Special Agents Series, Issue 193U.S. Government Printing Office, 1920 - Commerce |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 21
Page 5
... extent , of the great forces at work in British industry that indicate the direction of development . Statistics have been excluded because the main pur- pose has been to explain the broader aspects of industrial tendencies , with their ...
... extent , of the great forces at work in British industry that indicate the direction of development . Statistics have been excluded because the main pur- pose has been to explain the broader aspects of industrial tendencies , with their ...
Page 10
... extent , acquired at immense cost , and requiring much readjustment before peace pro- duction could be made possible . DISPOSAL OF GOVERNMENT FACTORIES AND EQUIPMENT . On the date of the signing of the armistice there were 302 national ...
... extent , acquired at immense cost , and requiring much readjustment before peace pro- duction could be made possible . DISPOSAL OF GOVERNMENT FACTORIES AND EQUIPMENT . On the date of the signing of the armistice there were 302 national ...
Page 13
... extent of control that might be necessary to restore industry to a normal basis . To obtain information upon this subject , in both its domestic and imperial aspects , reports were asked from a number of organizations , some of which ...
... extent of control that might be necessary to restore industry to a normal basis . To obtain information upon this subject , in both its domestic and imperial aspects , reports were asked from a number of organizations , some of which ...
Page 16
... extent to which the United King- dom and the British Empire as a whole are dependent upon foreign countries * ** * for a number of raw materials which are not produced at all , or are produced on a scale altogether incommensurate with ...
... extent to which the United King- dom and the British Empire as a whole are dependent upon foreign countries * ** * for a number of raw materials which are not produced at all , or are produced on a scale altogether incommensurate with ...
Page 17
... extent : It is obvious that any tariff which is to be used to any considerable extent as a means of reciprocating the preferential treatment accorded by the British self - governing Dominions to the mother country , and as the basis for ...
... extent : It is obvious that any tariff which is to be used to any considerable extent as a means of reciprocating the preferential treatment accorded by the British self - governing Dominions to the mother country , and as the basis for ...
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Common terms and phrases
Advisory Council American announced appointed April April 24 armistice associations bill Board of Trade Britain British Empire BRITISH INDUSTRIES FAIR British industry British manufacturers buyers Cabinet cent Coal Industry Commission combinations considered cost of production cotton declared distribution district domestic dumping economic effect Electric Power Supply electroplate Empire engineering trades established exhibit exhibitors existing factories fair firms foreign German Government House of Commons imperial preference Imperial Trust import restrictions increase interests iron and steel labor large number licenses locomotives London machine machinery matter ment miners Minister Ministry of Munitions Ministry of Reconstruction mittee motor cars Munitions organization output owners Parliament patents plants possible Post-War Priority practice present problems proposed purchase quantities railway raw materials recommendations representatives result royalties shipbuilding standardization Subcommittee tariff tion trade-mark United Kingdom wages War Cabinet War Trade Department workers
Popular passages
Page 30 - Even upon the evidence already given, the present system of ownership and working in the coal industry stands condemned, and some other system must be substituted for it, either nationalization or a method of unification by national purchase and/or by joint control.
Page 30 - We are prepared however to report now that it is in the interests of the country that the colliery worker shall in the future have an effective voice in the direction of the mine. For a generation the colliery worker has been educated socially and technically. The result is a great national asset. Why not use it ? XVI.
Page 41 - much impressed ... by the very large number of relatively small firms that exist — each with a separate organization, separate establishment charges, separate buying and selling arrangements, and each producing a multiplicity of articles. Some of them seemed to take a special pride in the number of things they turned out.
Page 31 - The contracts of employment of workmen shall embody an undertaking to be framed by the District Mining Council to the effect that no workman will, in consequence of any...
Page 78 - We are satisfied that Trade Associations and Combines are rapidly increasing in this country, and may, within no distant period, exercise a paramount control over all important branches of British Trade.
Page 78 - Associations before us that one of the beneficial results of the formation of Associations sufficiently powerful to control and maintain prices in the Home market was that it enabled British manufacturers to extend their output by selling their products at a lower price, or even at a loss, in foreign markets.
Page 80 - To express the same idea in another way — the business of the Ministry is to be acquainted with all proposals for dealing with post-war problems which are under consideration by government departments or committees, or put forward by responsible bodies or persons, to study them in their bearings upon each other, to initiate proposals for dealing with matters which are not already covered and out of all this material to build up in consultation with the other Departments for submission to the Cabinet,...
Page 20 - ... the districts into which the country is to be divided. "3. The sites so chosen should be as large as possible, having in view the land available in suitable localities, and should have ample water and transport facilities. Land is required, not only for the power stations themselves — which for the sake of security and safety would have to be suitably subdivided, that is they would not be contained all in one building — but for the processes involved in the extraction of by-products from...
Page 78 - We consider that it is desirable that means should be provided whereby the fullest information as to the activities of trade associations may be made available to the public, and complaints may be promptly and thoroughly investigated, so that doubts and suspicions may be dispelled ; or, on the other hand, the true facts ascertained as to evils for which a remedy is required. We believe that it will be found necessary ultimately to establish further machinery for promptly and effectively dealing with...
Page 15 - In our opinion it is vital that the Empire should, so far as possible, 'be placed in a position which would enable it to resist any pressure which a foreign Power, or group of Powers, could exercise in time of peace or during war in virtue of a control of raw materials and commodities essential for the safety and well-being of the Empire, and it is towards the attainment of this object that co-ordinated effort should be directed.