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<div id="title-bar"><h2>Social Security History</h2></div>
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<div class="archive"><div class="content-wrapper pad-left no-top-padding no-bottom-padding">This is an archival or historical document and may not reflect current policies or procedures.</div></div>
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<h3>CONGRESSIONAL TESTIMONY ON THE TOWNSEND PLAN</h3>
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<p align=center><b>January-February 1935</b></p>
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<p><i>(There were, in the opinion of most mainstream economists,
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major conceptual problems with the Townsend Plan. There were also
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daunting practical problems inherent in the scheme. These selected
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quotations from early hearings on the Townsend Plan hit upon some
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of these practical and conceptual problems. These short excerpts
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highlight some of the more "controversial" issues in the
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early debate. These excerpts are very short selections from extensive
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hearing transcripts.)</i></p>
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<br>
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<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%">
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<p><H2 ALIGN="CENTER">HOUSE HEARINGS</H2>
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<P><B>[Source: Report: ECONOMIC SECURITY ACT -- Hearings before the
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Committee on Ways & Means House of Representatives. 74th Congress,
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First Session. On H.R. 4120. U.S. Government Printing Office, 1935.]</B></P>
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<P> </P>
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<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS
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COMMITTEE, February 4, 1935. Report page: 754</P>
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<P><I>(Ed. Note: Dr. Townsend defended the bill before the Committee,
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H.R. 4120, but after extended and challenging questioning, he was
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forced to admit that the bill needed some amendment.)</I></P>
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<P><U>Mr. Cooper</U>. "As the bill now stands--as it is presented
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to this committee for consideration--if you were sitting in the
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seats that we occupy, would you vote to report this bill, and then,
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as a Member of the House of Representatives, vote to pass it?"</P>
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<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "I would, with certain amendments--certain
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corrections which have necessarily been left to the Secretary of
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the Treasury and which were expected to be left to the committee
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passing upon the bill."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Cooper</U>. "You admit, then that the bill should be
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amended and changed?"</P>
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<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Certain elements in it, yes; certain
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features of it."
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<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%">
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TESTIMONY OF GLENN J. HUDSON BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE,
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February 4, 1935. Report page: 738 <p></P>
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<P><I>(Ed. Note: Mr. Hudson was a life insurance underwriter who appeared
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to testify in support of the Townsend Plan. During his testimony
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he acknowledged several shortcomings of the bill as drafted, culminating
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in the following exchange.)</I></P>
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<P><U>Mr. Hudson</U>. "Again, I state that I am not holding myself
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responsible for that bill. Of course, I think that you men have
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the power and should have, and that bill should be changed."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Cooper</U>. "I understood you to state awhile ago very
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frankly--and I think you have been frank in your responses."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Hudson</U>. "I have tried to be."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Cooper</U>. "I understood you to state awhile ago very
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frankly you think this bill is very loosely drawn."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Hudson</U>. "I restate that."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Cooper</U>. "Would it be fair to ask you this question:
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Suppose you sat in the seats that we occupy at this table. As the
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bill now stands in its present form, do you think you would be safe
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in voting to report it and support it, as a representative of the
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people?"</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Hudson</U>. "No; I do not."
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<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%"> <p></P>
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<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS
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COMMITTEE, February 12, 1935. Report page2: 1126-1127.</P>
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<P><I>(Ed. Note: The Committee challenged Dr. Townsend relentlessly
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about the practicality of his Plan, resulting in this admission.)</I></P>
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<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "It has been very obvious to all of us
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that it would be quite impossible to start pensioning all of the
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old folks who have attained the age of 60 at one particular time,
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but it is also very obvious that it will take several years even
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to register them--a good many months. Now, if we were to start at
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the age of 75, we will say, and register these old folks as rapidly
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as possible and place them upon a $200 per month basis of pensioning,
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by the time we got down to the 60-year-olds, all the way through,
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time enough would have elapsed and the new amount of money put into
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circulation would so stimulate the productive ability of America,
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that we could easily take care of these classes as they came along
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on a $200 a month basis. I think Dr. Doane's entire analysis of
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this situation goes to prove one thing. Nobody has been fool enough
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to expect that we could take 10 millions of old folk and put them
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immediately on a $200 a month basis without putting this country
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into debt considerably to carry it. There has never been any idea
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that 10 millions would be retired immediately. But we can eventually
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do it by starting at a certain age, and the productive increase
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due to this power of buying which these elderly people would have
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would unquestionably so stimulate the productivity of America that
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the taxes of 2 per cent would be ample to eventually retire them
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at that age."</P>
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<P><U>The Chairman</U>. "We are not going to prolong the hearing
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by debating the question further, but evidently you must know that
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the people who are writing these letters, inundating Congress with
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letters by the carload, must have had it sold to them on the theory
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that just as soon as this law is enacted they will immediately go
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on the pay roll. That is evidently the way they understand it, and
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you are bound to know they understand it that way."</P>
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<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "I cannot help that. We all expect to
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go on that pay roll."</P>
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<P><U>The Chairman</U>. "If they understood they were not going
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to be registered for several years and would not get on the pay
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roll immediately, the propaganda would cease at once."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Vinson</U>. "Mr. Chairman, may I ask Dr. Townsend a
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question?"</P>
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<P><U>The Chairman</U>. "Very well."</P>
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<P><U>Mr. Vinson</U>. "I heard your last statement, Doctor, and
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noted what you said about the time it would take to get all of them
|
|
listed. Do I understand that you are receding from the position
|
|
stated in this bill--and I am reading from it--and conceding that
|
|
we could not do it at this time?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "I absolutely stand for that; however,
|
|
as I stated, it is very obvious that we could not get to all of
|
|
them immediately."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Vinson</U>. "How long do you think it would take to
|
|
register all those above 60 years of age?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "It would take a good many months."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Vinson</U>. "How many months?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "It would be very difficult to estimate.
|
|
I presume it will take 2 years before we can get to all of them."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%"> <p></P>
|
|
<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. ROBERT R. DOANE BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS
|
|
COMMITTEE, February 12, 1935. Report pages: 1111-1112</P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: Mr. Doane was an independent expert on economic matters,
|
|
called by the Committee to testify about the economic principles
|
|
of the Townsend Plan. Mr. Doane was the Director of Research of
|
|
American Business Surveys.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Doane</U>. "Yes. In table V, I have given the maximum
|
|
theoretical possibilities under a 2 per cent turn-over tax, based
|
|
upon 1935 estimated collections as indicated in these previous tables,
|
|
and also an estimated annual amount based upon a 1929 basis; that
|
|
is, assuming that we get back to the 1929 levels again. I have taken
|
|
the total expected tax collections covering the same items that
|
|
I have just listed in these tables, and in column 2 I have based
|
|
the expectations if all producer and consumer expenditures were
|
|
taxed, in column 3 the expectations if all expenditures of producers
|
|
and consumers, plus governmental and institutional expenditures
|
|
were taxed; and in the last column, the total expectation if all
|
|
gross transactions and property transfers were taxed."</P>
|
|
<P>"In column 1 it would indicate, on present levels, the maximum
|
|
expected would be $4,000,000,000 if we limit it to this restricted
|
|
group as shown in table 4. If we included all possible consumer
|
|
and producer expenditures, we could expect there would be approximately
|
|
$6,000,000,000 at these levels. And in the third column, the maximum
|
|
expectation would be around 9 billion; 9.6 billion."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "That is per year?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Doane</U>. "Per year."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Lamneck</U>. "Would it be well at this point to refer
|
|
to the testimony that we received before, to show the gross revenue
|
|
of about 8 billion; is that not right?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>The Chairman</U>. "According to my recollection."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Lamneck</U>. "And you say it will be about 9 billion;
|
|
is that right?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Doane</U>. "Yes; on all transactions and transfers."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "May I ask, Doctor, are you including financial
|
|
transactions such as payment of salaries?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Doane</U>. "Yes. That is the total gross, of everything.
|
|
You understand I an not recommending that all these transactions
|
|
be taxed, I am just stating here what it would be if they were all
|
|
taxed."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%"> <p></P>
|
|
<P>TESTIMONY OF GLENN HUDSON BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE,
|
|
February 4, 1935. Report pages: 728-729</P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: Glenn Hudson was a Townsend Plan official who was
|
|
presented as one of the Plan's economic experts. In this exchange
|
|
with the Committee, Mr. Hudson tries to justify the Plan's estimates
|
|
of potential tax revenues based on assumptions about the volume
|
|
of transactions in the economy.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Knutson</U>. "In your literature the claim is made
|
|
that the total money value of all transactions in 1933 was a trillion--we
|
|
used to talk of millions when I came to Congress, then it was billions,
|
|
now it is trillions--was a trillion, two hundred million?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Yes, sir."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Knutson</U>. "The authority for that was given as the
|
|
Fifty-fifth Statistical Abstract of the United States. I sent over
|
|
to the Library of Congress Friday and got the Fifty-fifth Statistical
|
|
Abstract of the United States, and I could not find it. I wish that
|
|
your statistician would give me the page where this information
|
|
was obtained, because I am pretty busy and I would not like to go
|
|
through that book again."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hudson</U>. "I have never made such a quotation from
|
|
the Fifty-fifth."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Knutson</U>. "I did not say that you had made it. It
|
|
has been made in the literature that has been sent out and has been
|
|
sent to me."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hudson</U>. "That is probably true. It does not appear
|
|
in the Fifty-fifth Statistical Abstract. I could not find it."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%"> <p></P>
|
|
<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS
|
|
COMMITTEE, February 4, 1935. Report pages: 735-736</P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: This exchange concerns the potential impact of the
|
|
Townsend Plan's taxes on the value of the dollar.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. Dr. Townsend, I understood you to say that in
|
|
1929 the dollar turned over 132 times."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Yes, sir."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "What do you estimate would be the turn-over
|
|
under the provisions of this bill?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "It should be vastly increased."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "About how much?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Over anything we have ever known. I
|
|
do not know that there is any particular way of making a definite
|
|
estimate. I figure that under this system of taxation whereby everybody
|
|
gets his shoulder under the load, making it so light that no one
|
|
will feel it, particularly, seeing to it that a sufficient amount
|
|
of money is in circulation constantly, forced there by the strength
|
|
of the National Government, we shall be able to create a state of
|
|
business that will quadruple anything we have ever known."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "Quadruple? That is multiplied four times?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Yes, sir."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "Say, 528 times under the plan of this bill;
|
|
$1 would turn over 528 times."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Approximately."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "That is, in a year?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Yes."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "That would be 528 transactions on the average
|
|
for a dollar?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Yes, sir."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "Each transaction would bear a 2 per cent
|
|
tax. The burden of tax that each dollar would carry would be twice
|
|
528, or $10.56."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Then we will easily reduce the tax,
|
|
the rate of tax that is provided for in the bill. It can be reduced
|
|
until no one will know that he is paying a tax. It will be insignificant--a
|
|
half of 1 per cent will carry the entire pension roll, once we get
|
|
fairly going under this system."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "$10.56 burden on each dollar would deflate
|
|
the purchasing power of the dollar by how much? Have you figured
|
|
that out?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "You cannot figure it out. You cannot
|
|
possibly tell what the opposing forces of inflation are. There are
|
|
opposing forces to inflation always. One of them lies in the fact
|
|
that mass production has always a tremendous influence toward price
|
|
deflation."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Hill</U>. "If you had a velocity of turn-over of 528
|
|
times, and imposed upon that credit turn-over which ordinarily goes
|
|
along with the dollar turn-over, you would have an inflation of
|
|
the circulating currency and circulating credit that would be almost
|
|
beyond the power of the mind to grasp. Do you think there would
|
|
be any inflationary effects from that, that would tend to reduce
|
|
the purchasing power of the dollar to practically nothing?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "I do not think there would be any tendency
|
|
toward undue inflation at all for the simple reason that the entire
|
|
tendency of competition would be the reverse. If you are in business
|
|
and something happens to quadruple your volume of business, certainly
|
|
you would quadruple your volume of profits."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%">
|
|
TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE,
|
|
February 4, 1935. Report pages: 732 <p></P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: This exchange concerns potential adverse impacts
|
|
from the taxes of the Townsend Plan.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "May I speak a word in reply to that?"
|
|
"Gentlemen, think back a little bit. We had a war 20 years
|
|
ago."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Knutson</U>. "Yes."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "If an increase in price means a tax,
|
|
we paid a 100 per cent tax at that time and liked it. It was the
|
|
best period of prosperity this country ever saw."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Knutson</U>. "And what followed it?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "What followed it? Never mind what followed.
|
|
We are not going to have any such thing as that follow. We propose
|
|
a prosperity based on the turn-over of money such as we had in that
|
|
day, and we are going to keep it up."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Mr. Knutson</U>. "As I understand it, then, this is a bill
|
|
to abolish the morning after the night before, speaking in terms
|
|
of economics."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "This is going to abolish the morning
|
|
after, certainly."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER"> <p></P>
|
|
<H2 ALIGN="CENTER">SENATE HEARINGS</H2>
|
|
<P><B>[Source: Report: ECONOMIC SECURITY ACT -- Hearings before the
|
|
Committee on Finance United States Senate. 74th Congress, First
|
|
Session. On S. 1130. U.S. Government Printing Office, 1935.]</B></P>
|
|
<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE,
|
|
February 16, 1935. Report page: 1042</P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: This continues the debate started during the House
|
|
hearings about how much money in benefits the Townsend Plan might
|
|
actually pay.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U>The Chairman</U>. "Doctor, why was it that you stated before
|
|
the House Ways and Means Committee that this 2 per cent turn-over
|
|
tax would get $24,000,000,000 a year, and now you intimate to the
|
|
Committee that you will probably only receive a little over $5,000,000,000
|
|
a year? What has caused you to change your mind about that?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "I did not change my mind about that
|
|
at all. It is very obvious, Mr. Chairman, that we cannot put eight
|
|
million or seven million of old folks on the pension roll immediately,
|
|
and as a consequence of the slowness of getting them on the pension
|
|
roll, the full volume of transactions due to their spending is not
|
|
going to be felt for maybe two or three years."</P>
|
|
<P><U>The Chairman</U>. "As I understand it, then, you do think
|
|
it would raise $24,000,000,000 a year in two or three years, but
|
|
in the beginning it will probably not be over five billion?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "We probably would not be able to get
|
|
all of the people on the pension roll either."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%"> <p></P>
|
|
<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE,
|
|
February 16, 1935. Report page: 1024</P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: This exchange concerns one of the key flaws in the
|
|
Townsend Plan, i.e., how to determine that the pensioner has in
|
|
fact spent the monthly allotment in the month received.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U> </U></P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "How are you going to determine that
|
|
he has spent it for commodities at the end of the month?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "The banker will be in a position to
|
|
know."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "How?"</P>
|
|
<P><U> </U></P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "It will be a very difficult thing to
|
|
ascertain."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "The banker has got to be the inspector
|
|
for every one of the pensioners who has an account in his bank?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Not necessarily the banker."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "Somebody will have to do the inspecting."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "But not necessarily the banker. Everyone
|
|
who is spending the money, who is known to be the recipient of it,
|
|
is going to have neighbors immediately about him."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "So the neighbors are going to watch
|
|
him?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "The neighbors are going to watch him,
|
|
certainly."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%"> <p></P>
|
|
<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE,
|
|
February 16, 1935. Report pages: 1063-1064</P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: This exchange further probes the issue of how anyone
|
|
might be able to establish that a pensioner was in fact spending
|
|
their pension within 30 days, as the Plan required.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U> </U></P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Gerry</U>. "Your idea is the community would take
|
|
an interest in seeing that it would be spent?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "I think so."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Gerry</U>. "Did it work that way in prohibition?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "In prohibition?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Gerry</U>. "Yes."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "No. Why?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Gerry</U>. "I am asking you."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Because there was very little affect
|
|
on the part of the powers that had charge of the enforcement of
|
|
the prohibition law, to do anything with it."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "There was also a laxity on the part
|
|
of people in the community to keep the enforcement officers informed,
|
|
to the extent that they did not want to be snooping around among
|
|
their neighbors to find out whether or not there was a violation.
|
|
Your bill set up an official snooping committee in each precinct
|
|
in the United States to watch over the expenditure of this money,
|
|
and follow it out to the ultimate results."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "I cannot see that there would be any
|
|
snooping necessary."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "What would the committee that you
|
|
set up in the bill be required to do?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "To receive complaints."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "To receive complaints from whom?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "From those who thought the law was being
|
|
violated."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "There would be a committee set up
|
|
in each voting precinct to receive complaints from the neighbors
|
|
who thought that one of their next door neighbors were spending
|
|
some of the $200, or $400, or $600, if there happened to be three
|
|
of them who were 60 years old living in the same household, in a
|
|
way that they did not approve of?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "There would have to be some sort of
|
|
committee until the people became accustomed to the new regime,
|
|
the new system."
|
|
<HR ALIGN="CENTER" WIDTH="40%"> <p></P>
|
|
<P>TESTIMONY OF DR. F. E. TOWNSEND BEFORE THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE,
|
|
February 16, 1935. Report page: 1028</P>
|
|
<P><I>(Ed. Note: Since the Townsend Plan proposed a tax on all transactions,
|
|
it would be necessary, as this dialog points out, to monitor the
|
|
transactions of all self-employed persons, such as farmers.)</I></P>
|
|
<P><U> </U></P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "Your plan contemplates that the Secretary
|
|
of the Treasury shall issue a license to every farmer in the nation
|
|
for which he might pay whatever fee is fixed, and unless he so registers
|
|
and is licensed he cannot sell what he has produced?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "We propose to have some measure such
|
|
as that set up."</P>
|
|
<P><U>Senator Barkley</U>. "That is true, though, that is a fact?"</P>
|
|
<P><U>Dr. Townsend</U>. "Yes, that is true."</P></P></P></P></P></P></P></P></P></P></P></p></p>
|
|
|
|
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