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Transactions of RHASS Volume 1940 - Page 010

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Year 1940
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OCR Text 8 THE EFFECTS OF THE WAR ON AGRICULTURE.
PRODUCTION AND IMPORTS or HUMAN FOOD AND ANIMAL
FEEDING-STUFFS TO THE UNITED KINGDOM, 1937-38.
pggiilcid Imported. Total.
H mnan. Foods.
Thous. tons. Thous. tons. Thous- tons.
“'heat (as flour) . . 767 3,197 3,964
Sugar . . . . 469 1,618 2,087
Butter . . . . 45 472 517
Cheese . . . . 37 146 183
Eggs . . . . 409 190 599
Milk, condensed. . . 188 103 291
Beef and mutton . . 918 1,007 1,925
Bacon and ham . . 151 325 476
Fruit and nuts . . . 661 1,948 2,609
Milk, fresh . . . 4,556 . . 4,556
Vegetables . . . 1,871 1 644 2,515
Potatoes . . . . 4,400 145 4,545
Other cereals . . . 128 237 365
Miscellaneous . . . I 437 921 1,358
Total . . . 15,037 10,953 25,990
. Thous. tons Thous. tons Thous. tons
0071 cent/Tat“ for Animals- dry matter. dry matter. dry matter.
Grain, milling offal . . l 2,29] 6,579 8,870
Oil cake . . . . . . 1,573 1,573
Miscellaneous (meat meal,
molasses, &c.) . . 250 390 640
Total . . . 2,541 8,542 11,083
The table does not include grass and home-produced fodder
crops, which amount to between 25 and 30 million tons per
annum. Reckoned in bulk, home-produced foods and feeding-
stuffs exceed imports, but bulk is not a true indication of
the relative amounts of food. Speaking broadly, the bulky
foods, such as potatoes, liquid milk, and vegetables and
fodder crops, are produced at home, and the more concentrated
foods, such as wheat, sugar, fats, butter and cheese, and
concentrates for animal feeding, are imported. If we take
the true index—via, the calorie or unit of food value—home
production is estimated to provide somewhere between 32
and 35 per cent of our total supply.
It takes about 20 million tons of shipping out of a total
1 This figure is an estimate of the Food (Defence Plans) Department for the
years 1934-36. It is impossible to give an exact figure because there are no
returns for vegetables grown in gardens and allotments.
a rear
14.
«Adiivsait 1%: w < 1
THE EFFECTS OF THE WAR ON AGRICULTURE. 9
‘ ' ons er annum to import our food and feeding-
231%.“??th tlib Navy has been successful m_enab11ng
imports to be maintained, with the exceptlon of feeding-stuffs.
These are uneconomical to import on account of the-blg
shipping space required in terms of the human food they;E
produce. The following table shows the number of lbs. 0
feeding-stuffs required to produce 1 1b. of human food, both
reckoned as dry matter. The figures are only approxrmate,
because efficiency in transforming food depends upon the
rate of production or the rate of growth of the animal :—
Milk cow 5 1b-
Pig n
Hen . 15 H
Beef cattle 20 n
Immediately the war broke there was a shortage of feeding-
stuffs. This is likely to continue, because it IS obwously
more economical of shipping space to import the finished
product than to import feeding-stuffs. _ .
If the shipping position should become serlous, either
through sinking ships or through ships being required for
importing war materials, imports W111 be more and more
restricted to foods which have a high food value per'unlt
shipping space, and if, as will be the case if the war continues
for a number of years, we must exercise the utmost economy
in using foreign credits, imports W111 more and more be
restricted to the foods which are cheapest to purchase abroad.
The following table shows the relative storage space, food
value, and approximate cost per 100,000 calories of the main
foods we import :—
Aggg-gbgggv- Avtlt‘é’f'til‘élsg? §fi§?,%§§%?§233
‘CUb' “3' per ton‘ celliliiidifirgcsuptiicfd.’ dgdlgistrizs.
Wheat (bulk) . . . E 50 56 5/5
Sugar . . . . l 45 83 4/3
Fats and tallow (in barrel) . l 80 118 8/4
Dried fruits . . . 50 55 21/—
Butter . l 55 143 27/3
Cheese . . . . 1 60 56 39/4
Bacon . . . . 110 39 35/9
Frozen beef 95 26 40/2
Eggs in shell 120 12 74/5
It is seen that wheat, sugar, and fats are the cheapest foods
and those which occupy the smallest shipping space per unit
value. If, as Keynes the economist has suggested, we should
come down to a national iron ration, these are the three foods
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Title Transactions of RHASS Volume 1940 - Page 010