-3- terms of the adjustment of domestic prices or of stimulus to export trade, tend to be lost vis-a-vis Germany. The device aims to establish a special depreciated German mark, and this, of course, implies a corresponding appreciation of the dollar in terms of the German mark. 6. The sale of German marks at a considerable discount is likely to assert a depressional influence on American prices and seriously affect those American industries which are subject to sharp German competition. The power to sell marks at a large discount might have a considerable effect upon a wide range of American prices. The sale of German marks at a discount of 41 percent would be equivalent to a kind of dumping, which might represent a serious competitive threat for many American industries. Consideration needs to be given to the political implications involved in this threatened intensified German competition. Substantially the same result would, to be sure, follow from an open depreciation of the German mark. But there is the.important difference that, under the proposed plan, the depreciation of the mark would be actively promoted by our own action, and, therefore, any unfavorable reaction upon our own industries could be charged directly to our own Government. 7. The proposed plan is clearly to Germany's advantage, but offers little advantage and many disadvantages for the United States. If Germany secures a preferred market for her |