FARMING IN BRITAIN
> PROBLEMS OF POST-WAR ADJUSTMENT. CONSERVATIVE PARTY REPORT. (Special P.A. Correspondent.) LONDON, April 5. A further contribution to the discussion of post-war agriculture is made by a report of a sub-committee of the Conservative Party. It fits in with the proposals of other bodies stressing the need for stable world prices on an international basis, more efficient farming, better marketing and better conditions in the villages. Just what proportions Britain’s farming will assume .'after the war is difficult to assess, but industrial and commercial bodies do not hesitate to point out that Britain is first of all an industrial country, which is most important for income from overseas, and that the country’s prosperity rests on a flourishing industry rather than a large domestic agriculture. Many think the policy of guaranteed prices, markets and wages has come to stay for Britain’s ’ agriculture. Sooner or later the House of Commons must discuss the whole subject.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 7 April 1943, Page 4
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155FARMING IN BRITAIN Wairarapa Times-Age, 7 April 1943, Page 4
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