Foreign Aid Appropriations for 1951: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, Eighty-first Congress, Second Session |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 66
Page 5
... steel was the Ruhr . But when you have trade barriers among all these nations it tends to force up the price of steel , because they make steel only for a relatively small market . And that applies to everything else . The nations were ...
... steel was the Ruhr . But when you have trade barriers among all these nations it tends to force up the price of steel , because they make steel only for a relatively small market . And that applies to everything else . The nations were ...
Page 7
... steel plants are going to be taken into that territory . Mr. HOFFMAN . That is right . Mr. TABER . I do not know what those people are going to do or how they are going to live . You have got to take that into consider- ation and work ...
... steel plants are going to be taken into that territory . Mr. HOFFMAN . That is right . Mr. TABER . I do not know what those people are going to do or how they are going to live . You have got to take that into consider- ation and work ...
Page 8
... steel . Much of Germany's steel production was built up regardless of the fact that it was totally uneconomic . The Hermann Goering plant could not possibly operate in competi- tion with any other , because the cost of producing steel ...
... steel . Much of Germany's steel production was built up regardless of the fact that it was totally uneconomic . The Hermann Goering plant could not possibly operate in competi- tion with any other , because the cost of producing steel ...
Page 13
... steel that gives her a surplus beyond her domestic needs . Greece needs steel in order to rebuild some bridges or perhaps to get their railroads into operation , or for one of a dozen different reasons . If we supplied the steel to ...
... steel that gives her a surplus beyond her domestic needs . Greece needs steel in order to rebuild some bridges or perhaps to get their railroads into operation , or for one of a dozen different reasons . If we supplied the steel to ...
Page 15
... steel in the United States at a time when the steel could have been produced in Europe . Obviously , this would have increased the cost of the recovery program . The only other course that the Greeks and Norwegians might have followed ...
... steel in the United States at a time when the steel could have been produced in Europe . Obviously , this would have increased the cost of the recovery program . The only other course that the Greeks and Norwegians might have followed ...
Common terms and phrases
activities administrative agricultural products American amount appropriation Army Austria balance of payments Belgium BISSELL British budget BYROADE capital coal commodities CONGRESS cost counterpart funds currencies deficit Denmark Department deutschemarks dollar area DRUMMOND economic employees equipment ERP aid estimated Europe European expenditures exports figure financed fiscal year 1951 FITZGERALD food and agricultural foreign FOSTER France French GARIOA GARVIN GARY Germany gold and dollars Government Greece HANES HOFFMAN included increase industrial imports information program investment Italy Japan Japanese JEFFERS June 30 KENNEY Marshall plan McCLOY ment military million dollars mission months Netherlands OEEC Office operations over-all overseas territories participating countries payments union percent personnel PORTER prewar projects raw materials recovery requested ROONEY Ryukyu Islands Ryukyus set-up shipments situation steel supplies surplus TABER ticipat tion tons Total imports trade Trieste United Kingdom VOORHEES western WIGGLESWORTH WOLFE ZELLERBACH
Popular passages
Page 532 - Ryukyus for the movement of supplies donated to or purchased by, United States voluntary non-profit relief agencies registered with and recommended by the Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign Aid or of relief packages consigned to individuals residing in such areas ; Provided further.
Page 532 - ... without reimbursement and without regard to the appropriation from which procured, such property as the Director of the Bureau of the Budget shall determine to relate primarily to any function or functions so transferred...
Page 31 - States and particularly to small independent enterprises, information, as far in advance as possible, with respect to purchases proposed to be financed with such funds, (2) by causing to be made available to prospective purchasers in the nations receiving assistance under this Act information as to commodities and services produced by small independent enterprises in the United States...
Page 31 - The Secretary of Defense shall assure that there is made available to suppliers in the United States, and particularly to small independent enterprises, information with respect to purchases made by the Department of Defense pursuant to part II, such information to be furnished as far in advance as possible.
Page 530 - ... such minimum supplies for the civilian populations of such areas as may be essential to prevent starvation, disease, or unrest, prejudicial to the objectives sought to be accomplished; and such supplies, commodities, and equipment as may be essential to carry out the purposes of this appropriation...
Page 31 - Act — (1) by causing to be made available to suppliers in the United States and particularly to small independent enterprises, information, as far in advance as possible, with respect to purchases proposed to be financed with such funds.
Page 356 - The information requested was not supplied at the time of printing and may be found in the appendix appearing at the end of the printed hearing.
Page 554 - What has been accomplished in other occupied areas, at substantially greater cost, was because of an earlier large direct outlay plus billions of dollars of aid in contiguous trading areas which contributed to the recovery of Germany, and multiplied the effectiveness of our direct aid to Germany. Germany was integrated into the European recovery program. This has not been true in the Far East. A growing market was created for German production while Japan continues to exist in an area of political...
Page 14 - This new payments union will be an improvement over the old intra-European payments plan in two important respects. The first is that it will permit trade to be conducted within Europe on a truly multilateral basis. The payments union will be, in effect, a clearinghouse of which all the central banks of the participating countries will be members and through which they will be able to settle their accounts with one another. Even at the present time, individual private transactions between the citizens...
Page 201 - Bouches du Rhone Department with the help of the Ministry of Agriculture and thanks to the generous aid of ERP funds by the United States of America.