Full text: The Demand for Empire butter

TABLE 11.—Percentage of Independent and Multiple Shops in each 
Area stocking Australian Butter. 
(Second Survey, July-September.) 
Independent .. 
Multiple .. 
All Shops 
9-4 A ; 3 o 
cd = = 3 & 
3 <= m9 o J = 
§ 3 13 2 = = 
= a B 13 > 8 5 
= Mw — : 
- TC 
2 
4 
o~ 
ry 
All 
; Areas. 
3 
Z 
- 
2 
Australian butter was most frequently found in branches of non- 
local multiple firms and in co-operative stores. 
During the First Survey, it was stocked by 10 per cent. of the shops 
visited ; in the Second Survey this number had dropped to 3 per cent. 
The drop was most marked in Birmingham. In most cases it was 
replaced by Irish, but some retailers in the North changed to one of 
the minor European butters. 
It will be seen from Tables 10 and 11 that Australian butter is 
considerably more popular in the Southern Areas than in the North. 
The largest percentage during the First Survey was in Birmingham, 
but the great majority of the shops there were selling only small 
quantities with a European butter as the chief line. In London, 
Australian butter was found in 16 per cent. of the shops, and in 
about half of these it was the main butter stocked. The Bristol and 
South Wales area was not surveyed until June when the Australian 
season was nearly over and thus the percentage recorded for that 
area is probably undulylow. The shops which were stocking Australian 
butter in the North generally sold it as a second line. 
New Zealand Butter. 
In 1929, the import of New Zealand butter was about 20 per cent. 
of the total imports of butter for the whole year, and about 13 per 
cent. of the total imports for the six months April-September. 
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