WHAT CHEAP MEAT MEANS
One of the main objects of the Government and of all people interested in the progress of the Dominion is the increase of production. In this connection it is important to consider whether the present favourable treatment of wheat growers is justified On the ground that it is desirable that New Zealand should grow enough wheat for her own consumption, Mr Nosworthy haa been giving very material assistance to wheat growers and flour millers. Wheat is grown almost entirely in Canterbury and a portion of Otago, as the soil and climate of the North Island are not suitable for the crop. This means that the whole people of th« country pay perhaps Id extra for each 21b loaf in order to benefic a comparatively small number of South. Island farmers. The point of importance however, is that there is no chance of building up an export trade in wheat from the Dominion. We consume less than eight million bushely of wheat per annum, and the average production is below* that figure. The limiting value of the production of wheat, even unaVr artificial conditions prevailing at present, is therefore £3,000,000 if we put the price of wheat at 7/G per bushel. Now, let us suppose the wheat growers and millers are not protected except by the fairly high cost of importing from Australia or Canada. Wheat and its products would then be cheap and the pig and poultry industries would boom. Pork, becon, eggs and poultry would be cheap and the cost of livftig would be reduced. Dut this benefit is of little importance compared with the unlimited . possibilities of the export of pork, bacon and eggs. Denmark at present receives more for bacon than for dairy produce, and conditions here are more favourable for pig rearing than in Denmark, except that pollard is too dear. At the last census there were 146,000 families keeping hens in this Dominion, and cheap wheat would mean an enormous increase in egg production, making a large export trade oossible.—"The Budget."
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Shannon News, 4 December 1925, Page 2
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340WHAT CHEAP MEAT MEANS Shannon News, 4 December 1925, Page 2
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