OVERSEA FUNDS
RESERVE BANK SURVEY SHRINKAGE IN TRADE BALANCE. ABNORMAL OUTFLOW OF CAPITAL. (By Telegraph Press Association.) WELLINGTON. This Day. "hi view of the relationship between internal credit expansion and the demand for overseas funds, the connection between the total increase of more than £ 14,000,000 in the accommodation granted by the Reserve Bank to the Government and the loss of overseas funds which occurred during the year is significant.” stales the annual report of the directors of the Reserve Bank for the year ended March 31, 1939. Dealing with the overseas funds of both the Reserve Bank and the trading banks, the report stales that the combined net overseas assets of the whole banking system in respect of New Zealand business declined by £17,293.000 New Zealand currency during the year.
The report states that the introduction of exchange control directly concerned the bank, .first by the suspension of the obligation to redeem notes in sterling and secondly by the bank’s statutory duty to regulate and control the transfer of moneys to or from New Zealand and the disposal of moneys that are derived from the sale of any New Zealand products and for the lime being are held overseas. In operating the permit system for transfers, the bank had been guided by the assurance of the Minister of Finance that one of the objects of exchange control was to enable overseas debt, whether Government, local body, or private, to be met on the due date. “It is estimated." the report adds, “that the normal requirements for Government and local body debt service overseas and for the net adverse balance of other financial transactions, including travellers’ requirements, amount to nearly £12,000,00(1 New Zealand currency annually. As revealed by the external trade statistics. however, the surplus of exports over imports for the year had fallen to £3.459.000 only. Moreover, owing to the state of the market for New Zealand local body loans in London, it became necessary to repay several of those sterling loans which fell due during the year. Thus, while the decline in the favourable balance of external trade appears to have accounted for about one-half of the shrinkage in the net overseas funds, it is evident that there was an abnormal net outflow of capital after allowing for the local body debt repayments.”
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 22 July 1939, Page 7
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384OVERSEA FUNDS Wairarapa Times-Age, 22 July 1939, Page 7
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