rw V The Commoner XOU 21, NO. 7 12 T7:v7r8f,"'?' ?w tfif m- ni lit partook of a surfeit last year. Tho gain in prices may have been fantastic and largely on paper, but tho loss, coming bo swiftly, produces vory real distress for hosts of good people, in cluding women and children. Wo can not euro or palliate destitution by philosophizing or ex plaining or proving that it comes obedient to the laws of political economy." Warnings and Remonstrances, Given Time and Again, Pass Unheeded by Board, With Dirc- fnl Consequences. 's FOURTEEN MONTHS havo elapsed since my tetter to tho board of January 28, 1920, with roforonco to which, in a letter ao tho governor of. the board of February 19, 1921, concerning the .unequal distribution of the funds of the system and tho large loans which were being extended to certain favored member institu tions, I had said: "I pointed out to you that the New York Re sorvo Bank was, AT THAT TIME (January, 1920), loudlng an amount nearly six times its own Capital, that is to say, SIX TIMES THE CAPITAL OF the Reserve Bank of New York to ONE member institution, .and I sbowod you that the money which tho New York Reserve Bank had loaned to one borrower on Dccomber 31, 1919, amounted to nearly TWICE AS MUCH as the aggregate ,amount of loans and discounts which the Fed eral Reserve Bank of DALLAS was lending at .hat time to ALL of its member banks in that groat district, embracing tho entire state of Texas and part of the states of Louisiana, Okla homa, Now Mexico and, Arizona. "It appoars that In order to make the3e huge Joans to those institutions the New York Fed eral Reserve Bank, had found it desirable to re tlscount or borrow about the time of my letter to you of January 28, 1920, over $118,000,000 from SEVEN other Federal Reserve Banks, in cluding among others, the Reserve Banks of DALLAS, CHICAGO and ATLANTA, WHOSE RESOURCES AVAILABLE FOR THEIR OWN MEMBER BANKS WERE TO THAT EXTENT LESSENED." SIX MONTHS have now passed since I took , the liberty of giving my warning of October last to the Secretary of the Treasury and to the board, and of urging so earnestly a revision of policies. FOUR MONTHS have gone since I supple mented that warning in an earnest and elabor ate presentation of the situation. The suffer ng. throughout the country had meanwhile be come greatly intensified. In that subsequent Iet er I had advocated reduction of interest rates xnd increased extension of cred!t for urgent 'msiness needs to the" lim'ts cons'stent with rudence and the equitable distribution of our available resources. Instances illustrative of the widespread distress n the west and south, and in tho,east ns well, and argument for such a policy of forbearance and consideration for borrowing banks, as would en able them to give like treatment to individuals, was drawn as strong as my ability-permitted. It seemed to me something was wrong some where and somehow, when with an actual shrinkage in values of our commodities within a year of twelve to eighteen billion dollars, FOUR OR FIVE favored member banks in New York City were borrowing from the govern ment's reservoir of money and credit as much as FOUR OR FIVE THOUSAND member banks in the west and south were borrowing from five Federal Reserve Banks, embracing in their re spective districts twenty-one great states. "Average1 Rates Charced Arc Dwluslve, Some Gorged, Others Starved. The board, with its knowledge of these huge 1oans to certa'n New Yrk cHv banks, claims there was, "ON AN AVERAGE," no restric tion of credit, etc.; but again it must be pointed out that it is a poor consolation to starving families to be assured that taking into, consid eration food wasted, in riotous living and luxury the "AVERAGE" amount consumed in their community is fair. Of such "AVERAGES" as these we may well exclaim. "What crimes are committed in thy name!" The purpose of the Federal Reserve Act is not to secure satisfactory "AVERAGES" we already had tolerably good "averages" but to secure A FAIR DISTRI BUTION AND EQUITABLE ALLOTMENTS TO EACH AND EVERY ONE. $500,000,000 From Other Sections, Enticed by Fancy Interest Rates, for Loans in Witfl Street I was further painfully impressed by the evidences of the official records that at the be ginlng of August, 1920, in crop moving time the national banks in New York city were lend ing for correspondents on so-called Wall Street" loans for ttock speculations and Poiib, more than $500,000,000 COAXED FROM BANKS EVERYWHERE IN THE COUNTRY by the high rates speculators would pay. This was more than the Federal Reserve Banks of Minneapolis, St. Louis, Kansas City, Dallas and Atlanta were lending to their 4,000 or more member banks. This document, my letter of December s a, 1920, to the board, was long, elaborate, care fully prepared. I tried to make the statements of conditions, as I saw them from my inside view, vivid and energetic and the suggestions for improvement clear. The reaction I got, after forty-four days, was that I had written some thing, not to be acted upon but to bo reported on when the board knew how many persons had seen my letter, and what their names were. The board was to determine, not how to DO some thing, but, perhaps, how to formulate reasons for NOT doing it. "Whatever was required to be done," says Dickens, "The CIRCUMLOCUTION OFFICE was beforehand with all the public de partments in the art of perceiving how NOT to. do it." Board Says Shrinkage in Values "Somewhat Annlogus to Puncturing Balloon To Let Out Gas." Comptroller Replies Sensible men Bring Down Balloon by Careful Handling of Valve Ropes and Ballast. After a preliminary Incubation of two weeks, the governor of the board had also written me in a general way on January 13 th, some com ments on my letter of December 28th, defensive ot board poLcies and the status quo, but with out acting upon the recommendations in my let ter, and ho stated that the views expressed in his letter were 'also those of other members of the board. He impressed me as being rather more intent on rasping me, if possible, than on acting to meet the unhappy conditions existing, but did remark that the process of deflation was "some what analogus" to what takes place "when a balloon is punctured and the gas escapes." Tak ing this as a text, I urged that sensible men bring down balloons by careful handling of valve ropes and ballast, not by driving a hole in the bag and precipitating collapse and destruction. That had been the gist of my entire complaint and plea. It was impossible so far as my ex perience went, to fasten the minds of the board on that point. -I NEVER HAVE, TO THIS DAY, SECURED A DEFINITE DENIAL OF ANY MA TERIAL STATEMENTS I HAVE MADE OR A SOLID REASON FOR OPPOSING ANY OF THE SUGGESTIONS OR RECOMMENDATIONS I VENTURED TO OFFER. While in the earlier period the board was very helpful in facilitating an orderly decline, its subsequent obtuse refusal to recognize changed conditions, and to revise its policies accordingly though fully warned and urged to do so, has in my opinion, to use the board governor's simile been "somewhat analogous" to puncturing a bal loon and producing a ruinous and needless crash, which wise management could have averted This was no fault of tho Federal Reserve Act' but of its administration, for without the Fed eral Reserve System conditions would be in finitely worse than they are, despite its faulty administration. The most perfect machine which genius- can invent, or ingenuity construct, may be ruined by ignorance and mismanagement. Wise Exercise of Powers by Reserve Board Could Have Made Shrinkage More Uniform and Gradual and Saved Country "From Much of the Distress and Ruin Through which We Have Been Dragged." All this has been cited to illustrate tho need of some action by congress in the interest of mSl tUu 11aborlnS men, and the business men of the whole country, to make the vastly important Federal Reserve Board a more elas tic more initiative, sympathetic and responsive body than it is; to put it in more direct contact with the public, and to fix its responsibly There is no time or need here to consider details o such legislation. Among our 532 members of congress there is brain power enough to de vise simple remedies for an obvious situation I believe firmly that the BOARD BY ITS POWER TO REGULATE AND INCREASE OR REiSS THE SUPPLIES OF FUNDS AND THE INTER EST CHARGES FOR MONEY C(TO HVff SAVED US FROM A FALL SO PRECIPITATE AND SMASHING, AND FROM MUCH (W 4tS DISTRESS AND RUIN THRO&OHraoHE HAVE BEEN DRAGGED. IT COUin Saw MADE THE SHRINKAGE OP vB 2mS GRADUAL AND UNIFORM INSTFAn n?4t? LENT AND SPORADIC. COULD HAVE 2" ED STRONGLY TO KEEP THE niCm.ATING CURRENTS OF COMMERCE AT MORE Pvr ' FLOW, SO THAT THE LOSSES OF EAn PRODUCER MIGHT BE OFFSET BY REAnv ABLE REDUCTION IN THE COST OF WhS HE "MUST CONSUME, WHAT Lord Leverhulme Declares "Too Rapid Deflation" Has Brought Stagnation and Uncmnlovmr,,. These views and apprehensions, which t six months, to constructive action and to a re! vision of Its policy Of contraction before it wal too late, were snarea oy aoie and clear-tuink ing men far and wide. The fatal consequencps of its folly or Inertia, or both, have been far reaching. Lord Leverhulme, one of the lam est and most successful manufacturers hi the British Empire, a man of broad vision whose in terests are worldwide, recently declared in an interview, as reported in our newspapers, that "THE PROCESS OF TOO RAPID DEPL TION IS UNDOUBTEDLY THE CAUSE OP THE PRESENT UNEMPLOYMENT AND TIUDE STAGNATION." Continuing the interviewer said: "The prices of commodities rose to tho ex treme limit during the war,. and their reduction was a prime necessity, but the fall has been too sudden for adjustment. The deflation has been accomplished through the banks calling in loans which were used to finance stocks at high prices, and the effect of the forced realization of these stocks has been to drive down prices of com modities below the cost of production. "Under these circumstances manufacturers are not likely to go on producing at a loss, and have consequently been compelled to shut down their factories." Our country being now the principal creditor nation of the world, its financial policies, as is clearly recognized, have a, world-wide effect. Need For Wise Counsel, Experience, Knowledge of Business, Courage and Sympathy with Pnblic Needs. . ,.". We learn by experience, and -should provide that the Federal Reserve OBoard of tho future shall have less of the characteristics of the automatic bureau and more of. the activities and spirit of the wide-awake business man. I be lieve it desirable from the standpoint of the pub lic, and of the commercial interests of tho coun try that the membership of the board should in clude at least one man of wide business experi ence, outside of banking; The six members at the time of my resignation included, in addition to the Comptroller of the Currency, two college professors, two bankers, a lawyer and a news paper man from Poughkeepsie. A Chicago business 'man of signal ability and exemplary character whose counsel would have been t)f great value, especially in our recent experiences, was refused by the Senate when nominated by tho President several years ago. Enlightened Statesmanship Shown, by Bank of France in Lessening Violence of Crisis. The enlightened statesmanship with which the management of the great Bank of France met this world crisis and tempered its strain and shock for its people may be Judged by a state ment made by the governor of. the Bank of France in his recently published annual report, Tn referring to the existing financial and commer cial crises, he said: "We have welcomed,. whether by means of re discount or by direct discount? all paper whose creation responded to the legitimate needs of commerce and production. By this liberal policy, to which we have remained and always will re main faithful, we expect to support with all pow er tho activit'es of widely varying business en terprises which in France are' needed to lessen the violence of the crisis." In striking contrast was the plan discussed by an "important official" of the Federal Reservo bank-of Now York, with a heartlessness w'fich even amazed Wall Street, and of which 1 shall speak again presently, which -called for "PUT TING ON STILL MORE PRESSURE, THUS CLEANING UP THE AFTER-WAR MESS IN A HURRY AND GETTING IT OVER," though it should involve "many fprced failures"; but the important official" referred to complacently concluded that it seemed best to stick to tho present set course without increasing or reduc ing pressure-, "despite the criticism" which it was admitted was "heard FROM ALL QUAR TERS FOR LOWER INTEREST RATES AND WITHDRAWAL OF PRESSURE TO FORCE PAYMENT OF OUTSTANDING LOANS." As is natural and proper, I 'offer my sugges tions of what congress should do.chiefly within Continued; on .$age&14 1 .'(..'$ -.':- . xj iufcrtV.iV.?.. jtonanflWi "?; itujt "! .l,tu:Lt. .A 'tfrffcf&ii