The Conservative (Nebraska City, Neb.) 1898-1902, February 21, 1901, Page 4, Image 4
The Conservative * . AUSTRALIAN FAILURES. PART I. The accounts givou by Sir Charles Dilke , Mr. H. De R. Walker , Mr. H. D. Lloyd , and a host of minor writers , of the working of the Australasian experi ments in state railways , irrigation works , banks , loans to farmers , and state life insurance , liave had various serious defects. They have failed to make proper allowance for the fact that dur ing the greater part of the period of the state's branching out into industrial and commercial enterprises , wages and profits in Australasia depended not upon the resources of soil and climate , nor upon the efficiency with which the public enterprises were conducted , but upon the rate at which money borrowed upon public and private account flowed in from Great Britain. They have failed also to note the significance of the con centration of the people in the capital cities , the problem of the unemployed in the capital cities , and the practical failure of the railways to aid in putting the surplus city population on the land. They have failed to see that the experi ment of state railways would have broken down long since if the cessation of the prosperity produced by the inflow of'foreign capital had not been followed by the practical cessation of immigra tion , and a rapid falling off in the mar riage rate and birth rate. In the case of New Zealand they have failed entirely to note that the recovery made in the last few years has been due altogether to private enterprise ; the de velopment of the export trade in foreign mutton , and the admirable transporta tion facilities afforded by the large fleet of coast vessels. They have overlooked the significance of the fact that the state railways , built at a cost of 16,400,000 , in 1898 carried only 2,518,000 tons , whereas the vessels that cleared coast wise and entered coastwise had a tonnage capacity of 5,900,000 tons. Costliness of Experiment. Finally , the writers in question have failed entirely to draw attention to the costliness of the Australasian experi ments in public trading. Of late years the people of Victoria , 1,200,000 in num ber , have had to raise each year by taxes between 700,000 and 800,000 for the purpose of paying interest on bonds issued for railways and other ventures that do not pay for themselves ; the people of New South Wales have had to raise about 500,000 a year for similar purposes ; and in South Australia the annual burden of interest not earned amounts to 1 per man , woman and child. In New Zealand , with a popu lation of 780,000 people , the deficit in the railway department for the last ton years lias averaged 212,000 a year. Obviously , the taxpayer must bear the cost of state investments which fail either in part or wholly to pay for them- selves. Money must be raised to pay off the principal which represents un profitable ventures ; the alternative is the perpetual payment of the interest , which has not been earned. In this re spect public industrial ventures differ from private ones. For the. losses con sequent upon misdirected investments made by private individuals or stock companies are borne in part by the lender. For example , in 1890 the indebtedness of the Australasian colonies to Great Britain on account of borrow ings by private individuals and joint stock companies amounted to 115,000- 000 ; by 1897 that indebtedness had been reduced to 85,000,000. A comparatively small part of the shrinkage was due to the withdrawal of British capital , but by far the greater part must be at tributed to the fact that large sums had been written off as irrecoverable. More than that , the British investor had lent his money with the expectation of an average interest return of five or six per cent. Yet , in 1897 , he was receiving on an average only 8 % per cent upon that part of his capital which had not been wiped out. Australasia as a community of busi ness men had been relieved of some 80,000,000 indebtedness , and upon the rest of what it had borrowed it was pay ing such interest as it could. On the other hand , Australasia as a group of states , in 1890 , had borrowed some 215,000,000 , and had agreed to pay therefor on an average of 4.08 per cent interest. A considerable part of the money hod been misspent , and in 1898 was yielding little or no return. ' But in this case the entire loss had to be borne by the taxpayer. The British investor in Australasian state funds continued to receive the stipulated interest on the full sum advanced. Recent Industrial History. The following account of the resources of Australasia , and of the recent indus trial and commercial history of that country , will enable the reader to judge for himself whether the conditions war rant the rose-colored and superficial accounts of matters Australasian which have been put before him in the past. Australasia is eminently a pastoral country ; primarily because about one- 'half of the habitable area is unfit for agriculture ; secondarily , because it lacks a population willing to go upon the land. In the year 1896-97 the value of the pro duce of the pastoral industries was thirty per cent of the value of the product of all industries , oven though three suc cessive years of drought had reduced the number of sheep from 125,000,000 in 1891 to 104,000,000 in 1897. In the same year agriculture yielded twenty per cent of the total production ; while dairy farming and the mining industries yielded respectively ten per cent and twelve. The remaining industries , TT which yielded one-quarter of the total product of Australasia , were subsidiary to the industries already enumerated. They supplied the people with the com modities which all countries must supply locally ; and represented in addition , some manufacturing , such as the appli cation of protective duties will bring forth oven in sparsely settled countries. Of the mining of iron ore there was none. Nor , by conseqxience , was there any of that kind of manufacturing which depends on the production of pig iron and steel. Wheat covers more than half the area in cultivation , and yields on an average about ten bushels an acre. In the United States and the Argentine Re public , on the other hand , the average yield is respectively twelve bushels and thirteen. The former of these countries , also , is less subject to drought than is Australasia. Wheat raised in the United States , if exported , must be hauled by rail some ten to fifteen hundred miles. In Australia , on the other hand , the maximum haul is little over two hundred miles while in the Argentine it is still less. The advantage of Aiastralia over the United States in the matter of length of haul by rail thus far , however , has been neutralized by the excessively high charges upon the Australian rail ways. To ship wheat a distance of two hundred miles over the railways of Victoria , or a distance of three hundred miles over those of New South Wales , in 1899 , for example , cost as much as to ship wheat from Chicago to Liverpool. Finally , the Australian farmer thus far has been handicapped by a comparative scarcity of farm labor , arising out of a restricted immigration coupled with a government policy of making work for unskilled labor on public works at eight hours a day and a minimum wage dictated by trade unions. Public opinion is so strongly in favor of the continua tion of this condition of things that the comparative dearth of farm labor must be deemed a permanent factor , almost as much so , as is the relative inferiority of the soil. So far then as competition in the world's wheat market is concern ed , Australia enjoys no particular advantage , and may be said , even , to be at some disadvantage. On the other hand'it has at last come to be admitted , even in Australia , that the only means of correcting the present abnormal dis tribution of the population between the capital cities and the country lies in the extension of agricultural operations. The pastoral and mining industries have not sufficient margin for expansion to be'able to aid materially in the prob lem of putting the people on the land. Manufacture for export is out of the question in a thinly populated country with only meagre deposits of coal and no deposits of iron. There remains then , only the tilling of the soil for export. Some progress has been made