Table D-73.-U.S. Government grants and credits, by areas and major countries, fiscal years 1954-59-Continued 2 Includes $100 million mutual security program loan to European Coal and Steel Community * Includes $250 million Export-Import Bank loan to the United Kingdom, repaid in October 1959. Gross sales (currency claims acquired) less currencies used by U.S. Government. Includes cash contributions to the multilateral construction program of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, some part of which may be in Greece and Turkey as NATO members. NOTE.-Area totals include data not shown separately. Detail will not necessarily add to totals because of rounding. Source: Department of Commerce. TABLE D-74.-United States imports of miscellaneous consumer manufactures, 1953-591 Excludes manufactured foodstuffs, passenger cars, and wearing apparel. Source: Department of Commerce. 108 14 3 47 788 891 953 919 639 152 162 142 879 142 TABLE D-75.-Estimated gold reserves and dollar holdings of foreign countries and international institutions, selected periods, 1952–59 ' Preliminary. 345 340 375 397 338 376 3,547 3,864 3,535 2,919 3,371 5,645 Includes repayment to Bank of France of $286 million in gold loaned by Bank to French Exchange Stabilization Fund in June 1957. NOTE. Includes gold reserves and dollar holdings of all foreign countries with the exception of gold reserves of U.S. S. R. and other Eastern European countries, and of international institutions (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, International Monetary Fund, United Nations and others). Holdings of the Bank for International Settlements (both for its own and EPU account) and of the Tripar tite Commission for Restitution of Monetary Gold are included under "other" Continental Western Europe. Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. 1 Data shown for United States foreign trade and for country groups and for manufactured goods in the world trade section of the table are unit value indexes. All others are price indexes. For description of world trade indexes by commodity classes, see "Methods Used in Compiling the United Nations Price Indexes for Basic Commodities in International Trade," Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 29, United Nations, New York. The series shown for foodstuffs is the weighted average of the two commodity classes, crude foodstuffs and manufactured foodstuffs. The series shown for industrial materials is the weighted average of the two commodity classes, crude materials and semimanufactures. Excludes trade of U. S. S. R. and Soviet bloc countries. U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFF |