Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv, Том 18,Часть 2

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Hoffman und Campe, 1922

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Стр. 99 - And while the soil bears on its surface all kinds of fruits which are known to cultivation, it has also underground numerous veins of all sorts of metals, for it contains much gold and silver, and copper and iron in no small quantity, and even tin and other metals, which are employed in making articles of use and ornament, as well as the implements and accoutrements of war.
Стр. 95 - Board was formed to control and develop Indian resources, with special reference to the needs created by the war, to limit and co-ordinate demands for articles not manufactured or produced in India, and to apply the manufacturing resources of India to war purposes with the special object of reducing demands on shipping.
Стр. 257 - Die Bewerbungsschriften sind in deutscher Sprache abzufassen. Sie dürfen den Namen des Verfassers nicht enthalten, sondern sind mit einem Wahlspruche zu versehen. Der Name des Verfassers ist in einem versiegelten Zettel zu verzeichnen, der aussen denselben Wahlspruch trägt. Die Einsendung der Bewerbungsschriften muss spätestens bis zum 1.
Стр. 94 - ... and a variety of odds and ends are made in some shops, but the basis of their manufacture and the limited scale of production do not enable them to compete with imported goods of similar character to the extent of excluding the latter. Agriculturists' and planters' tools such as ploughs, mamooties, spades, shovels and pickaxes are mainly imported as well as the hand tools of improved character used in most cottage industries, including wood-working tools, healds and reeds, shuttles and pickers....
Стр. 100 - Were India wholly isolated from the rest of the world, or were her mineral productions protected from competition, there cannot be the least doubt that she would be able, from within her own boundaries, to supply very nearly all the requirements, in so far as the mineral world is concerned, of a highly civilised community. But the consumer would probably have to pay more than ho does at the present day" '"Industrial Handbook," published by the Indian Munitions Board, p, 123.
Стр. 95 - Until they are brought into existence on an adequate scale, Indian capitalists will, in times of peace, be deprived of a number of profitable enterprises; whilst in the event of...
Стр. 94 - ... million and electric fans by tens of thousands. India relies on foreign supplies for steel springs and iron chains, and for wire ropes, a vital necessity of her mining industry. We have already pointed out the absence of any manufacture of textile machinery, and with a few exceptions, even of textile-mill accessories. The same may be said of the equipment of nearly all industrial concerns. The list of deficiencies includes all kinds of machine tools, steam engines, boilers, oil and gas engines,...
Стр. 100 - Speaking generally, tho value of the majority of the deposits is relative to external circumstances. Were India wholly isolated from the rest of the world, or were her mineral productions protected from competition, there cannot be the least doubt that she would be able, from within her own boundaries, to supply very nearly all the requirements, in so far as the mineral world is concerned, of a highly civilised community.
Стр. 99 - Writing in 1881 in the introduction to his "Economic Geology of India" V. Ball thus commented on the passage quoted above : — " To many it may appear that it was a fanciful and fabulous India, very different from the country as it is now known to us. To such the facts set forth in this work not only as to the extent of the mineral resources, but also as to the extent of the ancient mining operations, will come almost as a revelation. " Speaking generally, the value of the majority of the deposits...
Стр. 95 - The political and economic conditions of India," wrote the Industrial Commission, " have created a large export and import trade ; and this trade has brought about the present industrial position." Unrestricted freedom of importation is responsible in no small measure for the industrial backwardness of India. It largely explains the shyness of Indian capital for modern enterprises. There was never any lack of capital in India, r but Indian capital was chiefly invested in agriculture and a few manufacturing...

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