speeches · November 21, 1971
Speech
Darryl R. Francis · President
THE NEW ECONOMIC POLICY- - IMPLICATIONS FOR AGRICULTURE
Speech by
Darryl R. Francis, President
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Before
The Fifth Annual Governor's Conference on Agriculture
Ramada Inn, Jefferson City, Missouri
Monday morning, November 22, 1971
It is good to have this opportunity to discuss
with you some implications of the President's new
economic program with respect to agriculture. I am
particularly interested in this topic since the program
has elicited high-pitched discussion and even more
important it could have a serious impact on the volume
of agricultural trade in world markets.
Major features of the program are:
1. A tax credit on investment.
2. Repeal of the 7 per cent excise tax
on automobiles.
3. A speedup of the scheduled personal
income tax exemptions.
4. A $4.7 billion reduction in Federal
spending and a 5 per cent cut in the
number of government employees.
5. A 10 per cent cut in foreign economic
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6. A 90-day freeze on wages and prices
followed by a mechanism for achieving
wage and price stability.
7. Suspension of the convertibility of
foreign held dollars into gold.
8. An additional 10 per cent tax on goods
imported into this nation. 1/
Most of this discussion will be limited to the
foreign trade features of the program and specifically
to the suspension of the convertibility of the dollar and
the higher tax on imports. This is done for several
reasons. First, farm products are excluded from the
direct controls on wages and prices. Second, the Phase 11
announcements leave numerous questions unanswered as
to how the proposed wage and price controls will be
implemented. Third, the other proposals will likely have
only marginal impacts on agriculture.
Foreign Trade Profitable
Although international trade represents only
about five per cent of the nation's Gross National Product,
it has a much greater impact on agriculture. Farm
commodity exports totaled almost $8 billion in the last fiscal
year and accounted for more than fifteen per cent of total
1/ "Address by the President," August 15, 1971
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farm product sales. Exports are thus a vital factor in
determining total demand for farm products and total farm
income.
Farm products cannot be sold abroad indefinitely,
however, unless we are willing to purchase something
in return. International trade must be a two-way
exchange. A refusal to permit imports will soon cause
depletion of the means-of-payment for our products. We
could decide that accepting imports is too high a price
to pay for the opportunity of selling products abroad.
This nation can produce virtually any commodity or service
that it consumes; thus we could abstain from international
trade altogether. This highly protective route is, of
course, the least desirable alternative because inter
national trade is profitable.
Gains Accrue to Both Exporting and
Importing Nations
International transactions provide the same
opportunity for gain as domestic transactions. We do
not question the gains resulting from domestic speciali
zation of productive resources and the exchange of the
resulting output. When a dairy farmer sells milk to an
automobile worker and in turn purchases an automobile,
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the welfare of both dairy farmer and automobile worker
are increased. The value of the output is greater than
if each tried to produce both dairy products and auto
mobiles. Similarly, the value of total output of goods
and services in the State of Wisconsin and the City of
Detroit is greater as a result of the exchange of milk
from Wisconsin for automobiles manufactured in Detroit.
Just because Wisconsin happens to be in the United States
rather than in Canada has no influence on the gains.
Well-being would have been enhanced an equal amount if
Wisconsin were in Canada. International trade is thus
profitable to both farmer and other producers of products
for export and to consumers of foreign produced goods
and services. Exporters and consumers in other nations
receive similar benefits.
Since ail trade is profitable to both parties,
any hinderance to trade through taxes, quotas, or other
restrictions reduces welfare. Both dairy farmers and
automobile workers would have fewer goods and services if
the exchange of dairy products for automobiles was arti
ficially reduced through restrictions. Similarly, any
interference with international trade leaves each trading
nation with fewer goods and services.
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Some contend that protective trade barriers are
necessary for the U. S. to maintain a high level of
employment, high wages, and a high standard of living.
I contend that trade restrictions are neither conducive
to high real wages nor to a high living standard. They
aid producers in the protected industries by shielding
them from competition from more efficient producers
abroad.
Nations following restrictive trade practices
retain productive resources in less efficient lines of
output thereby reducing the total volume of goods and
services available to consumers. Let's view the problem
in terms of protection carried to its extreme. All foreign
competition for each actual and potential domestic
industry would be eliminated and international trade
would soon come to a halt. Each nation would be self-
sufficient but, like our dairy farmer and automobile
worker, self-sufficiency involves each nation trying to
produce everything. It will result in less total output
of goods and services. With less product, wages in
terms of purchasing power for goods and services will
decline. Thus in contrast to contentions of the pro
tectionists that trade barriers which limit competition
are beneficial they actually reduce real wages and well-being.
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The number of jobs in the protected industries
will increase but the gain will be offset by a decline
in jobs elsewhere. The total number of jobs in the nation
over the longer run is limited only by the number of people
who want to work at the market wage rate and the legal or
other restrictions on employment. Farmers have always
known that those who wanted to work and could not find an
acceptable job with another person or firm became self-
employed producers of valuable goods and services. Unem
ployment is a short run phenomenon during which produc
tive workers are searching for the market price of their
labor and is not affected by free trade in the longer run.
Since international trade enhances well-being
it is important that a means of payment be maintained
which will be conducive to such trade. Like all other
valuable goods, imports must be paid for, and exports are
the ultimate means of payment. But, since item by item
matching of imports and exports is extremely inefficient,
we avoid it by using the international payments mechanism,
just as we avoid the matching of goods and services in
domestic transactions with the use of money. Instead of
one currency, many are used in foreign transactions, and
the determination of their relative value - the exchange
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rate - is one of the major results of the workings of an
international payments system.
The International Payments System
The international payments mechanism, as estab
lished by the Bretton Woods agreements of 1944, provided
that countries can fix their exchange rates either in terms
of gold or in terms of the dollar. As it turned out, the
United States established the price of the dollar at $35
per ounce in terms of gold, and most other countries estab
lished the prices of their currencies in terms of the dollar.
Exchange rates were required to be maintained by foreign
central bank intervention. The central banks were re
quired to buy dollars when the price of the dollar showed
a tendency to fall in terms of their currencies and sell
dollars when the price of the dollar tended to rise.
Until the latter half of the 1960's the United
States experienced a significantly lower rate of inflation
and a lower amplitude of cyclical fluctuations than did
other major foreign economies. Therefore, the dollar was
the most stable of all major currencies. It was extensively
used as an international means of payment despite some
overall balance of payments deficits. A large resulting
deficit-induced dollar balance was thus held willingly and
provided a service as internat ional money.
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During the late sixties, however, the U. S. balance
on goods and services began to decline and capital
outflows accelerated. At the same time, our overly expan
sive monetary and fiscal policies resulted in large decreases
in the purchasing power of the dollar, both domestically
and internationally. Thus, in world trade we had an increas
ing rate of dollars being supplied and a reduced demand for
them.
As private individuals abroad stopped accumulating
dollars the international price of the dollar could remain
fixed only through massive accumulations by central banks.
Foreign central banks soon found their dollar reserves
excessive and began converting them into gold. By
September of this year our gold supply has dwindled to
$10 billion, and we were reluctant to permit its con
tinued depletion.
With these pressures increasing, and with no
hope for redress, Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium
announced that they would no longer purchase additional
dollars, thus floating their currencies and permitting
them to appreciate. Meanwhile, Switzerland and Austria
undertook outright revaluation by announcing that their
central banks would continue to purchase dollars but
only at a lower price. The U. S., faced with the impossi
bility of maintaining the fixed dollar to gold ratio,
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suspended convertibility.
Fixed Exchange Rates Unworkable
In view of the failure of the fixed exchange
rate system the question of selecting an alternative
payments mechanism arises. To demonstrate the problem,
let's assume that I buy a Japanese radio and send a
check for $30 to the Japanese exporter, who deposits the
check in his bank.
On the dollar exchange standard which existed
until recently, the price of a dollar is fixed in terms
of gold, and the price of Japanese currency is fixed in
terms of the dollar. In order for the exchange rate to
remain constant, the supply of dollars must be matched by
an equivalent quantity demanded or the central bank of
Japan is committed to purchase the thirty dollars at the
fixed exchange rate, thus increasing their foreign re
serves. If the fixed rates are not consistent with market
values of the two currencies, such reserves could build
up as long a s foreign central banks are willing to hold
our liabilities.
The fact that our purchases abroad have in recent
years exceeded foreign purchases in the U. S. is
evidence that the exchange rate has not reflected the
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market value of the dollar in the foreign exchange market.
The imbalance simply means that the U. S. has been pur
chasing more goods, services, and capital assets abroad
than foreigners have been purchasing from the U. S. The
difference has been settled through gold shipments and
rising foreign liquid claims on the U. S. Thus the real
value of these purchases from abroad was greater than
the dollar expenditures by those making the purchase.
The goods and services were thus obtained at subsidized
prices with the subsidies provided in the form of U. S.
Government gold shipments and excessive foreign central
bank dollar holdings.
The value of the dollar in terms of other cur
rencies could be made consistent with the fixed exchange
rate. This would involve a contraction of money income
and prices in the U. S. relative to money incomes and prices
abroad when our purchases abroad became excessive. To date
we in the United States have not indicated a willingness
to pay such a price for a viable fixed rate system because
attempts to reduce money income and the rate of inflation
is followed by substantial unemployment. As a consequence
the adjustment mechanism for the fixed rate is not per
mitted to work and both farm and nonfarm exports have suffered.
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Flexible Rates Workable
Most of our foreign exchange problems of recent
years could be avoided by the provision for greater flexi
bility in the exchange rates. A flexible exchange standard
implies that the price of the dollar will be determined by
market forces without official intervention. In the example
of my purchase of the Japanese radio, the Japanese bank would
offer my $30 on the foreign exchange market. If there are
buyers of U. S. goods and services at existing prices, the $30
will be purchased by them, and the exchange rate will not
change. But if Japanese importers view U. S. prices as being
too high, they will offer less Japanese currency for my $30
check, and the transaction will be consummated only at a
lower price of the dollar in terms of Japanese money. Thus
my import is still paid by an export, but only when accom
panied by a change in the exchange rate.
The flexible exchange rate would permit the
necessary currency adjustments and establish a balance
between imports and exports. An excess of imports by the
United States will cause a decline in the price of the
dollar in terms of foreign currencies. This would make
foreign goods more expensive to us and our commodities
cheaper to foreigners. This change in relative prices
would discourage imports and encourage exports.
A flexible rate does not require major central
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With the fixed exchange rate system such actions have been
taken in attempting to mitigate the adjustments necessary
to correct a disequilibrium in international trade. Such
actions have resulted in persistent and fundamental trade
deficits and surpluses. These imbalances have in turn
produced crises requiring periodic adjustments in the ex
change rate, direct controls, and other arbitrary impedi
ments to international trade.
A flexible exchange rate does not imply domestic
fluctuations in income and employment. It is self-adjusting
and reacts quickly to imbalances, thus providing for smoother
trade patterns. It is therefore more likely to be permitted
to function without excessive interference.
Virtually all national governments are committed
to the achievement of stable conditions in their domestic
economies. For example, it is difficult to imagine that,
given an import balance, the United States would be willing
to permit a contraction of domestic production and higher
unemployment. It is just as difficult to visualize Japan
deliberately submitting to inflation because their exports
have exceeded their imports. In the choice of an exchange
rate system, it seems to me, the crux of the matter is not
the ability of a system to make necessary adjustments. They
all can be made to correct imbalances provided we are will
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ing to pay the price in terms of domestic employment and
income. Given, however, the demonstrated political
necessity of maintaining full production and employment,
it is a matter of selecting a system which will be permitted
to remain viable and correct imbalances. Flexibility in
the exchange rates will meet this requirement, which is
not met by fixed rates.
Impact on Total Foreign Trade
With this background of recent economic actions
and some alternative possibilities available for an inter
national payments mechanism, let's take a look at the
probable impact of these actions on total volume of foreign
trade.
The additional tax on imported goods will likely
have little impact on total exports in the near future. It
will, however, tend to reduce imports, and it could trigger
retaliatory measures if maintained for an extended period.
Furthermore, as indicated earlier, any reduction of trade
in one direction will cause imbalances and ultimately a re
duction of trade in the opposite direction. I am thus hopeful
that conditions will permit the early removal of this tempor
ary restriction.
The suspension of the convertibiiity of the dollar
into gold has already led to a substantial readjustment of
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exchange rates. For example, the Canadian dollar has in
creased 7.8 per cent relat ive to our own. Other currencies
with important gains relative to our own are the German
mark, up 9.7 per cent; the Netherlands guildor, up 8.1 per
cent; the Belgium franc, up 7.3 per cent; and the Japanese
yen, up 9.4 per cent.
A rise in the value of these currencies rela
tive to the dollar means that importers in these countries
can purchase U. S. products at a lower price in terms of
their currencies. This should stimulate U. S. exports.
How long this additional export stimulus will continue de
pends on the exchange rates required to avoid imbalances
in trade between the U. S. and the rest of the world.
If floating or relatively flexible rates are
maintained indefinitely, it is my belief that they will
contribute to a moderately rising volume of international
trade. One reason for this view is that such a payments
mechanism is not as likely to induce governments to inter
fere with the profitable exchange of goods and services
between nations. No nation in the absence of gold shipments
can expect to increase its holdings of precious metals or
lose them to other nations. Thus there will be less rea
son for restricting imports to avoid gold losses. Neither
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will it be necessary for governments to worry about their
holdings of other types of foreign exchange if exchange
rates are permitted to float freely. Any nation's ex
change rates will be determined by the value of its pro
ducts in the export market. Without such worries there is
little reason for government interference with the payments
mechanism or with normal trade patterns.
Flexible exchange rates are also likely to in
volve less risk to exporters and importers over an extended
period than fixed rates, thereby contributing to a rising
volume of trade. There is little doubt, however, that daily
fluctuating in flexible rates induce marginally greater daily
risks and somewhat greater costs of international currency
convertibility. This is supported by the sparse historical
evidence and by the recent behavior of the forward rate.
The forward rate, which, among other things, reflects the
insurance premium for delivery of some currency at a speci
fied price at some future date, has increased. Interestingly
enough, however, the increases are minimal where the float
is "clean" and large where central bank intervention is
either present or anticipated. This seems to indicate that
actual flexibility is a small contributor to increased costs,
while intervention or anticipated revaluations under a fixed
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rate are the real culprit.
Most of our domestic commodity, stock, and money
markets have hourly fluctuations, and the premium associated
with frequent changes does not appear to be prohibitive nor
does it impair the efficiency of these markets. Here too,
large fluctuations in forward prices occur when there are
anticipations of some natural disaster, a strike or some
institutional interference, events not unlike anticipated
changes in the exchange rate.
The question that should be asked is not whether
costs of converting one currency to another is higher under
a flexible exchange rate as compared with the fixed rate,
but whether the total costs of periodic actual or anticipated
revaluations are higher. Since 1944, out
of 92 countries which have established parities under the
International Monetary Fund, forty-five have changed par
values seventy-four times. Several of these changes were
accompanied by serious international economic disturb
ances, and most of them by domestic resource reallocations.
Every sudden change in the official exchange rate causes
a movement of resources between export and import competing
industries, and each movement implies some structural
unemployment.
These greater risks from anticipated and actual
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revaluations thus probably inhibit more trade than the day-to-day
fluctuations in floating rates. Furthermore, the
day-to-day type of risks are taken by businessmen regularly
in domestic price movements. They know that such risks are
likely to be offset by price movements in the opposite direc
tion tomorrow. On the other hand, businessmen are not adept
at planning for arbitrary revaluations of exchange rates.
Thus, with the greater freedom of market forces under the
floating or flexible system, it is my view that businessmen
will feel safer in making long range investment plans for
exports and imports and that trade between nations will rise.
Impact on Agriculture
How do these prospects for increased foreign trade
affect our agricultural industries? Agriculture is one of
our more efficient industries, and given improved trading
conditions both here and abroad, farm exports should rise
markedly.
Nevertheless, the picture is not as bright as a
cursory view would indicate. Most nations that can pay for
our farm products have programs designed to protect their
farm commodity markets and to increase their farm incomes.
Their programs maintain an excess of national resources in
agriculture. They will therefore likely permit only limited
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amounts of our farm products to enter their markets. Any
gains in our farm exports resulting from the President's new
policies are thus likely to cause increased resistance abroad
to imports of American farm products.
Furthermore, we are not in a strong position to
bargain with foreign governments with respect to this pro
tectionist problem. Our country has not been innocent in
the use of these protective devices. Even in agriculture,
which has such a large stake in free trade, we have estab
lished highly protectionist policies. We have sugar import
quotas which, based on the New York wholesale price, cost
U. S. consumers an additional 22 cents for each five pounds
of sugar purchased. — We have subscribed to international
trade agreements which set minimum prices on coffee and
wheat, thereby limiting trade in these commodities. We
have meat import quotas which provide limits on imports of
beef. Our cotton export subsidy, designed to offset the
trade-retarding features of our domestic price support
program, is sufficient to permit exports of cotton to Japan
and imports of goods made from the cotton to the U. S. for
sale in competition with our own mills. In order to avoid
\J_ International Monetary Funds, International Financial
Statistics, Sept. 1970, p. 29.
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excessive disruptions from such competition, however, we
have a tacit agreement with the Japanese to limit cotton
goods exports to the U. S. Such tacit arrangements are
apparently preferred to formalized legal act ions, but if
they are equally effective in reducing trade, they are
likewise equally effective in reducing welfare.
A recent study by the University of Illinois
found that Illinois farmers favor foreign trade but prefer
to restrict beef and ham imports, their major farm product.
This view demonstrates the fact that our farm sector has
not thought out a consistent free trade policy. Despite
its great stake in free trade, agricultural interests are
confused and offer no rational program for reducing re
strictive practices and freeing world markets.
However, despite our inconsistent policies, it is
my conclusion that the current floating exchange rate will
provide some short run stimulus to farm exports, and if greater
flexibility of the rates are a permanent feature of our pay
ments mechanism, foreign trade could rise substantially. If
this occurs we could have a larger volume of farm exports
indefinitely.
2I_ Harold D. Guither, "Illinois Farmers View Current Policy
Issues," Illinois Agricultural Economics, Vol. 10, No. 2 and
Vol. II, No. I, July 1970 - Jan. 1971, p. 23.
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SUMMARY
In summation, I am hopeful that the objectives
which prompted the higher tax on imports will soon be achieved
and that this restriction will soon be removed. Its removal
could again place this nation back in the forefront of the
major commercial nations for free trade policies.
I view the break with the unworkable fixed ex
change mechanism as a move toward reducing international
trade restrictions. It should remove us another step from
the discredited mercantilistic trade policies of three or
four centuries ago where each nation thought that its wel
fare depended on an excess of commodity exports. With
greater flexibility in the payments mechanism there will
be less reason for destabi lizing government actions in an
attempt to stimulate exports or reduce imports.
Given free reign to sell throughout the world
at free market prices our own businessmen, as well as
businessmen in other nations, will make long range plans
for greater exports and imports. They can understand and
cope with day-to-day exchange rate fluctuations. Major
exchange rate revaluations by governments, however, can be
disastrous. It is the possibility of major revaluations
and the restrictions on trade in an attempt to avoid them
that tend to reduce exports and imports.
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If a larger volume of foreign trade develops,
an anticipated, some increase in farm exports should occur.
But, despite the great potential for farm exports, agri
cultural interests in this nation have no consistent free
trade policy or program. We are in a weak bargaining
position relative to the removal of foreign trade barriers
since like our foreign trading partners, we also have
highly restrictive policies. Thus, the U, S. and foreign
farm protectionist policies will likely continue and pre
vent major gains in farm exports despite the improvement
in the international payments mechanism.
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Cite this document
APA
Darryl R. Francis (1971, November 21). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19711122_francis
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19711122_francis,
author = {Darryl R. Francis},
title = {Speech},
year = {1971},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19711122_francis},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}