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A WAY OF ESCAPE

TRADE EXCHANGE WITH INDIA. (By D. W. M. Burn. M.A., President, New Zealand and India League, in the "Southland Times.”) it is finite possible, as some think, that weihave touched the bottom, and begun ever so slightly, ever so slowly to move upward towards prosperity again, hut. even the most sanguine must surely wish to see the iftovement quickened, wish to see some way of escape from the unparalleled depression of the moment. Under the social and commercial system of the day. though no sane person but would cheerfully admit its imperfections, salvation lies in markets. New Zealand has looked far and near for these, to the Mother Country, Europe, Canada, United States, South Africa, Australia; she has even dealt with the Far East, but she has never seemed to recognise the possibilities of trade with what, we used to call “our gieat dependency” with India, soon to l;e a sister nation, an independent and self-governing member of the group that form the British Commonwealth. It is scarcely worth our while to try to trace the cause of this neglect. To-day the possibilities of trade with India, of (doser intimacy with India in many ways, have struck us, and arc being made the subject of inquiry. On the wide field of art, and cognate cultural matters, we shall speak again; the object of this article is to draw attention to the possibilities oi trade exchange.

INDIA WANTS WOOL. Our knowledge of that great subcontinent is so vague, so hazy, that though we have all heard of the Himalayas and their perpetual snows most oi us think of India as a land of heat: we hear of the hot weather, of the departure of such as can afford to go from the sweltering low levels to the hills: but India has her cooler months and even frosts in certain districts; her people, unlike the prince in the fairy tale, well know what shivering means, and in the cold months all who can afford to purchase woollen clothes or wiaps make use of them. Our delegate to the All-Asia Women’s Conference, who spent about five months in contact with the life of India, mostly about Madras, but also in the north, reports the need of wool for blankets, shawls, line (‘loth; for carpets also, though that would mean a coarser staple. She notes the fact that India, with her dense population, has reduced pastoral areas to a minimum; she tells of cattle feeding in the city streets on vegetable refuse from the stalls, of city sheep kept by ones and twos; of goats, whose herder, walking ahead, of course, and not behind his flock and unaccompanied by dogs, strikes with his staff the branches of an odd tree here and there as he walks along, knocking down leaves for the hungry beasts to eat. She tells of the harshness of certain blankets which she saw being woven near Amritsar; she tells of the exquisitely soft and comloitable Bengal shawls, some four or five feet square, wich run from 30/to .£5 in value; and of the many poor who cannot purchase these, but would leap at the chance of purchasing some sori of woollen garment were it within their limited reach. Even now wool, raw wool, of various degrees of fineness, is required; and till India begins to build her own mills for the extended manufacture of cheap woollens for her millions, we might well find a market for cardigans and pullovers or some equivalent, if the possibilities of the situation were thoroughly explored.

INDIA WANTS BUTTER. Indians cook with butter. Australian butter can be had in India, but not the New Zealand product, though a friend who paid a. visit recently to England told me that he had eaten New Zealand butter at Colombo. Australia, offeiing an inferior grade of butter and having the advantage of direct shipping facilities, has perhaps been able to undersell us, but when cue notes that China took our butter in 1928-29 to the value of £31,598 Japan in the same period took it to the value of £17,217, Dutch India took it to the value of £B.BOB. Straits Settlement to the value of £ 18,035, and the Philippines to'the value of £19,293; and when one remembers that in none of these cases was direct transport available, one feels that it is more than likely that there has been no real effort on the part of our own traders to explore the possibilities of the Indian market. With Canada showing us the cold shoulder in the matter of our butter, we might do very much worse than look into the Indian situation.

India took gold and silver both from us in 1928-29 to the value of £280,858 and £40,717 respectively. India took tallow from us to the value of £27,322. India, who took no wool from us in 1927-28, in 1928-29 took wool to the valiic- of £32,205. The total value of our exports to that country in that period reached the sum of £386,421. It Ls a beginning; but when one thinks of India’s teeming millions, of her crying need of development, of the crying need of a raised standard of living’ for her agriculturists and labourers in general, and sees these and much more coming with the final shaking off of foreign dominance, one may be pardoned if he reads the sum in millions instead of thousands as it stands todav.

NEED TO ADVERTISE

India might take our honey in bottles, be it noted; our delegate saw Austialian honey but found none front this Domnion. India might take our cheese, India might take our mutton—the Hindu eats no beef; possibly the frozen article, almost, certainly the tinned. India, which takes our Glaxo, that product being obtainable in all parts, might take our Highlander milk as well as Nestle’s article, might possibly prefer it. In every Indian journal one may read advertisements of Ovaltine. Swiss Milk. Sanaogcn, etc., but with the exception of the übiquitous Glaxo, no advertisement of Dominion goods. What can our sister nation offer us in exchange? Tea, cotton goods, silk goods, nuts, spices, brassware, embroidered silk and cotton goods, objects of art of one kind or another Again as regards India’s side of the question it is a matter for thorough exploration. For the League’s part it would like to see a trade commissioner appointed with power to interview not only Government officials and trade magnates, English and Indian, in Madras, Calcutta and Bombay, but also some Congress officers,

and last hut by no means least rulers cf the greater States. India is much too vast a held toi single-handed working, and our commissionei would have to be provided with expert subordinates to lattend to west, and south. His work would be exeting, but. we believe, extraordinarily fruitful. He would find numbers of associations with which to work, bodies whose operations cover wide areas of country, such as, to go no further, the Madras Provincial Cooperative Union, the AU-India Spinners’ Association. Furthermore. India is already interested in New Zealand. For one thing the simple lact that we have here no colour question interests Indians to an extraordinary degree. They love to hear of our Maoris and how brown and white New Zealanders live side by side, entirely equal members of one nation; of how white and brown sit cn the same benches in our schools, play in the same cricket and football teams, go to the university together, enter into trades, professions, and politics without distinction of races, and inter-marry without causing a cyclone of gossip and caste protest. That little matter of which we never even think is a broad basis for . the building up of Indian sympathies. They have heard of our Plunket nursing system, of our care for our very young, and when they think of their own needs in this particular'field it is not surprising that they hope th«r. the Dominion may some day extend its sympathetic interest to their problem. and give them the benefit of its experience.

To bring this note to a conclusion, India will soon be mistress in her own house. Being so, she will forthwith enter upon a scheme of self-develop-ment, based on education. She will look, all about her for opportunities of trade exchange, social exchange, and cultural exchange. Are we to wait, we who ourselves need markets, till all the world is wooing the new Dominion? Or shall we, recognising what must come, make our advances now, showing ourselves ready to enter into a relation which will prove of benefit to both India and ourselves—shew readiness in no half-hearted fashion but by a strenuous effort to grasp the possibilities before both countries and set exchange between them on a safe, solid, permanent foundation?

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19310709.2.80

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 9 July 1931, Page 10

Word Count
1,465

A WAY OF ESCAPE Greymouth Evening Star, 9 July 1931, Page 10

A WAY OF ESCAPE Greymouth Evening Star, 9 July 1931, Page 10

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