Word: fiscales
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...adjusted compensation certificate [$275] . . . Why have you not had the honesty to conscript the massed and hoarded money of the country and put it to work?" He killed himself with gas. Amid such circumstances the U. S. Government last week closed its 1933 ledger. It began a new fiscal year in which President Roosevelt was determined to break the Treasury jinx of a fantastically unbalanced budget even if he also broke hearts & homes. A balanced budget, he thought, will break fewer hearts than have been broken by the unbalanced budget of the last three years. Franklin Roosevelt entered the White...
...borrowing, will include: $3,300,000,000 for public works; $500,000,000 for direct jobless relief, $400,000,000 to start the bank deposit guarantee fund. Domestic Allotment farm relief, home and farm mortgage relief, etc. Special taxes have been segregated to service this special budget. ¶ During fiscal 1933 the Public Debt increased $3,051,000,000 to $22,539,000,000 -high point since 1922. The incease in the Public Debt was caused by the deficit plus $1,258,000,000 advanced by the Treasury to Reconstruction Finance Corp. When Franklin Roosevelt promised in the campaign...
...position was promptly stated in a Conference memorandum which declared that "undue emphasis has been placed upon . . . temporary de facto stabilization," and proceeded to promise "[U. S.] support of measures for the establishment of a coordinated monetary and fiscal policy to be pursued by the various nations in co-operation with the others for the purpose of stimulating economic activity and improving prices...
...Little Setback." To digest the U. S. fiscal and tariff policies stated by Messrs. Cox and Hull several Continental delegates, notably M. Bonnet, flew home to their capitals. Meanwhile the dollar lost some four cents more of its value, dropped to the equivalent of 77? gold. Rumors that this decline might jar loose the stabilized franc, plus London comment that the U. S. tariff proposals offered little more than pious hopes, plunged Conference journalists into such gloom that Prime Minister MacDonald decided to go among them radiating Scotch cheer...
...Fiscal experts of the U. S. delegation ventured a plan for temporary stabilization of the dollar, withdrew it; and the Press reported that. C. U. S. Delegate Morrison had never heard of famed Czechoslovakian Foreign Minister Benes; and the Press reported that...