Ill
THE TREASURY
Short-term borrowing is an accredited expedient
of war financing. The Treasury must be put in
ready command of large funds immediately upon
the declaration of hostilities; and for the consid
erable time elapsing before sources of extraordi
nary revenue — war taxes and funded loans — be
come productive there is likely to be need of an
ticipatory borrowing. The excesses to be avoided
are (i) undue reliance upon temporary loans in
lieu of definitive revenue, with the possibility of em
barrassing refunding operations at perhaps critical
intervals; and (2) entry upon a policy of short
term borrowing with insufficient banking machin
ery, with the danger of descent to bills of credit
and fiat notes. These conclusions may fairly be de
scribed as in conformity with accepted fiscal theory
and as realized in familiar fiscal practice.
As employed by the United States in the present
war, short-term obligations in the form of certifi
cates of indebtedness have served a larger purpose.
They have indeed been used in the traditional way,
at the outset and to a very limited extent, to bridge
over the initial interval until war loans and war
taxes should become productive. But much beyond
this, certificates of indebtedness have been continu-
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