Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

LAND RECLAMATION

FASCIST PROGRAMME. The news that the Italian Governbent. have allotted 50,000,0001. for work on new irrigation schemes in connection with Lakes Maggiore and Garda emphasises the fact. that, land reclamation, temporarily sidetracked for military expenditure, has resumed its important place in the Fascist programme, writes a. correspondent to "The Times.” In modern Italy "bonifica integrate” is more than a. policy. Of it has been mad' 1 n. conception which expresses a whole range of patriotic sentiments — the wish for more and better production: the well-being of the peasant: a certain denunciation of urban life: and the recognition of an age-long struggle against Nature, which in Italy is never far beneath the surface. With nearly half the total area of rural Italy included in plans for reclamation, “bonifica.” has come to mean almost anything from the maintenance of existing drainage schemes to the provision of houses for rural workers.

The Mussolini Act of 1928 provided for 7.009,000,0001. (say £70,000,000) to be spent, on land reclamation within the next. 14 years. In 1935. after years of lavish expenditure, there was a definite slackening in tempo. Work then in hand was continued but not extended.

Official figures show on paper that large amounts of money continued to bo available for the service, of reclamation. It is reasonably certain, however, that comparatively little money was spent on “bonifica” between 1935 and the. beginning of this year and that for this period the position was accurately stated by Si.gnoj Franco Angelini, president of 'he Com federation of Agricultural V °’- ‘. when he said (in May. 1937) that re-h clamation is marking time for reasons of a contingent nature, but it is hoped <

that work can soon he got under way again.”

PROMISE TO THE SOUTH. In January last it was announced that a sum of 100,000,0001. would be devoted to the reclamation of 60,000 hectares In the Tavoliere of Apulia, in the far south of Italy. This was in accordance with a. promise which Signor Mussolini had made to the upland peasants of Apulia that after work on the Pontine Marshes was completed attention should bo'Turned to their part of the country. Much attention has been paid to housing for the peasants since the Duce put in the foreground “the problem of the countryman’s cottage.” An inquiry showed that eight per cent, of all rural houses, 276,810 houses, with 1,968,000 inmates, were fit only for demolition. This programme, too, has suffered from the tightness of money during the past few years. The indebtedness of rural Italy is deepening. How far this matters in a regime which is increasingly developing a close State-controlled economy is perhaps doubtful, but it seems inevitable that, the future of bonifica lies only with tho State. Feverish borrowing followed the Act of 1928. which declared that landowners must carry out their own bonifica'wherever the State so decreed, and that expropriation would punish default. With the reorganisation in 1936 of the Italian banking system, those debts have nowi been transferred directly to the State’sl control. The total sum lent by agri-j cultural credit institutions in 1936 (1,825.839.000 lire) was just, less than double that standing in their books for 1935.

Private enterprise has suffered a set-back, evidently unintended, from which it can scarcely recover, and the fact that expropriation has hardly anywhere been carried out is a sign that the authorities realise thii financial condition in which landowners now j find themselves. Within the next few years valuable data should be forthcoming on tho sociological experiments

being made in large-scale land settlement. Many of the ‘30,000 settlers hi the Pontino were brought from urban surroundings. To provide the necessary labour family units were sometimes artificially made up. Signor Mazzocchi-Alemanni. president of t,he Opera. Nazionale per i Combattenti, which carried out the reclamation, i'.ecently wrote: —

“We believe that this is a most useful social experiment infthat it sets out to transform town dwellers in mind and spirit and make countrymen Of them .... If only a. percentage pf settlers are thus transformed, politically and socially the experiment will have been the most important success in the annals of tho Opera, both from the national and international points of view'."

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19381115.2.25

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 15 November 1938, Page 5

Word Count
696

LAND RECLAMATION Greymouth Evening Star, 15 November 1938, Page 5

LAND RECLAMATION Greymouth Evening Star, 15 November 1938, Page 5