Australia:
Our Neighbor Down UnderThe
Industrial ProblemWith federation it became
possible to adopt a nation-wide policy of encouraging the development of
manufacturing industries and soon high tariffs became the accepted creed of the
chief political parties. National pride favored the policy. “Australia for
the Australians!” meant little if Australians could not buy their own products.
What good was it to be politically free and independent if they were still hewers
of wood and drawers of water for others? “Shall Australia be a sheep-run
or a nation?” asked the highly nationalistic Sydney Bulletin, and
continued: “To live on the back of a merino sheep is comparatively easy,
but it is not inspiring.” To live in the shadow of a factory smokestack
evidently was. During the first World
War self-sufficiency was justified on the grounds of defense. At most times Labor
was ready to support a high tariff on the ground that it made possible the preservation
of a high standard of living. The products of the “sweatshops” of
Europe or of Asiatics who lived on the proverbial “handful of rice”
must be excluded. This argument could not very well be applied against the high-wage
products of North America; at that point therefore the plea might be shifted to
the folly of letting the products of mighty American trusts come in, to the madness
of “sending money” out of the country to furnish employment for people
in other lands, or even to the silliness of buying anything abroad which could
be made in Australia, irrespective of price. Next:
The Labor Problem |