INDUSTRY IN DOMINION.
EVIDENCES OF PROSPERITY
FINANCE MINISTER’S REVIEW.
Per Press Association. WELLINGTON, Nov. 14. Rt. Hon. J. G. Coates, in an address to the conference of the New Zealand Manufacturers’ Federation this morning, referred to criticism levelled against the Government as a result of the Ottawa Agreement. He said lie thought tlie criticism from both sides cancelled each other out. He quoted the railway and Post Office Havings Bank figures to show that conditions in New Zealand were improving. The recent increase in spending power had shown itself in the almost phenomenal figures for the registration of new motor vehicles. The unemployment figures also showed a substantial improvement in the September quarter, giving a drop of nearly 14,000 as compared with 1933. , , Both exports and imports had shown an increase. Imports had exceeded exports for July, August and September of the present year, which was significant of the return to normal.
Tlie banking turnover in the first ten months of 1934 was £563,000,000 as compared with £466,000,000 in 1933. That indicated greater business activity. Bank advances since August had also increased.
In spite of the improvement in the unemployment position, continued Mr Coates, there was still every reason for concern that affected the manufacturers very directly. Already he had suggested in a tentative way that manufacturers should examine the bearing of tlie length of working time on the problem. Hie realised that many difficulties were involved, but it deserved patient examination to see whether and how far They could be overcome. New Zealand had no reason to be ashamed of the steps which had been taken towards economic adjustment. . STATE IN BUSINESS.
Nowadays, from all sides they heard the complaint of too much Government participation in business, as though the Government desired to extend its activities. He, therefore, wished to emphasise that the Government did not desire to extend its activitieSj but that any Government intervention in business life was brought about by pressure of circumstances.
Referring to the statement that New Zealand should insist on a higher standard of general education for children, Mr Coates said that if a higher age for entry into industrial employment would help to cure unemployment, or if the manufacturers could agree among themselves as to the necessity for this step, they could rest assured that every consideration would be given to cases where assistance was necessary against the competition of goods produced under less favourable conditions. COST OF PRODUCTION. In New Zealand there were many manufacturing lines which we should be able to produce as cheaply and efficiently as other manufacturing countries. The New Zealand manufacturer had at hand a market of at least one and a-half million people, all consumers, but had to guard against overdevelopment of productive capacity. The moral for New Zealand was that over-capitalisation must be avoided. New Zealand had over-capitalised by multiplying the number of small factories so that many were not running to full capacity. The Government should not be asked to protect those; it was the duty of the industry itself to eliminate high costs for producers and give the consumers the benefit of the lowered overhead costs in lower prices. There were many concerns in New Zealand which were individually efficient, yet the industry as a whole could he regarded as an uneconomic one because larger units were possible and necessary. The Government was willing to meet the manufacaurers when it could bo shown that their proposals would not only assist themselves but conduce to the material welfare of New Zealand, Mr Coates added.
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume LIV, Issue 198, 14 November 1934, Page 10
Word Count
590INDUSTRY IN DOMINION. Manawatu Standard, Volume LIV, Issue 198, 14 November 1934, Page 10
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