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TRADE OUTLOOK.

A suffering world

BRITISH PREMIER’S REVIEW. The Prime Minister was the principal ■ guest at the dinner of the federation of ! British Industries at the Hotel Cecil, London, on November 30. ■ He said he was glad that the great ' business community, the directing brains : of industry, were coming together, were federating" and combining and. eo-ordina- ■ ting, and were, he hoped, prepared to : give a common counsel to the Governj ment. i “Your chairman has reminded you that 1 the ‘boom’ times are over for the time j being, and that we are getting into the slack time, the period of depression. “Whether it is going to he long, or - whether it is going to be short, there is ; no doubt it is going to be serious. The ; question is not whether anything can be i done to avert it—l am afraid it is ini evitable—but .whether something can be j done to shorten it and to mitigate its evils.

“Before you can do anything to cure a condition of things, or to mitigate them, you must have a clear indication of causes and a readiness to acknowledge them, whatever they are. ALL SUFFERING ALIKE. “The causes are not peculiar to our country. They are something that affects the whole world. It is not an atmospheric depression that affects one coast, one country; it girdles the earth —the United States, Japan, China, India, France, Italy, Germany, as well as the United Kingdom. The whole world is suffering from it. It is important when you come to think of remedies to get that fundamental fact into your minds, so that we should not run into remedies that may be applicable to one country and not to another. “Countries with totally different economic systems are suffering alike—Pro. tectionist countries, Free Trade countries, . countries with good Governments and with bad Governments —(laughter) —countries whose Governments, in the eyes of Lord Northeliffe, can do no wrong, and countries whasfe Governments, in his lordship’s clear eye, can naver do right. (Laughter.) They all suffer alike. “It is raining on the just and the unjust witho’ut stint. Socialistic countries are suffering just like those wretched individualists are suffering. The worki ing classes are more wretched where the i sun of liberty is shining upon them under the sway of Lenin and Trotsky . than they are in any civilised country i where they arc locked up in the dun- | geons of capitalism. z I “Europe cannot work its way back to prosperity unless it has peace. Stamp I out the mer< who arc going about with ; petrol tins. Thp.*- are a curse, what- • ever their profession, and it is not confined to Bolsheviks or Sinn Feiners—- ; constantly starting incendiary fires here and there in Europe, in Asia, and everywhere. The world wants peace to attend to its business.

ECONOMY ESSENTIAL. “Here is the doctrine. Leave the industries in so far as is possible to work out their own salvation. I share your feelings against Government control and Government interference. “The Government are pledged to do everything possible to shield the industries discovered during the war to be i essential for the defence of the country, ito deal with the problem of dumping, I and to do something to deal with the ; exchange situation, so that it could not ibe utilised as a means for destroying our industries. But in the main our policy is that the less interference with trade there is on the part of the Government the better it is for both. “We must have public and private economy of the most constructive and relentless kind. I put public economy first. Public expenditure ought to be cut down to the minimum consistent with a national security and national efficiency. “The Government have set up a powerful committee for the purpose of gou.g through the whole of the estimates again with a. view of cutting down to the very lowest limit compatible with those conditions which I have laid down “We shall have to ask for the support of the nation when the scream comes from the other side, because it is coming. (Laughter.) People will say: ‘What! Going to cut that down?’ We will say: ‘Yes, because we cannot afford it.’ (“Hear, hear.”) “As the Cabinet has appointed a committee to cut down expenditure, I suggest there should be a committee in every household to cut "down expenditure. (Laughter.) I know what will happen. (A Voice: “Divorce” and laughter.) Each member of the family will want to cut the expenses of the other. The women will ent down the cigar bill and the men will cut down the dress hill. (More laughter.) That is what happens in the public expenditure, but it is essential, if the nation is to recover, that there should be rigid, ruthless economy for some time to come.” (Cheers.)

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19210203.2.64

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Daily News, 3 February 1921, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
808

TRADE OUTLOOK. Taranaki Daily News, 3 February 1921, Page 6

TRADE OUTLOOK. Taranaki Daily News, 3 February 1921, Page 6

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