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FARMING IN ENGLAND.

IN DEPLORABLE ST/.TE. BAD MARKETING. “Farming in England is In a most deplorable condition, and I make that statement advisedly,” said Mr H. J. Harris, of Palmerston North, who has recently returned from a trip to the Old Country. Mr Harris paints a far from reassuring picture of the position of the primary producer in England at the present day. On the Lincolnshire wolds, where his relatives had farmed for centuries, he stated that farmers were unable to obtain even a reasonable price for their produce. He knew of one instance where a farmer had been compelled to sell 900 tons of the best potatoes for £3 a ton when the minimum price which would have given him a return was £7. An even more striking instance cited by Mr Harris was that of a farmer who had sold a 561 b bag of cabbages for 4d. These cabbages had been handled by several middlemen and had finally been retailed to the consumer at 4d each. Lack cf Co-operation. These were only two of the Innumerable instances in which the English farmer was suffering from the lack of a co-operative marketing system. There was absolutely no system of marketing farm produce, and the result was that the farmer had to accept whatever was offered him, and the middlemen reaped the profits. The incomprehensive part of the position was the fact that there were thousands of people in the Midlands anxious to buy potatoes and other farm produce at reasonable prices, while at the same time thousands of tons of potatoes were being used for manure by the farmer who would rather put them back into the soil than sacrifice them at the prices offered. “It is inexplicable,” said Mr Harris, "when one considers that in New Zealand, with dearer land, dearer labour,, and very distant markets, we can sUll beat the English primary producer in his own country." “England has lost sight of the fact that she is still able to produce almost enough foodstuffs for her own requirements and has concentrated, to the exclusion of all else, upon the manufacturing aspects.” Mr Harris stated that farm produce of all descriptions was being imported into England from abroad while at the same time the farmers of the Old Country could not bring ends within a reasonable prospect of meeting. The Department of Agriculture was investigating the serious position In an endeavour to find some remedy, and Mr Harris inclined to the opinion that the | present Labour Government was fully ; alive to the situation. In his own opinion the immediate remedy lay in the organisation of a co-operative marketing system which would enable farmers to obtain a fair price for their produce. i

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT19291009.2.119

Bibliographic details

Waikato Times, Volume 106, Issue 17837, 9 October 1929, Page 13

Word Count
455

FARMING IN ENGLAND. Waikato Times, Volume 106, Issue 17837, 9 October 1929, Page 13

FARMING IN ENGLAND. Waikato Times, Volume 106, Issue 17837, 9 October 1929, Page 13