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AUSSIE DAIRYING

DUTY ON N.Z. BUTTER. (Australian and N.Z. Cable Association.) SYDNEY, January 16., Dr Earl Page, Federal Treasurer, m an address on the Government’s policy in regard to the dairying industry, at Turwillimbah, referring to the reci-, procal trade agreement between Australia and New Zealand, pointed out that six months’ notice was necessary before a variation could become effective. ' Recently New Zealand had desired to increase the duty on flour by £l, and the Commonwealth had raised no objection,, yet when Australia wanted to increase the duty on New Zealand butter, there was an outburst from the Dominion. He suggested that a representative of the Federal Government should be sent to New Zealand to revise the whole treaty, and see if the butter duty could not be settled without delay. New Zealand dairymen, he said, were not benefiting by exports to Australia, but only the speculator. -Many countries, where the standard of living was much lower than in Australia, were going in for dairying, and in order to compete against them, Australia would have to reduce manufacturing costs to a minimum. The meeting resolved to request the Federal Government to approach the New Zealand Government asking for a revision of the whole trade agreement, with the object of bringing the increase of duty on butter into operation as soon as possible; also asking that a representative of the Federal Government be sent to New Zealand for the purpose of having the matter dealt with at the earliest moment. Mr Page said that in Australia, 125 millions sterling represented the capital invested in the development and equipment of dairy farms. They had. an annual production of forty-five millions, of which thirty millions was for milk products. Butter and cheese factories represented a capital, outlay of £4,250,000. Their average annual production was valued at nearly twentytffiree millions. There wer® approximately half-a-million persons and hundreds of towns entirely dependent upon the industry. Directly or indirectly, a million persons in Australia depended for a livelihood upon the dairying industry.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19280112.2.41

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 12 January 1928, Page 5

Word Count
336

AUSSIE DAIRYING Greymouth Evening Star, 12 January 1928, Page 5

AUSSIE DAIRYING Greymouth Evening Star, 12 January 1928, Page 5

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