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OFF THE GOLD STANDARD

THE OTHER SIDE OF THE PICTURE. The following letter from M,r A. Spencer Watts, who represented the Associated Chambers,, of Commerce of Australia at the conference of the International Chamber of Commerce at Washington, appeared in the Sydney Morning Herald: “There appears to be a feeling in many quarters akin to jubilation at tli© latest—and greatest—disaster which has befallen Great Britain, rue depreciation of sterling and aD expectation of great advantage to be derived by Australia therefrom. Let it not be overlooked that any advantage which may accrue to Australia will be at the expense of Great Britain, and be short-lived. ‘Off the gold standard, is a phrase which may serve for lack of better. Gold is still the standard measure of value for international settlements in the last resort, arid though London has ceased to be a free gold market England must still pay her external commitments in gold or value measured by the gold standard. or alternatively default. At the same time Great Britain is still the world’s greatest creditor nation, and must accept payments of almost everything owing to her in sterling, and if sterling should remain around 25 percent. discount it means in plain terms receiving 15s in the “pound from her debtors and paying to her creditors 20s in the pound. “Last year-, .notwithstanding extremely low prices, Great Britain's purchases of foodstuffs to feed her population cost more than £1,000,000 a day, and even if no increase, in the gold price occurs the additional cost per day with sterling at 25 per cent, discount will he in the vicinity of £&50,000 per day for seven days a- week. England must still import huge quantities of foodstuffs or see her population starve, and what hopes has she in the present condition of world trade ? Any results in this direction that can he immediately hoped for will be on the side of less imports. “Let no one imagine that ‘going off gold’ was voluntary. Since the German crisis of July, London’s leading financiers, to whom the politicians turned in despair, have strained every nerve in an endeavour to save sterling from depreciation, and the nation must now strain every nerve to get sterling back as near to par as possible with the least delay to avoid consequences to Great Britain and the Empire too awful to contemplate. Un. less Australia is prepared to stand alone in defence, as well as other matters, any advantage she may gain at the expense of Great Britain will prove Dead Sea fruit. One instance only should make clear the loss to Great Britain when we remember that in June of this year we shipped £5.0“0.000 of gold to meet London’s debt of £5.000,000 sterling, and that a debt of precisely the same amount which falls due to a London hank this month could be satisfied by the shipment of £4,000,000 gold, a loss to Great Britain as a national unit of 25 per cent. “It would appear that two or three years of Labour-Socialist Government has dealt a severer blow to Great Britain’s financial standing and prestige than- did four years of devastating war.”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19311017.2.57

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 17 October 1931, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
527

OFF THE GOLD STANDARD Hokitika Guardian, 17 October 1931, Page 6

OFF THE GOLD STANDARD Hokitika Guardian, 17 October 1931, Page 6

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