief period and in certain quarters this bill was assailed by those who profossed to be- liovo that it was written in the interest of the creditor class. I suspect, Mr. Chairman, that thero aro somo folks who aro incapable of accu rately discriminating the real "creditor class when it comes to tho banking business. As a matter of fact, in tho great volume of business transactions tho "creditor class" is tho people who loan money to banks. In this senso tho banks themselves aro distinctly debtors to their depositors notwithstanding tho lattor are many times borrowers of money and credit. But, for populistic purposes, tho "debtor class" has boon craftily turned to mean everybody who borrows or desires to borrow money; and tho attempt is mado to have it appear that under this, bill greater difficulty will bo experienced by "the plain people" in negotiatng loans than under tho existing system. A persistent and pernicious effort has been mado to creato the impression that this bill, in somo unexplained way, discriminates against tho American farmer. To cure these imaginary discriminations thero have been suggested financial nostrums that would cause the judi cious to grievo and which, if accepted, would Involve tho whole country in ruin. Presented in tho interest of the farmer and in the name of democracy, they would impoverish the former and eternally discredit tho latter. Some of these suggestions have been prompted by an exuber ant but utterly misdirected zeal; others by a pitiful ignorance of tho subject, and others still have their inspiration in the perennial and ubiquitous demagogy of a certain class of poli ticians. It would have been sheer foolishness, Mr. Chairman, for tho proponents of this bill to have undertaken any discrimination against the American farmer, to whose favor a vast ma jority of members here owe their political exis tence and whoso interests they were commis sioned to represent. And, sir, it would have been cowardly in the banking and currency committee of the house had it sought to please the agricultural interests by partial legislation, hurtful to the banking and commercial interests of the United States. We have done neither of these things. We have sought to do exact jus tice to all classes; and any public man who would have us do otherwise affronts tho intel ligence and disparages the patriotism of the American farmer no less than he outrages the sense of justice of tho American merchant and banker. It is gratifying to report to the house that while in somo directions there have been manifestations of selfishness and in others amus ing rhetorical exhibitions in behalf of the people, tho committee has had a clear perception of its duty and has yielded neither to greed nor to declamation. It has steered a straight course, right between Scylla and Charybdis. The requirements of the American farmer for bank credit are no different from the needs of other members of the community. The farmer requires loanable capital, to enable him to ex tend his agricultural operations as far as there Is profit In them, and to take advantage of mar ket conditions which call for the application of more wealth than he actually possesses. How ever, while thus essentially on the same basis as others in respect to loanable funds and his noed of credit, the farmer is peculiar In the rospect that he ordinarily requires a longer term of credit than do some othor members of the community, and in most countries requires cur roncy in tho transaction of his business rather than book credit with tho bank. FARM LOANS The present bill is intended to render capital available to banks through the rediscount opera tion, and at this point I desire briefly to call attention to those phases of the bill which bear upon the farmer and his welfare and in regard to which it is probable that the agriculturist will bo directly helped. In section 14 of tho bill we have provided for the rodiscounting of paper possessing a maturity of not more than 90 days in one case and in another case paper possessing a maturity of not moro than 120 days. In tho same section we have provided for the making of acceptances by national banks and the rediscounting of those acceptances by federal reserve banks. Thero has been a creat dnn.1 nf mfnnnnro. hension in many quarters with reference to the meaning of tho 90-day provision in this para graph. Tho claim has constantly been made that this 90-day provision would be of no ser vice whatever to the farmer, because the farmer never bothers with so short a loan as 90 days. This, of course, is an entire misapprehension of the .whole situation. Tho terms of the bill do npt provide that tho paper shall not be dis counted if it runs moro than 90 oays but merely that . it shall not bo discounted until it is within 90 days of muturlty in other words, the bill enables the hanker who holds the farmer's paper to shorten tho life of tho farmer's paper by 90 days and to that ex tent get now funds with which to aid the farmer Now, just what does this mean? Suppose that the loans of a farming community made by na tional banks will average 90 days, with a re newal for 90 days, or six months in all. it ia evident that a bank which had loaned, let us say $25,000, for four months would bo ablo to pre sent this paper at the end of tho first 30 days of the life of the loan and to get a rediscount for tho remaining 90 days. That is to say, it would bo ablo to draw back the amount of the farmer's credit at the end of tho first 30 days and to relend that sum to other people. When tho time camo for renewal the bank would, ol course, have to be in position to pay its loan or rediscount to tho federal reserve bank if it ex tended the farmer's accommodation for another 90 days out of new funds that have come in meanwhile; but it could again rediscount at tho end of another 30-day period. In other words, if the community were doing its banking upon a four months' period of credit the bank would be ablo to shorten this in practice to a 30-day period of credit. It is entirely conceivable that by this process it should practically treble the amount of banking capital which it could, If necessary, place at the disposal of tho com munity. Now, let us suppose that the country hank, as is no doubt frequently the case, does not have a steady run of loans such as would justify tho use of the method just described. Let us suppose instead of that that tho demand for loans is likely to be "bunched" in the late spring and then to slacken so that the funds of tho banks are tied up on, let us say, six months' paper. Under the 120-day provision of this bill such banks would be ablo to take six months paper as soon as it was two months old to a federal reservo bank and rediscount it. In other words, funds that would ordinarily havo been tied up for four months longer will now bo actually available to meet such additional de mands as may come to the bank in tho course of the summer and early autumn. Here, again, it is evident that the loan period being practi cally cut down by two-thirds the loaning power of the bank is trebled, assuming that it is ablo to obtain from the federal reserve bank the rediscounts for which it has the basis in tho shape of paper' growing out of agricultural transactions. HANDLING FARM CROPS I have been constantly hearing that the pro posed bill afforded no basis for accommodating the farmer who had raised his crops and who desired to get means that would enable him to carry them along pending improvement oi prices. Nothing could be more unjust or fur ther from the facts of the case than this. As a matter of fact, tho bill makes ample provision for the handling of the great export crops of the country, such as cotton, wheat, corn, and the like. Not only does it provide for loans of tne kind already referred to, but in the paragraP" relating to acceptances it makes ample provision for enabling the owner or raiser of crops to re tain the title to them while they are being dis posed of abroad. Let us see how this won s. If a cotton grower in the south, for exainl"e; needs funds he may arrange with a banK.u,v his home to grant him a specified credit ot, say $50,000. In this event he would draw a di of exchange or draft on the bank in quest iou for, say, six months and would attach to it u documents showing shipment. The bank wouw accept this paper and he would then be m pow tion to sell the bill practically anywhere. " credit would be based on an actual ownersnip u cotton protecting the actual amount ot tne u and investors practically everywhero wourn entirely at liberty to purchase this paper i ee because it had -been guaranteed by tne "'" v which accepted it. Everywhere in the count j where there were idle funds there would ob demand for theso bills. Not only federal reser banks, but other banks would constitute a u ket for such bills. When rediscounted in they would constitute a virtual "f11 e credit to these banks, enabling them to inu their loaning power tremendously f11! vhich to give to their customers accommodation the latter could not otherwise have expecttu. LOWER INTEREST TO THE FARMER The unquestionable effect of this n.enwrious would be to draw funds now idle (Continued on Page 20.) Mm