Señor Hurtado to Mr. Blaine.

Sir: I beg leave to offer some observations on the report of Hon. William F. Wharton, Acting Secretary of State (vide Ex. Doc. No. 68, Fifty-second Congress, first session), to whom was referred the resolution of the Senate of the 21st of March last, wherein the President was [Page 467] requested, if not incompatible with public interests, to communicate to the Senate the items of taxation under the laws of Colombia upon which he had found and proclaimed that the tariff laws of Colombia are reciprocally unequal to the United States.

I am aware that, although documents such as the report above alluded to are often printed and freely circulated, they are, nevertheless, of a private character and not subject to be commented upon outside of Congress, to whom they are addressed. Nor do I intend to transgress this rule. The remarks which I have the honor to submit to you have reference merely to matters of fact, and I venture to present them, by way of information only, with the hope that they may be conducive to a satisfactory issue in the important question connected with the matter of the report.

For the sake of clearness in the course of these remarks I shall confine myself in the body of this note to the mere statement of facts; the demonstration of which will be found in the accompanying memoranda to which I shall refer, as occasion may require.

The report states:

It will further be seen that of the total importation in 1891, of the products * * * of the United States imported into Colombia, it may be safely estimated, that at least 80 per cent were charged with duties.

It is difficult to estimate the exact proportion of American goods that enter free into Colombia; but those exported to the free ports of Panama and Colon from New York and San Francisco alone, constituted in 1891, 28 per cent of the total imports from the United States into Colombia. If to that proportion of free imports were added the quota due to exportations to the Isthmus from Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and New Orleans, and if goods, on the free list, shipped from the United States to the custom-house ports were also taken into account, this proportion, viz, 28 per cent would be considerably increased.

The estimate 20 per cent laid down in the report, is evidently much too low (vide memoranda, Sec. I).

The report of Acting Secretary Wharton, further says:

In the province comprising the Isthmus of Panama, a more liberal tariff with a much larger free list than that of the general tariff is in force; but as the statistics are not separable, the exact amount of our export trade with the Isthmus, can not be ascertained. This condition has existed for many years past.

The ports of the Isthmus of Panama were made free ports in 1856 and so continued to be until 1891, when a few articles were subjected to import duties. Among these, the only American imports on which the tax falls, are salt beef and pork which pay 1½ cents per pound; whisky and bitters paying 3 cents per pound. All other American imports are free (vide memoranda, Sec. ii).

The report farther states:

The statistics hereto appended show that as a consequence, in a great measure, of these tariffs, the balance of trade is now and for some years past has been largely against the United States. For instance, for the year ending June 30, 1891 * * * while imports from Colombia aggregated $4,765,354 our exports thereto were $3,182,644.

It is submitted that if the high duties imposed by the Colombian tariff make the balance of trade with the United States to be in favor of Colombia, as stated in the report, then the same result should follow respecting the trade of other nations with Colombia; for the tariff contains no discriminations. Its provisions are one and the same for all nations. But the balance of trade between Colombia and foreign countries is in every case against Colombia, the trade with the [Page 468] United States included; and, contrary to the statement contained in the report, has been so for several years past. (Y. Mem., Sec.—.) If any conclusion can be drawn from the premises laid down in the report, it would follow that the tariff of Colombia, far from being high, requires to be increased for the protection and equalization of the commerce of that country.

The sum stated in the report as the amount of imports from Colombia for the year ending with June, 1891, viz, $4,765,354, is much in excess of the correct value of the imports. This arises from the erroneous valuation put upon the Colombian peso (in which the invoice accompanying each importation is framed) at the time of converting the footing of the invoice into United States currency.

The error alluded to consists in the assumption at the U. S. customhouses that the said invoices are made out in standard silver pesos of Colombia, a coin no longer in existence or used in account; whereas the invoices are made out in irredeemable paper pesos (the currency of the country since 1886), the value of which is, and has been for some time past, $0.50 United States gold (Y. Mem., Sec. iii). Making the proper corrections the amount $4,765,354, given by the custom-houses of the United States as the value of the imports from Colombia in 1891, will be reduced to $3,035,532, which is less by $147,112 than the value of the exports from the United States (Y. Mem., S. iii).

Appended to the report (p. 5 of the printed document) is a table purporting to show the duties levied in Colombia on the chief articles of export from the United States.

These duties expressed in United States currency are much in excess of those actually imposed by the Colombian tariff, and there is not a single case in which the excess is less than from 40 to 50 per cent above the actual duty. In many instances it is considerably greater, for instance:

On plows and machinery for agriculture the duty is made to appear in excess of the tariff duty by 200 per cent.

On chemicals, the duty laid down in the table on saltpeter, stearic and sulphuric acids, is in excess of the tariff duty 800 per cent, while on soda salts, caustic soda, and potassa subcarbonates, etc., the excess amounts to 1,650 per cent.

On iron building materials, galvanized iron for roofs, ditto doors and windows, railings, nails, tacks, saws, and tools generally, the excess given by the table over the tariff duty is 500 per cent.

These are not the only cases of similar exaggerations occurring in the table, which makes no allusion whatsoever to articles on the free list.

Among the last items found in the table under examination appears the following: “Vessels sold to foreigners, per pound, $0,003.”

There is no duty on vessels excepting such as are intended for fluvial navigation on the waters of the Republic; and, as a rule, these are invariably exempted from the tax under special concessions by way of encouragement to such undertakings. At all events, no discrimination is made respecting the duty on this or any other article in Colombia bearing on the nationality of the owner or importer.

At the foot of the table is found the following note:

The duties above stated do not include port and other charges, being only the import duties levied by the National Government.

Port dues and other charges are no doubt a proper subject for consideration when the commercial relations between two countries are being examined under an economic point of view. In this connection [Page 469] it would have been advantageous to Colombia, the object of the examination being had in view, had the report stated that practically the port dues and other charges on vessels entering and leaving Colombian ports are nominal—a condition so liberal that I believe finds no parallel in any other country. The total movement of incoming tonnage in the ports of Colombia during the year 1889 amounted to over 1,600,000 registered tons. The sums collected thereon for port, light, and other charges aggregated 14,219 pesos, equivalent to $7,110 United States currency, or say about $4.45 per vessel of 1,000 tons register. The larger part of this small charge was for light dues.

I have, etc.,

J. M. Hurtado.

Memoranda accompanying Mr. Hurtado’s note of May 11, 1892, to the honorable the Secretary of State.

I.

The shipments of merchandise from the United States to the free ports of the Isthmus of Panama during the year ending June 30, 1891, as far as can be ascertained, were as follows:

(a) From New York to Colon $1,059,181
(b) Coal 103,745
(b) Lumber 21,344
(c) From San Francisco to Panama 98,542
(b) To Bocas del Toro direct 37,904
(d) From Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and New Orleans
Total 1,320,716

The above sum of $1,320,716 constitutes 28 per cent of the total exports of the United States to Colombia for the year 1891. This proportion would be increased if the value of shipments from Boston, Philadelphia, etc., to the free ports were taken into account. It is therefore shown that the importations free of duty into the isthmus alone, without taking into consideration the goods admitted free through the custom-house ports of Colombia, are of themselves sufficient to considerably reduce the percentage of United States products stated in the report to be charged with duty upon entering into Colombia.

II.

See Consul Sims’ report (Consular Report No. 126, for March 1891, pp. 453, 454) as to articles made dutiable on being landed at the port of Colon. The duties are wrongly estimated. For instance, the duty on salt beef and pork is 5 cents (Colombian currency) per kilogram (21/5 pounds.) Consul Sims gives the duty at 5 cents (United States currency?) per pound. The exact duty in United States currency is 1⅔ cents per pound.

III.

The invoices accompanying shipments of merchandise from foreign countries to the United States required to be presented at, the custom-house of the port of landing are necessarily made out in the money of the country whence the exportation takes place. Such is the case with all shipments from Colombia, and the said invoices are made out in Colombian money, which, since 1886, consists of an irredeemable paper currency of considerable less value than the standard silver peso. The peso; which was established in 1848, as the legal-tender unit of value, contained 25 [Page 470] grams weight of silver alloy 960–1,000 fine, has long ago ceased to exist in circulation or to he used in account. In Colombia all transactions have been carried on, since 1886, in paper currency, which is legal tender for any amount and invoices like all other statements, respecting money matters, refer to that currency.

The invoices alluded to can not therefore be correctly dealt with after the manner from time to time proclaimed by the Treasury Department, for estimating the value of the respective imports in United States money of account, viz, the gold dollar. This system assumes, that the foreign money of account is represented by a gold or silver unit, the intrinsical value of which has been previously ascertained by the U. S. mint and its relation to United States money determined. When, as in the case of Colombia, the foreign money has only a fiduciary value, it becomes necessary to find out, by other means, what that value may be and there is no other or better method to reach this result than by taking the equivalent exchange as the expression of that value.

(a) Reported by Consul-General Calderon.

(b) Report of the inspector of the port of Colon. These shipments refer to the calendar year 1891.

(c) U. S. Bureau of Statistics.

(d) Not known.

The rate of exchange between Colombia and the United States has fluctuated within very narrow limits and 100 per cent premium represents a fair average, that is to say, Colombian pesos 200 equal to 100 United States gold, or pesos 1=50 cents, United States currency. This has been the ratio adopted by the Minister of Finance at Bogota to compare the aggregate of imports into, and exports from, Colombia. (V. report to Congress of 1890. Also Minister Abbott in consular report No. 109).

At page 6 of the printed report is found a table of exports from the United States to Colombia and imports from Colombia to the United States between the years 1876 and 1891, inclusive.

Taking the last six years, during which paper currency has been the legal tender in Colombia, viz, from 1886 to 1891, it will be found that exports from the United States aggregate $26,208,767 and imports $23,957,258.

But this last sum embodies an error arising from the rates at which the peso in the custom-house invoices has been converted into United States gold.

The values of the Colombian silver peso proclaimed by the Treasury Department on the 1st of January, 1886 to 1891, have been, respectively, as follows: $0,771, $0,727, $0,699, $0,680, $0,698, $0.771, which gives an average of $0,721.

Now, between this average, $0,721, and the exchange rate, $0,500, there is a difference of $0,221, which represents the excess of the value given to imports over their real value, or say 30 6 per cent.

Deducting therefore from $23,957,258, 30 per cent ($7,187,177), the real value of imports ($16,770,081) would be obtained.

But this last amount also contains an error, owing to the fact that in the departments of Santander and Panama the Government paper money is not current. There is in these parts of the Republic a money of account, consisting of a peso 835/1000 which only exists in its subdivisions, viz, halves, fifths, and tenths of the dollar. These are the remains of the former silver currency, the fractional parts of which were coined of the above stated fineness, following the measure adopted by the Latin Union in 1866, in order to impart toughness and give durability to fractional coins, by introducing a larger proportion of copper in the alloy.

The coin, 0 835 fine, or fractional peso, is intrinsically worth 7 2 per cent less than the standard hard silver peso, 0 900 fine; and where the latter has been estimated as in the average above established at $0.721, the U. S. mint process would have valued the fractional peso at $0.6691, United States currency.

The exchange between both Cucuta and Colon with the United States, is, as quoted in these remarks, 50 per cent premium, say 150 pesos=$100 United States currency, equivalent to peso 1=$0.6666. Practically the same value given above.

Minister Abbott has made the reduction into United States currency of the exports of Colombia for 1888, in a manner similar to that followed in the present case (Vide-Consular Reports, No. 109, p. 356), but has neglected to take into account the differences of value between the hard and fractional peso.

Minister Abbott finds from official data that, of the exports through the customhouse of Cucuta, two-thirds valued for 1888 at pesos 976,678 was reported in pesos, and the remaining one-third in paper. Assuming that this valuation followed the goods to destination, and furthermore that all goods so priced were exported to the United States, it will be found that the correction to introduce in the aggregate exports to this country, above computed at $16,770,081, is to add one-sixth of the value of the merchandise exported through Cucuta. The same course should be followed respecting imports from the isthmus.

Estimating the two-thirds of Cucuta exports at 1,000,000 pesos yearly, and the exports from the department of Panama at 750,000 pesos (See Report of the inspector of the port of Colon), of which say two-thirds come to this country; the amount on which the correction would fall would be pesos 1,500,000 yearly, or pesos 9,000,000 for six years, the sixth part of which amounts to 1,500,000 which is to be added to the aggregate imports as above estimated from 1886 to 1891, making a total of 18,270,031 as the correct value of imports from Colombia to the United States.

[Page 471]

recapitulating.

Imports estimated by the U. S. custom-house on the basis of hard silver peso from 1886 to 1891 $23,957,258
Less 30 per cent for reduction to paper currency basis 7,187,177
Corrected imports 16,770,081
Two-thirds exports, Cucuta $1,000,000
Two-thirds exports, Panama 500,000
Yearly 1,500,000
For six years 9,000,000
One sixth to be added 1,500,000
18,270,081
Balance of trade 7,938,686
Exports from the United States 26,208,767
Average yearly balance of trade in favor of the United States 1,323,114

IV

When the duty on an article in the Colombian tariff is 1 cent of peso, the duty on same per pound avoirdupois in United States currency will be:

Pounds avoirdupois, 2.205 = 1 kilogram.
Kilograms, 1 = 1 cent peso.
Cents peso, 2 = 1 cent United States currency.

Hence, 1,000 × 1 × 1/2,205 × 1 × 2 =0.227 cents United States currency, or $0.00227 duty per pound avoirdupois.

The table appended to report, p. 5, states:

Agricultural implements:
Duty in United States currency per pound, according to report $0.0170
According to tariff:
Plows and agricultural machinery 2½ cents (duty per pound, 2½ by $0.00227) 0.0057
Excess $0.0113
Equivalent to 200 per cent over and above the tariff duty.
The table states:
Chemicals, drugs, etc.:
Duty in United States currency per pound $0.100
According to tariff:
Duty on saltpeter, stearic, and sulphuric acids, 5 cents Colombian peso per kilogram; per pound, 5 by $0.00227 0.011
Excess 0.089
Equivalent to 800 per cent over and above the tariff duty.
Chemicals, drugs, etc.:
Duty in United States currency per pound $0.100
According to tariff:
Duty on soda salts, caustic soda, and potassa, subcarbonates, etc., 2½ cents per pound, 2½ by $0.00227 0.0057
Excess 0.0943
Equivalent to 1.655 per cent over and above the actual duty.
Iron and steel (manufactures of)—
Under this head the table omits to mention the numerous articles of this class on the free list, and puts the lowest duty at, per pound $0.067
According to tariff—
Galvanized iron for roofs, iron buildings, nails and tack, hinges, saws, and tools generally, duty 05 Colombian peso per pound, 5 by 0.00227 0.011
Excess 0.056
Equivalent to 500 per cent over and above the tariff duty.