BRITISH EXPORT TRADE.
SHRINKAGE IN QUANTITIES.
THE AUSTRALIAN DEADLOCK.
Australian and N.Z. Cable Association. (Repd. 8.30 p.m.) LONDON, Nov. 16.
The Tariff Commission, in a memorandum dealing with quantities.- rather than values of . British exports, emphasises that a decline is revealed compared with exports before the war. Mr. Stanley Machin, president of the London Chamber of Commerce, in a interview, stated that the shrinkage affected both the Dominions and foreign trade. The prohibition of shipments of gold from Australia had created an unfortunate state of affairs in the Anglo-Australian market, and had the effect of holding up an enormous number of Australian orders. If the present conditions were not remedied early Australian trade would be seriously injured.
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LVII, Issue 17631, 18 November 1920, Page 7
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117BRITISH EXPORT TRADE. New Zealand Herald, Volume LVII, Issue 17631, 18 November 1920, Page 7
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