ITALY'S PROBLEMS
MUSSOLINI'S NEW POLICY ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL CHANGES Press Association—By Telegraph—Copyright. ROME, November 15. (Received November 16, at 8.50 a.m.) Signor Mussolini, addressing the Council of Corporations, with which he intends to replace the Chamber of Deputies, announced the suppression of capitalistic production, the burial of economic liberalism, and the fragmentation of all the Socialist parties in Europe. Ho claimed that unlimited consumption was a pretext for supercapitalism, whose ideal was the standardisation of humanity from the cradle to the grave. Ivor Kreuger and Samuel Tnsull represented its latest stage. Not only countries but continents were opposed to each other in economic warfare. Europe no longer .dominated the world. America had arisen and Japan was advancing by rapid strides. Europe could still regain the political rudder if it found, a minimum of political unity. The Duco added that as the corporative system would not be ripe for enforcement for some months the Chamber of Deputies would be re-elected, but would subsequently decide i£s own fate. It was anachronistic aAd alien to Italian mentality.
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Evening Star, Issue 21570, 16 November 1933, Page 11
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174ITALY'S PROBLEMS Evening Star, Issue 21570, 16 November 1933, Page 11
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