The Nineteenth Century and After, Volume 108Leonard Scott Publishing Company, 1930 |
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Pagina 191
... Britain , steadily and automatically increased in weight because of constantly falling prices . Many people consider that these factors suffice to account for the post - war decline of the iron and steel industry in Great Britain , and ...
... Britain , steadily and automatically increased in weight because of constantly falling prices . Many people consider that these factors suffice to account for the post - war decline of the iron and steel industry in Great Britain , and ...
Pagina 196
... Britain will not increase the competition of foreign producers elsewhere in the export market , and will therefore have no effect on British exports of British steel . If this assumption should prove incorrect , if shutting the door ...
... Britain will not increase the competition of foreign producers elsewhere in the export market , and will therefore have no effect on British exports of British steel . If this assumption should prove incorrect , if shutting the door ...
Pagina 202
... Britain's position is more favourable is shown both by the distribution of the world's steel industry as a whole and by her own natural advantages . In round figures the world at the present consumes 120,000,000 tons of steel a year ...
... Britain's position is more favourable is shown both by the distribution of the world's steel industry as a whole and by her own natural advantages . In round figures the world at the present consumes 120,000,000 tons of steel a year ...
Inhoudsopgave
THE AFRICAN LABOURER IN 1929 By W Benson | 15 |
8ཨཽ 8 | 45 |
WHAT IS WRONG WITH CRICKET? By G J V Weigall | 92 |
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