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DUTY ON CEREALS.
. o— (From the New Zealand Mail.) The proposal of the Government to impose an inij' v t duty on flour and grain is one whi '» lias very naturally received the appvo\.;l of the people of Canterbury, and tho disapprobation of those of Auckland and Westland. We may say at once that we do not feel called upon to support the proposal because it has been made by the present Ministry, nor to consider the principle involved from either a Canterbury or a Westland standing point. We look upon a bread tax, imposed exclusively for revenue purposes, as the most odious and least defensible of all imposts. In our opinion a tax on imported cereals can only be defended on protective principles, or as a temporary expedient to meet a temporary and exceptional state of affairs, which has ansen in part, though not exclusively, from the legislation that has taken place in Australia relative to the same subject. The New Zealand farmer naturally assumes that it would be a suicidal policy to permit grain to be imported free of duty from Australia, so long as Australia continued to levy a duty on grain the produce of New Zealand. The political economist I on the other hand asserts that such a fact should not be taken into the reckoniug; that we should buy our flour and grain in the cheapest market, and I that if we get them from Australia, that I country must take commodities, the produce of New Zealand, in exchange. This assertion is a onesided truth, and whether wholly true or wholly false, it does not meet the views and objections regarding this policy entertained by the agriculturists of this colony They consider, if a cargo of wheat is imported into Australia from New Zealand, say in virtual exchange for a cargo of wheat imported into New Zealand from Australia, that the transaction, however profitable it may prove to commission agents and shippers, can be of no possible advaniage to the great body of producers and consumers of either country ; and that so long as a duty is imposed on New Zealand grain in Australia, the farmers of the two countries cannot enter the commerce market upon equal terms. Without entering into the discussion of this question of reciprocity, which, in the opinion of the economists, involves as great a fallacy as that of protection, we are prepared to maintain that it has been too hastily assumed that protective duties must necessarily, and for all time, have the effect of increasing the price of the domestic article. They would not have this effect in the long run to any appreciable degree provided natural facilities existed for the home production of the commodities upon which import duiies were lened. We think it has also been too hustily assumed that a duty on imported grain would only benefit the graingrower at the expense of every other class in the community ; for it would really directly benefit all classes dependent on the agricultural class for support, and indirectly more or less every individual member of the community. Moreover, when it operates as a protective duty, and not as a source of revenue, it enables those whose prosperity is thereby promoted to consume more largely dutiable articles, and this indirectly augments the revenue. But when it operates solely as a revenue duty it diminishes to that extent the fund expended on otherdutiable articles, and so far defeats the object for which it was imposed. A duty on breadstuffs can only be defended on protectionist principled. Any tax which will encourage production, and stimulate the industrial energies of the people, must necessarily tend to augment the naiional wealth, and for that reason can be easily borne. Any tax which will not do this, and which is only imposed for revenue purposes, may have the very opposite effects, and in proportion that it does, it is felt, however small, to be oppressive. But a revenue duty imposed on imported breadstulfs is highly objectionable on other grounds. Such a way of obtaining a revenue runs altogether in | the wrong direction. The customs revenue, without a large and permanent increase in the population, has already reached its limita. Whether the truth be recognised or not, the time has arrived when absentees, mortgagees, and the monied and property classes generallymust contribute their fair share of the public burdens. Moreover, the most popular defence urged on behalf of import duties completely breaks down if imposed on the absolute necessaries of life. "When imposed upon luxuries, and upon articles not indispensible, they do in effect constitute a aperies of voluntary taxation. He who chooses to go without the taxed article is not obliged to pay the tax. But obviously this is not the case as regards a duty on breadstuffs. The admission of breadstuffs and raw materials generally, into a country duty free, is justly considered as a most effectual means of protecting home manufactures from the evils of foreign competition. When viewed in this light, a duty on imported cereals appears still more indefensible. Yet we are disposed to think that under tho very exceptional circumstances which at present exist in this colony, exceptional treatment is required. New Zealand does not require an import duty on grain in order to encourage its home production, which is the object for which protective duties are levied ; but it requires tho imposition of these duties in order to encourage its home consumption in preference to the foreign grown article. In truth some temporary, artißcial, legislative expedient is required to divert the grain trade of Canterbury and Otago into what would prove its most natural. and effective channels. We know of no better expedient for this purpose than the one proposed by the Government. This had not come on for discussion when the foregoing remarks were written.
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Bibliographic details
Wellington Independent, Volume XXVI, Issue 3327, 24 October 1871, Page 3
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977DUTY ON CEREALS. Wellington Independent, Volume XXVI, Issue 3327, 24 October 1871, Page 3
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DUTY ON CEREALS. Wellington Independent, Volume XXVI, Issue 3327, 24 October 1871, Page 3
Using This Item
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.