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VIII - FINANCIAL CRISIS OF 1841, 1842, AND 1843

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

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Summary

At the beginning of the third industrial period the commerce of New South Wales was increasing very rapidly, and, tested by the usual standards applied to such cases, the colony appeared to be in a very prosperous condition. The imports of 1839 exceeded in value those of 1838 by £650,000, and, in spite of the declining price of wool, the value of exports was increased by £146,000. But to a critical observer the character of the imports must have appeared significant of danger, for they consisted to a very considerable extent of articles of personal luxury. Carriages, jewellery, and, above all, wines and spirits, bulked largely amongst the imports, the value of which vastly exceeded that of the exports, the respective figures for 1839 being, imports £2,236,371 and exports £948,776. In after years it was customary to declaim against this import as an unmixed evil, but such was not the case, as a fair proportion represented a genuine gain to the country, being new capital sent out to Port Phillip, where settlement had begun in earnest in 1839. The prospects of the new colony appeared so attractive to English capitalists that they came in large numbers and purchased extensive areas for immediate occupation. The sale of land went on vigorously, and the proceeds of the sales, both at Port Phillip and in the older settlements, poured into the Treasury at Sydney, and made immigration on a large scale possible.

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Labour and Industry in Australia
From the First Settlement in 1788 to the Establishment of the Commonwealth in 1901
, pp. 473 - 502
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011
First published in: 1918

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