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MEN FOR INDUSTRY

SOME RELEASED FROM PUBLIC

WORKS

STATEMENT BY MR SAVAGE.

EXPANSION OF PRODUCTION NEEDED.

(By Telegraph—Press Association.) WELLINGTON, This Day.

The need for a better balance between public works and industry was referred tp by the Prime Minister, Mr Savage, when asked in an interview last evening if the Government’s scheme of industrial expansion was expected to result in a simultaneous tap-ering-off of public works activities. He said that steps already had been taken to release men on public works for work on farms constituted a' definite move in this direction.

“We have to get a better balance between public works and secondary industry,” said Mr Savage. “To the extent that we can take men from public works and put them into industry that will be done. Secondary industries will have to be built in any case. If we can’t get men from public works we will have to get them elsewhere. The secondary industries of the Dominion must be developed to obtain that better balance. “I am not one who thinks that money has been wasted on public works. It is apparent that values have been created every minute by expenditure on public works. Wages received by public works men are spent in buying the necessaries of life, and there are thousands of things not produced in New Zealand that have to be imported from abroad. That is the story in a nutshell. Our job is to get a better balance. We have to have more done in the way of secondary production, or an oxtension of primary production, or both. By the expansion of exports we achieve in respect to the conservation af overseas credits the same result as is achieved by an expansion of secondary industry. “The Minister of Public Works has already indicated that where men on aublic works can be used for farm work they will be made available. That s a definite move in the direction I have indicated. Ministers ,of the Crown and officials are very active at the present time in getting the whole situation more evenly balanced, and whatever problems exist will have to be removed.”

Asked if the measures designed to improve the balance between public works and industry were likely to involve the curtailment of any major aublic works undertaking, Mr Savage said that all these works would be completed. “We are not stopping them,” he added.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19381213.2.52

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 13 December 1938, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
400

MEN FOR INDUSTRY Wairarapa Times-Age, 13 December 1938, Page 5

MEN FOR INDUSTRY Wairarapa Times-Age, 13 December 1938, Page 5

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