Abstract

Britain's Vanishing Farmer

Hobson, J. A. | June 18, 1930 issue

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The inability of farmers to make a decent living out of growing foods and raw materials is a world trouble. But it presses with special urgency upon Great Britain. It is no new trouble. For the past fifty years with a growing population England has been producing at home a continuously smaller proportion of the staple foods and raw materials which her climate makes it possible for her to raise. Since 1913 this tendency has been accelerated, notwithstanding the lesson afforded by the war of the perils of dependence upon overseas supplies.

See Also:

FARMERS; FOOD; AGRICULTURE; RAW materials; POPULATION; GREAT Britain
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