| $ Gold | $ Gold. | |
| Sundry cash creditors | 906,585 | |
| Bills payable | 363,545 | |
| National indemnity bonds | 73,656 | |
| External loan principal | 4,744,000 | |
| External loan interest and expenses | 3,657,694 | |
| 8,401,694 | ||
| $9,745,480 Gold. | ||
| = at 150 premium, | $24,363,700 Silver. |
Silver Liabilities.
| $ Silver. | |||
| Sundry creditors | 930,550 | ||
| Salvador bonds (principal and interest) | 3,564,207 | ||
| Administrative salaries, expenses, etc. | 836,299 | ||
| Deposits | 2,629 | ||
| Funds to be applied to special purposes | 88,022 | ||
| Various bonds | 113,140 | ||
| 5,534,848 | |||
| Total | $29,898,548 | Silver. |
The Public Debt of the Republic of Salvador on December 31, 1901, amounted to $10,666,584 (gold) = £2,133,517, and $6,207,059 (silver) = £517,256. Reduced to the silver unit, the total Debt amounted to $32,873,520.
The Customs Revenues for 1910 show a small decline over those of 1909, the difference being $3,784.00.
| Import Duties. | Export Duties. | ||
| Sonsonate | $3,522,875.05 | $430,359.84 | |
| La Unión | $1,086,766.03 | $114,528.03 | |
| La Libertad | $554,400.57 | $125,926.49 | |
| Import Duties at the General Treasury (parcels post) | $169,638.59 | Imports at El Triunfo | $215,835.19 |
| Totals[2] | $5,333,680.24 | $886,649.55 |
The Government's whole Revenue during the first half of 1910 amounted to $2,972,501 (gold), and its expenditure to $2,677,431 (gold).
The total import and export duties for the two years 1909 and 1910 are as follows:
| 1909. | 1910. | ||
| Imports | $4,176,931.56 | Imports | $3,745,249.19 |
| Exports | $8,481,787.65 | Exports | $9,122,295.09 |
| (These figures are in U.S. gold currency.) | |||