INTERNATIONAL PAYMENTS 213
We may turn for a moment to another and different case, that
of the United States after the establishment of the Federal Reserve
System.
The features in this system which are important for our purpose
are the attenuation of reserves in the ordinary commercial banks;
the accumulation of a great reserve of gold in the Federal Reserve
Banks; and very flexible conditions for the issue of notes. The
credit and money mechanism, one might imagine, thereby was
made more sensitive, since the banks as a whole operated with less
cash in hand. Yet in fact it was made less so because of the enor-
mous store of gold concentrated in the Reserve Banks and the
wide flexibility of note issue.
The law, as is well known (I assume the reader to be familiar
with its main features), prescribes a minimum of 35 per cent
against the deposits of the Reserve Banks, 40 per cent against the
notes. But it was expected, when the system was established, that
substantially more than the minimum would normally be kept —
perhaps 50 per cent — at all events some very conservative and
amply adequate proportion. While the proportion actually held
during the war and for a short period after its close was not
greatly above the required minimum, the unexampled post-war
conditions soon brought into the United States such an influx of
specie that the gold holdings of the Reserve System came to con-
stitute a formidable problem, not because they were unduly small,
but because they were quite needlessly large.
The point important for the present purpose is that the system
was designed to regulate in some deliberate and systematic way the
international gold flow and the effects of that flow on domestic
trade and domestic prices. The system was expected to protect
the country’s financial and industrial structure against the impact
of international gold movements, while yet it left the situation
potentially sensitive, the degree of sensitiveness depending on the
principles and policy of the governing official bodies. A great
reserve in the Federal Banks obviously can serve as a buffer against
external strain. Pressure from an inflowing gold supply may be
easily absorbed by it: the Federal Banks can prevent the pressure