NEED FOR ECONOMY
ASSOCIATED CHAMBERS MOVE COSTLY ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM DOMINION’S "OLD MAN OF THE SEA.” (By Telegraph—Press Association.; WELLINGTON, Dec. 6. "Concerted action by all the 45 chambers affiliated to the Associated Chambers of Commerce of Now Zealand is being taken in a short, determined campaign for greater national economy, and a deputation is to tvait on the Government shortly to urge the appointment of a non-political commission,” said Mr C. M. Bowden, president of the association, on Saturday. "The association is prepared to use a flying squadron of members to visit outlying chambers to ensure that the move has full co-oper-ation, and the chambers are being urged to immediately appoint committees to consider the matter and report to the executive.” Mr Bowden said conditions had reached such a stage that decided steps would have to be taken to secure greater national economy. The commission proposed should have instructions to prepare urgently for adoption by the Government an adequate plan for the adjustment of national and local requirements to the ability of the country to provide means. The efforts of the Government to effect econmies had produced very little result. The reduction in national expenditure under the Supplementary Budget had been only £200,000, or less than 1 per cent. National and local taxation had risen from a total of £5 I4s 30d a head in 1004 to £l7 12s 2d a head in 1930. The national debt had increased by £88,000,000 from 1919 to 1929, and the local bodv debt by £40,000,000 in the same period. More than £26.000.000 of direct and indirect taxation would be extracted from the community next year, although the national productive income had dropped by about £31,000,000 sineo 1929-30.
"If the costs that the business community have saved are only to be. taken away again by increased taxation. to sustain the irreducible administrative system that straddles this country like a. Colossus, then trade and industry must breathe their last.” said. Mr Bowden. These accumulated administrative costs are now clinging to our backs with the tenacity that the old man of the sea clung to the back of Sinbad. The wells of taxable income are running dry, and the weight of the present taxation cannot be eased until the administrative costs of the Government are reduced.”
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Hawera Star, Volume LI, 7 December 1931, Page 4
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380NEED FOR ECONOMY Hawera Star, Volume LI, 7 December 1931, Page 4
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