660C.116/167

The Secretary of State to the Ambassador in Poland (Cudahy)

No. 185

Sir: Reference is made to your despatch No. 638 of March 21, 1935, transmitting the reply of the Polish Government to the representations with respect to the treatment accorded by Poland to American trade which you made on March 8, 1935, in compliance with the instructions contained in the Department’s telegram No. 10 of February 27, 1935. The Department has studied carefully this reply and the Embassy’s comments thereon and forwards herewith, for presentation at an early date to the Polish Minister for Foreign Affairs, a draft note setting forth in greater detail the position of the American Government in the premises. You should make special efforts to impress upon the Minister for Foreign Affairs the importance which the American Government attaches to this matter and its earnest desire to generalize fully to Poland all concessions made in reciprocal trade agreements with a view to according to Poland equality of trade opportunity and treatment, thereby affording increased markets for Polish goods in the United States. You should emphasize that this Government desires to obtain from the Polish Government an authoritative statement setting forth the precise conditions under which American goods are admitted into Poland in order that it may be in a position to determine whether Poland should be assured continued enjoyment of the benefits of reduced duties proclaimed under trade agreements.

In view of the statement contained in the first paragraph on page 7 of your despatch under reference, to the effect that the matter is being considered for the Polish Government by the Minister of Commerce and Industry and subordinate officials in his Ministry, the Department suggests that the Embassy endeavor to arrange discussions with those officials with a view to enlightening them with respect to the [Page 640] policy of the American Government and clarifying any points upon which they may not be fully informed and desire additional information. The general foreign trade policy now being pursued by this Government has been set forth at length in numerous press releases and other material which have been forwarded from time to time to the Embassy. It is believed that the Embassy can, in that manner, assist materially in bringing about a satisfactory conclusion to these discussions and the Department hopes that it will endeavor to facilitate in every appropriate manner complete understanding by the competent Polish officials of the position of this Government.

The comments of the Embassy and memoranda of conversations with Polish officials will be read with much interest in the Department.

Very truly yours,

Cordell Hull
[Enclosure]

Draft Note for the Polish Government

1. The Government of the United States has considered with the greatest care the Note Verbale of the Polish Government dated March 16, 1935, and observes with satisfaction that the Polish Government is most willing to proceed with the examination of the problems confronting commerce between the United States and Poland which was initiated by the American note of March 8.

2. The American Government desires to emphasize that the purpose of its note of March 8 was to set forth frankly the general foreign trade policy being pursued by it with a view to enlisting the sympathetic and valuable cooperation of the Polish Government in the promotion of a policy which has already won the support of many other countries. It was not the intention of that note only to point out the discriminatory features of the policy now pursued by the Polish Government towards American trade, but also to invite Poland to cooperate at once, or as soon as it is in a position to do so, with the United States and other countries in pursuit of a broad commercial policy calculated to bring about a world-wide increase in international trade. Since the American Government attaches great importance to this matter, it now proposes to set forth in greater detail the considerations which actuated it in presenting the note of March 8 in the hope that this exchange of views will remove any misunderstanding in that regard on the part of the Polish Government.

3. Equality of opportunity and treatment is the keynote of the foreign commercial policy of the Government of the United States which neither seeks nor accords preferential discriminatory treatment—it asks only that a foreign country treat American commerce no less favorably than it treats the commerce of third countries and, [Page 641] in turn, accords equality of treatment to the commerce of foreign countries. This policy is the opposite of discrimination and retaliation. It is a policy of respectful and friendly approach to all countries to cooperate in establishing equality of trade opportunity and treatment throughout the world. This policy reinforces and implements the unconditional most-favored-nation principle, which is the most effective means of bringing about rapidly a general reduction of trade barriers, of giving elasticity to trade arrangements and of increasing international trade throughout the world.

The reciprocal trade agreements program recently inaugurated by the United States under the Trade Agreements Act of June 12, 1934,12 which provides that the duties proclaimed in consequence of trade agreements entered into with foreign countries shall be extended to all countries but also provides that those duties may be confined to such countries as do not discriminate against American commerce or pursue policies which tend to defeat the purposes of the Act, is wholly in accord with the unconditional most-favored-nation principle. The United States stands ready to extend unconditionally the tariff concessions granted in its trade agreements to all other countries which give American commerce non-discriminatory treatment.

4. It is the carefully considered view of the Government of the United States that the rule of no discrimination is the only standard of international conduct sufficiently definite to be applied fairly and with a minimum of international controversy in connection with the extension of minimum tariff rates and the administration of other forms of trade control measures. The Government of the United States rejects the view that such criteria as the relative balance of trade between countries, or the absolute height of trade barriers, can be used as proper guides as to whether a country is entitled to the enjoyment of American minimum duties. The first of these rejected criteria—the balance of merchandise trade—implies the desire to bring about a bilateral balance of merchandise trade between each pair of countries and leads to the impairment or destruction of multilateral trade based upon an economical and mutually advantageous international division of production. It also fails to take into consideration other important factors in the balance of payments between countries. Such factors are particularly significant in American-Polish economic relations. With respect to the second rejected criterion—the absolute height of trade barriers—such wide differences of opinions must necessarily exist and the question is, moreover, so complicated by the characteristic structure of a nation’s industries, and by historical and traditional considerations, that any definite conclusions with regard to the application of such a criterion must of necessity be arbitrary. [Page 642] Under the policy which the Government of the United States is pursuing and in which it urges the Government of Poland to cooperate, the United States does not refuse generalization of minimum duties and equality of treatment to a foreign country, irrespective of the degree to which it is restricting trade, as long as American commerce is offered equality of opportunity and accorded its fair and equitable share of the permitted importations.

5. The President of the United States proclaimed on April 1 the Trade Agreement with the Belgo-Luxemburg Economic Union.13 Concurrently with that action he issued instructions to the Treasury Department regarding the countries to which the tariff concessions made in that Agreement will be extended.14 Poland is included in the third section of the President’s instruction under the following qualification:

“3. In respect of the products of each country designated under this item, the proclaimed duties shall be applied so long as such duties remain in effect and this direction is not modified in respect of such countries [country].”

The Government of the United States is, consequently, continuing to accord to Poland most-favored-nation treatment under the provisions of the treaty of friendship, commerce, and consular rights between the two countries. One purpose of the present conversations is to ascertain the precise policy of the Polish Government towards trade with the United States with a view to determining whether Poland should be assured continued enjoyment of the benefits of duties proclaimed under trade agreements. If Poland continues to discriminate against trade with the United States, consideration must under the law be given by the American Government to the withdrawal of its minimum duties from Poland, with due regard to obligations under the existing treaty.

In his instruction to the Secretary of the Treasury, alluded to above, the President also specified that minimum rates proclaimed in the agreement with the Belgo-Luxemburg Economic Union shall be applied to like articles originating in a number of countries even though they are at present granting less favorable treatment to American trade than to that of other countries, until thirty days from the date on which he advises the Treasury that the United States has ceased, or on a certain day will cease, to be bound by provisions of existing treaties or agreements. In the case of the countries in this group, it is expected that notices of termination of existing treaties or agreements will be given, in accordance with their terms, since the treatment [Page 643] foreseen in the applicable treaty or agreement is not being accorded to American trade. The Government of the United States proposes to follow this policy with respect to all countries discriminating against trade with the United States with which most-favored-nation treaties are in force.

6. While the American Government is not unmindful of the benefits that the United States has enjoyed from its trade with Poland, it is definitely of the opinion that Poland has likewise benefited greatly from the financial and commercial transactions that have taken place between the two countries since the re-establishment of the Polish State. It feels, consequently, that it must reiterate that the increasing difficulties confronting American trade in Poland which have arisen from the discriminatory measures applied since 1932 to imports of numerous American products and from the definite intervention of the Polish authorities into the field of American-Polish trade, resulting in the restriction of imports front the United States and the direction to other countries of the importation of commodities formerly obtained from the United States, have occasioned anxiety as to the course of future development of American-Polish economic relations. The system employed by the Polish Government to control imports from the United States has operated to destroy the natural relative competitive position in the Polish market of American products vis-à-vis similar products from other countries and to withhold from American commerce the treatment to which it is entitled under the provisions of the treaty of friendship, commerce, and consular rights between the United States and Poland. While the Government of the United States appreciates the circumstances in which the Polish Government has found it necessary to have recourse to a system of controlling imports, it desires to stress that the principle of fair treatment in international trade and the most-favored-nation principle enjoin upon every country making use of systems of limiting and controlling imports to apply those systems so as to derange as little as possible the natural relative competitive positions of the various countries supplying the imports of the articles affected. A policy of effecting through compensation trade, or other administrative devices, a balance of the merchandise trade between two countries is, in the opinion of the American Government, in conflict with the most-favored-nation treatment provided for in the treaty of friendship, commerce, and consular rights between the United States and Poland. In this connection it is desired to point out that Article VI of the treaty of friendship, commerce, and consular rights between the two countries provides, in part, as follows:

“Each of the High Contracting Parties binds itself unconditionally to impose no higher or other duties or charges, and no condition or [Page 644] prohibition on the importation of any article, the growth, produce, or manufacture of the territories of the other Party than are or shall be imposed on the importation of any like article, the growth, produce or manufacture of any other country.…

. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

“Neither High Contracting Party shall establish or maintain restrictions on imports from or exports to the territories of the other Party which are not applied to the import and export of any like article originating in or destined for any other country. Any withdrawal of an import or export restriction which is granted even temporarily by one of the Parties in favor of the articles of a third country shall be applied immediately and unconditionally to like articles originating in or destined for the other Contracting Party. In the event of rations or quotas being established for the importation or exportation of articles restricted or prohibited, each of the High Contracting Parties agrees to grant for the importation from or exportation to the territories of the other Party an equitable share in the allocation of the quantity of restricted goods which may be authorized for importation or exportation.”

The Government of the United States cannot but regard the continued effectuation of an import policy deliberately calculated to divert to other countries the imports of commodities formerly obtained from the United States and the application of extra charges on imports of American origin as an indication of an unfriendly attitude of the Polish Government towards commercial and financial relations with the United States.

7. In view of the considerations set forth above, the Government of the United States must repeat the request made in its previous note for information concerning the precise conditions under which American products are admitted into Poland, since it cannot accept the contention of the Polish Government, as made in its note of March 16, that such information

“seems to be of a general character having no connection with Polish-American economic relations.”

The Polish Government, it is hoped, will appreciate the desire of the Government of the United States to have accurate and authoritative information with respect to the attitude of the Polish Government towards, and the treatment now being accorded to, American trade in Poland, in order that there may be no possibility of its coming to a decision which, as a result of inadequate or inaccurate information in the premises, might not be fair to Poland. But apart from this special consideration, the Government of the United States holds the sincere conviction that this request is fully justified on the grounds of the friendly relations which have always existed between the two countries. The American Government, consequently, would appreciate receiving from the Polish Government a statement setting [Page 645] forth the restrictions now imposed or that are to be imposed on imports from the United States. It is particularly desirable that this statement contain full details with respect to the following points:

1.
The application to American imports of:
(a)
contingents, quotas, or licenses,
(b)
the system of compensation exports.
2.
An explanation of the nature, purpose, amount, and disposition of the special fees levied or charged on American imports subjected to restrictions.

8. In this connection, it has been noted that, coincident with the coming into force of the new Anglo-Polish trade agreement,15 the Polish Government canceled quotas on certain American commodities and placed the commodities affected under the Polish compensation system, thus subjecting another important group of American products upon importation into Poland to additional high charges which are not levied on similar goods imported from other countries. The Government of the United States naturally feels justified in calling attention to the constantly widening discriminatory measures applied to American imports and in seeking definite remedial action.

9. The Government of the United States desires to advance the following views with respect to the two questions raised in the final paragraph of the Polish note of March 16:

With respect to the first question relating to the American-Polish treaty of friendship, commerce, and consular rights, it is the view of the American Government that the treaty envisages equality of treatment in each country for the trade of the other which is the only basis upon which enduring and mutually beneficial trade relations can be developed between countries. The Government of the United States cannot in any circumstances agree that the treaty is to its advantage because merchandise exports from the United States to Poland have exceeded Polish merchandise exports to the United States. Furthermore it considers that attempts to balance the merchandise trade between two countries by artificial means are highly detrimental to the fundamental economic well-being of the countries concerned and to the development of world trade. The American Government is not in complete accord with various observations and figures presented by the Polish Government in regard to American-Polish trade, but it does not desire to enter into detailed discussion in view of the larger issue. It is of the opinion that the Polish Government overemphasizes the influence of the balance of merchandise trade which is but a single factor in the balance of payments and is frequently counter-balanced by other factors of special significance in American-Polish economic relations. The treaty was intended to regulate and promote the whole range of the economic relations between the United [Page 646] States and Poland. The incorporation therein of the most-favored-nation principle with respect to merchandise trade was to ensure the same equality of opportunity and treatment for that trade in both countries as the United States willingly extends to Poland in connection with all transactions concerned with other financial and economic intercourse between the two countries. Allusion has been made earlier in this note to the views of the American Government with respect to the purpose and value of the most-favored-nation principle in regulating international merchandise trade. It is hoped that those statements will serve to enlighten the Polish Government as to the attitude of the American Government in the premises and to enlist its cooperation in opposing the tendency displayed by some governments to endeavor to equalize on a bilateral basis the balance of merchandise trade between countries and thus to decrease the normal volume of international trade.

With respect to the second question relating to the increases of Polish exports to the United States, the American Government is happy to state that it views with favor the increase of Polish exports to the United States. It earnestly desires to continue generalizing fully to Poland all tariff and other concessions made in reciprocal trade agreements with a view to maintaining for Poland equality of trade opportunity and trade treatment, thereby affording increased markets for Polish goods in the United States. One purpose of the present discussions with respect to the attitude of the Polish Government towards American trade is to enable the Government of the United States to generalize to Poland concessions accorded to other countries in the expectation that the duty reductions thus extended to Polish goods will result in increased exports to the United States.

10. The Government of the United States trusts that the full statement of its foreign trade policy which it has now made will indicate clearly the basis of the present conversations, namely, its profound conviction that the normal flow of international trade can only be restored through the adoption by the important countries of a liberalized commercial policy resting upon the doctrine of equality of trade treatment and opportunity. It hopes that the present discussions between the Polish Government and itself upon the question of American-Polish economic relations will be productive of beneficial results in promoting commerce between the two countries and thus will contribute substantially to the revival of world trade and prosperity. The Government of the United States is convinced that the prospects of success will be materially improved by the adherence of Poland to the policy set forth hereinbefore, and it is prepared to discuss with Poland ways and means of increasing the merchandise trade between the two countries on the basis of equality of opportunity and treatment for the trade of each country in the territory of the other.

  1. 48 Stat. 943.
  2. See pp. 102 ff.
  3. For text of letter of April 1, 1935, from President Roosevelt to the Secretary of the Treasury, see Department of State, Press Releases, April 6, 1935, p. 216.
  4. Signed February 27, 1935, League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. clxii, p. 181.