THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD OF NEW ZEALAND FINANCE.
_ — «. ■ An article on New Zealand finance which appeared in this journal a short time ago appears to have made so
much irapressiou on Sir Julias Yogel that he though it necessary to reply to it in the coarse of an elaborate speech recently delivered at Auckland. Some of the local journals, it appears, had sailed attention to our criticisms " approvingly," and that was too much for the Treasurer. The citizens of Auckland were accordingly invited to meet him in the Theatre Royal, which, we are told, was " tilled to its utmost capacity " with ladies and gentlemen." The scene was theatrical in every sense. " The house was packed from floor to ceiling, and as the curtain rose and Sir Julius Yogel, proceeded by bis Worship the Mayor, wheeled himself forward to the table, be was received with cheers." But although the assembled ladies and gentlemen of Auckland had their celebrated financier before them, prepared to "unfold another sensational '• policy " and to demolish bis critics at the same time, the meeting does not appear to have l>een at all enthusiastic. There w*g nothing, indeed, in the Treasurer's speech to arouse any feeling of enthusiasm. It was apologetic in tone from beginning to end. He virtually admitted the failure of the great I sorrow ing policy he bad inaugurated 15 years ago ; but of coarse he came with explanations in the one band and consolations in the other. An enormous* debt had been incurred for railway construction ; but the railways contemplated by him bad not been constructed, the money having been diverted to other and less productive purposes. Bat said the hopeful Treasurer, " you must not look at the question of your total debt as it stands now. The adage tells you there ia no use in crying over •• spilt milk." This was not all. Agricultural settlement bid not made as much progress as it ought to have done ; small farmers were plunged in debt and needed "small loans" from the State; while large estates were apparently growing larger every day. Intense depression had afflicted the producing interests of the South Island, and its population was fast slipping away. Something, clearly, must be done. Were the.y to stop borrowing-, or to goon borrowing? As the Treasurer put it — "Are you going to leave this Colony to be the prey of a few large owners, the great mass of the people praying only to find their way to some other Colony? That is the question before you ; that is the question the Colony will have to decide." The picture as drawn by Sir Julias Yogel, in his eftorts to carry the Auckland electors with him, was still more darkly coloured than that which we bad painted, and of which he thought it; necessary to complain ; but the depth of its shading cannot be realised from the mere outline we have given. The speech abounds in revelations for which we were hardly prepared, and which tend tv show that the position of affairs is much less bopefal than it appeared to be. It is startling to learn, on bis own authority, not only that the great borrowiug policy of 1870 had proved a failure in its essenthl features, but that the failure itself was due to causes over which the Government could exercise no more control in the future than they had done in the past Still more startling is it to learn that, in face of these deplorable r< -stilts, Sir Jnhns is now urging the Auckland electors to support him in another policy of the same kind, even more impracticable and nn promising than the first. The secret of this reckless dealing with the prospects of the Colony may be easily explained. Sir Julius was placed in office a short time ago by the Otago and Canterbury votes for the avowed purpose of initiating another borrowing policy. The South Island, formerly the most prosperous part of the Colony, has for years past been suffering from extreme depression of trade in all its branches. So far, however, from being warned by the results of the original policy, the South resolved to have another era of inflated prosperity at any cost ; and accordingly the construction of two great lines of railways — the Otago j Central and the East and West Coast lines — is regarded there as the only means of averting ruin. But the people of Auckland — which of late years has enjoyed a large share of prosperity owing to its commercial interests — naturally look upon those lines as very doubtful speculations, and nearly all the Auckland members in the House of Representatives are opposed to their construction. The division of opinion on this subject between North and South is strongly marked. Tp secure his Government in office the Treasurer finds it necessary to secure the Auckland votes, and hence the speech to which we have referred. But as votes cannot be obtained without some equivalent, the Treasurer came prepared with one in the shape of a proposal for securing th« construction of the North Islaud Trunk railway from Wellington to Auckland. A loan for the construction of that line has been voted, but it seems there is imminent danger — especially while the Auckland members are in opposition — of the money being expended on other purposes, as in other cases. A cuiious specimen of finance as it pre vails in New Zealand appears in the following passage : "I have provisionally arranged in such a manner that we shall be able to Iwrrow on short dated debentures until October next, in anticipation of the loan ; so that % will be possible, if Parliament meets' early and chooses to take the step, to avoid negotiating that loan except as required for the express purpose for which it is intended ; and it will be further posssible for us by legislation so to ear mark a loan that in future it cannot be expended for other purposes than those for which it was intended.'' We wonder what opinion would h%
formed by English capitalists of the singular system of finance levealed in tlm sentence. A loau voted by Parliament for a specified purpose may be appropriated to purposes never dreamt of when the Act was passed. Sir Julius evidently has his doubts about the morale of this proceeding, and in order to satisfy the Ancklanders that they will not i»e stripped of their Trunk loan as soon as it is negotiated, he proposes to "earmark" it like a sheep, to prevent its diversion to other purposes. Sir George Grey, we observe, does not seem to think much of this ingenious process. He referred to it in a very irreverent manner at a public meeting which he addressed a few days after the Treasurer's speech was delivered. '• We are told that loans are to be ear marked. Nonsense! Do yon believe that if an Act was passed now, and yon were told thai ; the loan had been ear marked, a Minister who had a majority in the House and who was anxious to hold office at any cost, if he found by cut- ! ting off the ear and setting rid of it, he would not do so ? Do you not think he would soiae the loan and clip both j ears? off?" It must be confess hJ that the probability lies in that direction, so that the Auckland Trunk loan lies in jeopardy and is likely to remain so. Its ultimate disposal may depend not so much on the ear mark as on the voting of the Auckland members.
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Inangahua Times, Volume XI, Issue 1685, 31 March 1886, Page 2
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1,266THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD OF NEW ZEALAND FINANCE. Inangahua Times, Volume XI, Issue 1685, 31 March 1886, Page 2
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