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Government Finance on the Eve of the Civil War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2011
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Financially, the Federal Government was more poorly prepared for war in the early months of 1861 than it had been since its establishment. The financial policies of the government in the period preceding the war weakened its credit; and this, along with the urgency of the conflict, was to make short-term borrowing and the printing of paper money attractive but costly wartime expedients. Although the failure to finance the war on a sound basis cannot be ascribed merely to prewar financial conditions and policies, the stage was set by them. The regression to earlier methods of war finance began even before the war.
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References
1 Dewey, Davis R., Financial History of the United States, 12th ed. (New York: Longmans, Green & Co., New York, 1934), pp. 34–59.Google Scholar
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3 Cf., Annual Report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the State of the Finances (hereinafter referred to as Treasury Report), 1867, pp. iii–iv.
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5 Average annual expenditures, 1857–61, were $68.1 million, compared with expenditures of $69.6 million in 1856. Treasury Report, 1946, pp. 367, 369.
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17 Ibid., p. 8.
18 The amount sold was $7,022,000. Secretary of the Treasury to the Chairman of the Committee of Way and Means, January 18, 1861, H. Misc. Doc. No. 20, 36th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 4–5.
19 Treasury Report, 1860, p. 8.
20 Idem.
21 Under the Independent Treasury Law the Treasury acted as its own banker. It received and disbursed only specie. The Treasury and sub-treasuries were like a great money reservoir into which funds flowed from all parts of the country. The outward course of funds was directed by the appropriations and authorizations of Congress and the policies of the Secretary of the Treasury. Thus the fiscal operations of the government were a major direct influence in the money market, for currency drawn into the Treasury reduced the supply, and Treasury disbursements increased it.
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26 Ibid., December 5, 1860, p. 14.
27 12 Stat. 121 (December 17, 1860).
28 H. Misc. Doc. No. 20, 36th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 3.
29 Secretary Cobb had resigned on December 8, 1860. He was succeeded for a brief period by Philip F. Thomas. Cobb felt that his duty to the state of Georgia required his withdrawal from die Treasury Department. John Sherman, who was at that time Chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, and who was sometimes strongly partisan in his views, long afterward maintained that Cobb “had aided in every possible way to cripple the department while in charge of it.” Sherman, Recollections, I, 251.
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34 12 Stat. 129.
35 Sen. Ex. Doc. No. 2, 37th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 11.
36 12 Stat. 178.
37 Idem. Eventually, under this Act, $35,364,450 of Treasury notes were issued. Of them, $22,468,100 were redeemable in two years, and $12,896,350 were redeemable in sixty days. Many of the notes were paid out directly to creditors. Bayley, National Loans, pp. 76–77; and Knox, United States Notes, p. 79.
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43 12 Stat. 259.
44 It has been well established that the use of special inducements in government borrowing has frequently been detrimental to the public credit and to the national economy and has been at the root of many subsequent problems of government finance. For a definitive study of this aspect of public finance, see Love, Robert A., Federal Financing (New York: Columbia University Press, 1931).Google Scholar
45 Between 1837 and 1847 there were numerous instances in which one- and two-year note issues were authorized by Congress. See Bayley, National Loans, pp. 67–75.
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