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Ein Geleitzug |
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HISTORICAL US EXPORTS IN "THE LETTERSTIME PERIOD"In the decades before WWI, the US was a net debtor nation. That is, imports consistently exceeded the value of exports with the difference being funded by debt instruments in the hands of foreign banks and nations. Britain held the greatest share of the outstanding US bonds and other debt instruments and their retirement enabled the Asquith government to stay out of the bond markets themselves for almost the entire first year of the war (See "Finances of Empire" on the Letterstime Site, Ein Geleitzug section). The US exports appear to have been dominated by commodities such as cotton, lumber, metals, and foodstuffs. Most of the finished goods that the US did export seemed to have gone to the nations in South America, who were themselves selling foodstuffs and other commodities to European markets to get the hard currency they used to buy US finished goods. Thus, the South American nations were competing with the US in commodity exporting but used some of that revenue to buy US finished goods that the US could not sell to Europe (for example, agricultural hardware). The outbreak of war in August 1914 almost instantaneously altered the import-export balance of trade of the US just as it did the Belligerents. Essentially, all the exports of all the Belligerents dropped dramatically and their imports increased as much as access to external sources allowed. This caused increases in some US export commodities and the loss of traditional markets for certain other commodities. On an absolute scale, US export growth far exceeded export loss, as exemplified by the huge drop in cotton exports being overwhelmed by the massive increase in foodstuff exports. Armies consume far more food and forage in war than the same numbers of men and draft animals do in peace, yet at the same time the resources they represent in horses, men, and land are taken out of production. A farmer in a trench can not plow a battlefield with his rifle. First, a look at the overall by month:
----------------------- Exports --------------- Imports ----------------- Export Surplus September -----156,052,333 ------------139,710,611--------------16,341,722 November-------205,878,333 ------------126,467,062------------- 79,411,271 December ------245,632,558 ------------114,656,645 ------------130,976,013 January----------267,879,313 ------------122,372,317-------------145,506,996 February --------299,805,869-------------125,123,391-------------174,682,478 March ------------299,009,563-------------158,040,716-------------140,969,347 April --------------294,470,109-------------160,576,106-------------133,894,093 May---------------273,768,093-------------142,284,851--------------131,483,242 June--------------268,601,599-------------157,746,140--------------110,855,459 As can be plainly seen, the US attained and maintained a balance of trade surplus in excess of $100 M per month! The next step is to examine the export commodities by class.
------------------------Nine Months --------------------Nine Months---------------Increase Group 1 -------------$6,283,953 -------------------- $34,421,595 ------------
$28,137,642 Group 2 ------------ 16,291,624 --------------------- 62,360,423 --------------
46,068,799 Group 3 ------------- 25,856,921--------------------147,702,807-------------
121,845,886 Group 4 -------------- 5,293,155 -------------------- 35,239,110 --------------
29,945,955 Group 5 ------------ 20,599,959 ------------------- 60,150,388 ---------------
47,550,429 Group 6 ----------- 218,390,743 ----------------- 627,417,302 -------------
409,026,359 Group 7 ------------ 10,419,041 ------------------- 70,640,989 ---------------
60,221,948 Groups 1 - 7 ----- 303,035,596 --------------- 1,045,932,614 -------------
742,897,018
Total Exports -- 1,832,290,639 -------------- 2,192,875,493 ------------ 360,584,854
- horses (250,000 versus 18,000 in same period a year earlier)
- breadstuffs ($431 M versus $107 M)
- Cotton [$216 M] Not only were the Central Powers lost as markets for US exporters of cotton and copper, but many South American countries had used sales to the Central Powers to generate the hard currency they used to buy US products. That seems to be why steel, agricultural implements, and machinery fell so much. Imports from Germany up to March 1, 1915 (before the Order in Council) were $76 M, down from $127 M for the same eight month period a year earlier. Still ~60%, but would quickly fall off after March 1915, dropping to a British estimate of just 8% by September 1915. One thing that should not be missed in the above data is that the US was now selling significant (and increasing) quantities of finished goods to Europe. Cars, trucks, airplanes, munitions, saddles, boots, wagons, horseshoes, barbed wire, and surgical instruments are all finished goods that the US previously could not sell in bulk to European markets. The data thus demonstrates how the war greatly increased the demand even as it disrupted the factors of production in Europe. A factory worker in a trench cannot make a car with a rifle. Nonetheless, over two-thirds of the export increases were in commodities such as food, unworked leather, forage, and zinc. (Germany and Belgium were both major pre-war exporters of zinc, so zinc exports rose from $16 M to $62 M.) If the US and South American Neutrals had been able to maintain just pre-war export levels to the Central Powers, then the above table suggests that the US could have more than doubled the historical rise in exports in the first nine months of the war ($361 M actual net increase despite drops of $382 M). Almost none of the bulk exports of the US to Germany were on the pre-war list of contraband, especially not cotton, copper, and food - the largest exports by far. by Jim LETTERSTIME HOME |
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