NEW ZEALAND'S EXPORTS
THE production year in Nejw Zealand has ended, and it is consequently a convenient point of time at which to make comparisons. During last production year exports totalled £65,076,628, as' compared with £65,160,999 in the previ- N ous year, a decline of or 0.14 per cent. Cheese shipped was up by 43 per cent, and butter by 17 per cent. Frozen meat was well down, namely: frozen lamb £2,196,663, and frozen mutton £1,094,839. Wool was down by £3,054,633. New Zealand is making accommodation to the wartime requirements of the United Kingdom, and the shipping situation has, speaking relatively, remained remarkably good. The: Minister of Agriculture hasi been able to state that the meat export position will not become as difficult as was at first thought, so taking all things into account New Zealand must consider itself a fortunate country.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19410917.2.17.2
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 4, Issue 156, 17 September 1941, Page 4
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142NEW ZEALAND'S EXPORTS Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 4, Issue 156, 17 September 1941, Page 4
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