893.61311/4–2845

The Ambassador in China (Hurley) to the Secretary of State

No. 346

The Ambassador has the honor to enclose, for the Department’s information, a translation of a formal note dated March 24, 1945 from Dr. T. V. Soong, Minister for Foreign Affairs, stating that the Chinese Government has made complete settlement of the U. S. Wheat Loan to China of September 193142 and of the U. S. Cotton and Wheat Loan to China of May 1933.43

[Enclosure—Translation]

The Chinese Minister for Foreign Affairs (Soong) to the American Chargé (Atcheson)

Sir: With reference to the Wheat Loan and the Cotton-and-Wheat Loan granted to the Chinese Government by the American Government in September 1931 and May 1933 respectively, I have the honor to state that the entire principals and interests accrued therefrom have been reimbursed in full by the Chinese Government, as is a matter of record.

[Page 1077]

As regards these two loans, the Chinese Government in September 1931 entered into an agreement, for flood relief, with the United States Department of Agriculture for the purchase of American wheat, under the terms of which 450,000 tons of American wheat or wheat flour were to be purchased from the American Grain Price Equalization Corporation valued at US$9,212,826.56, against which sum payment was to be made, with an annual interest of four per cent, at the end of June and December of each year, each time refunding one-third of the total amount. This was known as the American Wheat Loan.

In May 1933, because of the large quantity of raw materials required by Chinese textile and flour mills in the interior, a Cotton and Wheat Loan for US$50,000,000 was obtained from the American Reconstruction Finance Corporation. It was agreed that the rate of interest would be five per cent per annum, and that payments against the principal were to be made four times a year and against the interest twice a year; also, that consolidated taxes were to be set aside as the first security and the Customs five per cent relief surtax as the second security. Subsequently, owing to fluctuations in the Chinese cotton market, the Chinese Ministry of Finance consulted with that Corporation and obtained its agreement to the reduction of the Cotton and Wheat Loan to US$10,000,000, thus making a total of US$17,086,282.48 together with the Wheat Loan.

In addition to the twenty-five percent of the Cotton and Wheat Loan’s principal, on which payments had been made at the due intervals, its remaining seventy-five percent, as well as the entire principal of the Wheat Flour Loan and the two loans’ interests, were repaid from revenues derived from the Customs five percent relief surtax regularly as they became due.

In 1936 these two outstanding loans were taken over in their entirety by the Export-Import Bank at Washington,44 with which an agreement was reached on May 28 of that year for the flotation of a consolidated bond loan against the two outstanding accounts amounting to a total of US$16,608,329.99, at five percent interest per annum, to be reimbursed in six and a half years’ time. Following the reorganization of the loan, all the principal and its accrued interests were paid regularly upon becoming due from the Customs five percent relief surtax until June 1939 when, as most of this country’s Customs were taken possession of by the enemy, the approval of the American Government was obtained for the deferment of the redemption of the principal for two years and for the reduction of the rate of interest [Page 1078] to four percent. Revenues derived from the Customs surtax were still meager when the period for deferment expired, and payment was made regularly from the national treasury by the Chinese Ministry of Finance.

Up to the end of last year, payments on the principal and interest of this loan were made according to the agreement. In this regard Dr. Wei Tao-ming, Chinese Ambassador to Washington, reported by telegraph that he had received confirmation in writing from Mr. Pearson, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Export-Import Bank, in which he expressed full satisfaction with the settlement of the loan in question, as is a matter of record.

It would be appreciated if you would communicate the foregoing to the Department of State.

I avail myself [etc.]

T. V. Soong
  1. The 1931 agreement involved the sale to the National Government of China of 450,000 short tons of wheat or wheat flour by the Grain Stabilization Corporation with the approval of the Federal Farm Board. Payment was effected through obligations of the Chinese National Government. The terms of the agreement were made public on September 26, 1931, by the Federal Farm Board in its press release No. 2–96 (893.48/403).
  2. The 1933 agreement signed on May 29 provided for a Reconstruction Finance Corporation loan of $50,000,000 to finance the sale of American cotton and wheat to China. The details of the agreement were given in a press release issued by the RFC on June 4, 1933 (893.48/708).
  3. See press release issued by the Export-Import Bank of Washington on June 20, 1936, Foreign Relations, 1936, vol. iv, p. 489.