Show world monetary plans seen as boon to trade funds would help restore production and stimulate exchange of goods in postwar era treasury says by news analyst and commentator service union trust building washington D C I 1 have just come from a luncheon of creamed chicken and rice green r salad al I 1 d and trimmings the food was not however the interesting part of the affair the food for thought that ilia t went with it was and so was the setting we were served from a large la rge oval table able in the conference room of the united states treasury the hosts were secretary of I 1 the he T treasury treasury henry and a squad of his seal fiscal fi experts the subject of the conversation was the same one which was discussed at many of the mora more than conferences which took place around that same table and which led up to the bretton woods monetary ta r y conference last july tod today ay th that at same subject ls is before congress in the form of pending legislation which would authorize american participation in an international bank of reconstruction and development and an international monetary f fund un d upon the passage of this legislation and the creation of the bank and fund the masterminds master minds on money matters tell me depends the success of any world security organization which may come out of the united nations meeting at san francisco aim to 0 o stop economic warfare the reason for that statement boiled down to its essence is this you cant stop international warfare unless you stop economic warfare economic warfare in this sense me means ans international trade practices not in the common good specifically some of the practices indulged in by nations competing for foreign trade before and after the grand smash of 29 how is this warfare to be restrained quid pro quo of course in the vicious fight tor for trade after the waria large number of nations will have three strikes on them to start they are wrecked some physically and a great many more financially politically economically those which will emerge less affected by the war scourge like the united sta states es will be equally affected if they have nobody with money or credit enough to buy their goods therefore in exchange tor for an agreement to abide by certain fair practices as we might call them and contributions in cash or its equivalent under the bretton woods agreement a nation would receive membership to in an international bank which would guarantee private loans make some direct for the purpose of reconstruction and development so they can build factories and do other things necessary to create goods to sell and earn money to buy these loans would be 10 loans ans in which the risk is too great for a private institution to take and which if they were made and bonds offered to the public the public touch but guaranteed by the international bank over a long term private bankers would lend the money and the public with the word of 44 nations behind the bonds would hardly be skittish the monetary fund would be created for the purpose of stabilizing liz exchange and facilitating the growth of international trade the members would agree to tie their exchange to the gold standard and not change it unless the governors and directors of the fund approve this would stop among other things what amounts to imposing hidden tariffs on foreign goods by changing the rates of exchange of a count rys currency in terms of other nations currency in their mad efforts to export goods at any price and get credits abroad the germans had all sorts of different kinds of marks that had bad one value here and another there As to the administration of the bank and fund a very careful system has been worked out regulating the amount of financial responsibility each country would have the figure would be based on the trade of a nation over a certain past period with some other modifications ficat ions for instance the united states would assume roughly one third of the financial responsibility and have one third of the votes on how the money or credit is to be handled e relief for U I 1 S Ban bankers hers risks one ot of the chief arguments as to the direct value of the program for the United States Is this it is estimated th that a t in the postwar period the united states bankers will have to do the bulk of the world lending estimated on the amount we did after the last war perhaps as much as 80 90 per cent rather than have the lenders risk the loss as they did last time it would be better to have the government and the governments ol of the rest of the nations nation a bear two thirds of the risk this they would do under the international bank it is pointed out oat by treasury officials that not only will most of the money be borrowed from private bankers in this country tor for the next five or ten years since we have most of the money to loan but most ot of it will likewise be s spent pent here since we have most ot of t the he things foreign countries need there are two chief reasons why su such ch an international financial program will be to the disadvantage of the private banker although by no means all bankers oppose it one is that the governments of nations will control the world fiscal policy and not the leading private international bankers who had the control before the second is that in the long run as sponsors of the plan admit it will lower interest rates those two reasons reat sons are not stressed by the vocal opponents of the measure before members of congress many other objections some highly technical are set forth the main suggestion in the report of a committee of the american bankers association is that because of unsettled political conditions throughout the world any action ought to be postponed until these conditions stabilize they say that the nations should agree to certain changes in the program before it is presented to the congress some of the changes suggested are re prompted by honest conviction some are due according to treasury oan officials bials to a misinterpretation of the program there is a group in the united states which says that the united states will come out of the little end of the horn under the orran arrangement ran gement and that the british sold us a bill of goods there is a group in england which says that britain will come out of the little end of the horn and that the united states sold their representatives a bill of goods that is one thing which quite aside from the arguments pro and con on the various disputed parts of the program demonstrates that it must be pretty good some weeks ago in this column I 1 tried to explain why germany came back after its defeats in france may I 1 be permitted to explain why the nazis come back for the second time once again we have to consider not the military organization of germany alone but the civilian organization as well nazi discipline because it was built on an entirely antihuman anti human foundation finally collapsed it was a discipline of 1 deceit 2 force both were bound to fall fail in the end because it failed to take into consideration one thing which the nazis refuse to admit exists the human soul with threats brute force and an organization which could carry out the threats and exercise the force was effective up to a tain point then it tailed failed its strength was in bending the twig as I 1 tried to point out in my earlier analysis youth worshipped wor shipped the false god of as long as its clay feet could be concealed youth knew no other god but the moment the clay feet crumbled in the defeat of its armies ie force forca failed youth deserted even the older people despite the numbing fear of the espionage of the ga gaul ulester ul elter the fear of the concentration camp tear fear of the firing squad began passive resistance the sturm the military unfit drafted by himmler refused to fight retus d to assemble when ordered ida hla Rega regulations lations evaded taxes went unpaid |