Treasury Debt Management since 1939



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University Press Scholarship Online You are looking at 1-10 of 10 items for: keywords : Treasury debt Treasury Debt Management since 1939 mitpress/9780262016377.003.0024 This chapter examines several aspects of how Treasury officials exercised their authority with respect to debt management policy after 1939. It begins with a brief survey of how the Treasury financed World War II. It then explains how a wartime interest rate stabilization program solved a problem faced by Secretary McAdoo twenty-five years earlier, and describes the difficult process of terminating that program following the end of hostilities. It concludes with a discussion of how the Treasury arrived at the strategy of regular and predictable auction offerings that has been in place since the mid-1970s a strategy that grew out of the innovations of Secretary Mellon and Secretary Mills in the 1920s and early 1930s. Paying down the War Debt mitpress/9780262016377.003.0012 This chapter examines how the Treasury reduced wartime debt. Andrew Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury, and his colleagues first addressed the problem of refinancing the postwar overhang of short-term debt and then put in place the program of regular tax date financings that became the backbone of Treasury debt operations in the 1920s. Between mid-1923 and early 1927, they whittled down the Third Liberty bonds as sinking Page 1 of 6

fund appropriations became available, but when tax receipts exploded in early 1927, they had the mental agility to make a midcourse correction, switching their attention to the Second Liberty bonds and calling those bonds for early redemption. They also made use of intermediate-term securities in the second half of the decade, three times offering 5-year notes callable in three years. Birth of a Market: The U.S. Treasury Securities Market from the Great War to Item type: book mitpress/9780262016377.001.0001 The market for U.S. Treasury securities is a marvel of modern finance. In 2009 the Treasury auctioned $8.2 trillion of new securities, ranging from four-day bills to thirty-year bonds, in 283 offerings on 171 different days. By contrast, in the decade before World War I, there was only about $1 billion of interest-bearing Treasury debt outstanding, spread out over just six issues. New offerings were rare, and the debt was narrowly held, most of it owned by national banks. This book traces the development of the Treasury market from a financial backwater in the years before World War I to a multibillion dollar market on the eve of World War II. It focuses on Treasury debt management policies, describing the origins of several pillars of modern Treasury practice, including regular and predictable auction offerings and the integration of debt and cash management. The book recounts the actions of Secretaries of the Treasury, from William McAdoo in the Wilson administration to Henry Morgenthau in the Roosevelt administration, and their responses to economic conditions. His account covers the Treasury market in the two decades before World War I, how the Treasury financed the Great War, how it managed the postwar refinancing and paydowns, and how it financed the chronic deficits of. It concludes with an examination of aspects of modern Treasury debt management that grew out of developments from 1917 to 1939. Treasury Debt Management during the Great Contraction Page 2 of 6

mitpress/9780262016377.003.0018 This chapter traces the evolution of Treasury debt management actions between 1930 and early 1933. It first examines the outlook for debt management in the second half of 1930. It then describes how unforeseen events complicated, and then derailed, the refinancing program that Secretary Mellon and Under Secretary of the Treasury Ogden Mills had mapped out, and how those officials fashioned innovative responses. When faced with unexpected financing requirements in the first half of 1931, they introduced a program of regularly refinancing maturing Treasury bills with new bills, thus turning bills from their originally intended use as an instrument of cash management into an instrument of debt management. The last section describes how Mills, who became Secretary of the Treasury in February 1932, funded the activities of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in 1932 and early 1933. Coda on Treasury Debt Management during World War I mitpress/9780262016377.003.0010 This chapter discusses the changes in Treasury debt management that accompanied the wartime growth in debt. These include how the Treasury sold securities, the contractual provisions of Treasury securities, and the way in which the Treasury moderated the mismatch between episodic receipts (stemming from bond sales and tax collections) and its more nearly continuous disbursements. Treasury Debt Management before World War I mitpress/9780262016377.003.0003 Page 3 of 6

This chapter describes the characteristics of Treasury debt and the primary and secondary markets for Treasury bonds in the decades prior to World War I. The market for U.S. Treasury bonds before World War I differed from the postwar market in two respects. First, bonds were issued to finance specific projects: to replenish Treasury gold stocks, to finance a war, and to build a canal. Second, the requirement that national banks pledge Treasury bonds against their currency issues and public deposits led to a strong demand for Treasury bonds by national banks: 80 percent of all outstanding Treasury bonds were pledged as collateral in 1914. Statutory Control of Treasury Indebtedness mitpress/9780262016377.003.0021 At the beginning of, there were three statutory restrictions on Treasury debt management actions: a limit of $10 billion on outstanding bills and certificates of indebtedness; a limit of $7.5 billion on outstanding notes; and the authority to issue no more than $20 billion of Treasury bonds. In contrast, by mid-1939 there was only a single statutory limit of $45 billion on total outstanding indebtedness. This chapter examines why Congress gradually moved away from controlling individual categories of Treasury debt to controlling aggregate indebtedness. Coda on Treasury Debt Management during the 1920s mitpress/9780262016377.003.0015 This chapter briefly discusses three important developments in Treasury finance engineered by Treasury Secretary Mellon and his Under Secretaries, S. Parker Gilbert, Garrard Winston, and Ogden Mills, in the 1920s. First, they refinanced (with intermediate-term Page 4 of 6

notes) $2.5 billion of short-term debt that threatened to clog the Treasury market in early 1921. Second, they developed machinery appropriate for applying budget surpluses to debt reduction in an orderly fashion, redeeming three Liberty Loans between 1922 and 1928 with a thoughtfully constructed mix of early retirements, exchange offerings, cash redemptions at call or maturity, and regular quarterly refinancings. Third, they introduced Treasury bills in 1929 and, in the process, began to revive auction offerings of Treasury securities. Treasury Finance during mitpress/9780262016377.003.0016 This chapter examines the impact of on Treasury tax receipts, federal expenditure policies, and Treasury indebtedness. The discussions cover Britain s departure from the gold standard and the Revenue Act of 1932; revenue acts during the New Deal; Treasury expenditures during the Great Contraction; the birth of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC); the banking crisis of 1933 and the role of the RFC in reopening the banks; and Treasury expenditures during the New Deal. Coda on Treasury Debt Management during the Great Depression mitpress/9780262016377.003.0023 This chapter discusses Treasury debt management during the Great Depression. The most important development in Treasury debt management was the introduction of regular and predictable auctions of thirteen-week Treasury bills. These would serve as a model for the regular and predictable note and bond auctions that came to Page 5 of 6

characterize Treasury debt management in the last quarter of the twentieth century. Page 6 of 6