214 INTERNATIONAL TRADE from being transmitted to the ordinary banks and the general trade of the country. Conversely, an outflow may simply diminish the store held by them, again leaving the country at large undis- turbed. And yet everything depends on the way in which the enormous store is handled. The system may be so administered as to render banking operations, credit adjustments, the trend of prices, closely dependent on the volume and the movement of the central reserve, and thereby on the imports and exports of specie; or it may make the dependence remote and uncertain. At the time of the adoption of the system something like the European practice of pre-war days was probably contemplated : a normal reserve well above the minimum ; not much attention to minor movements of the reserve, whether up or down, and these not allowed to impinge on the general credit structure; none the less, defense of the reserve, thru discount rates, whenever considerable and continuing drains set in; and, conversely, ready release from the reserve for seasonal or temporary remittances, indeed for very considerable outflow when the remittances swelled to dimensions much above the normal. But the establishment of any settled policy, the development of any traditions, was impossible either during the Great War or in the years immediately succeeding. I shall point out in a subsequent chapter! how anomalous was the character of the international trade of the United States during and after the war, and how different were the occurrences from anything contemplated in the theoretic analysis of the ordinary or “normal” conditions. It isenough here to note that the Federal Reserve System was designed to have a smoothed and moderated sensitiveness; one in which the movements of gold from country to country would be made smoother and less abrupt than in earlier days, and subject to some deliberate and methodical regulation ; yet not in the end with effects different from those contemplated in pre-war theory and practice. It would seem probable that in time — when the far-ramifying disturbances of the war are at last effaced — some such situation will emerge. But it would now (1926) be quite rash to predict. 1 Chapter 25, pp. 307-334.