170 BANKING AND BORROWING POLICIES IN
leads to the conclusion that the transition from the ascension to
the declension stage of the latest of our borrowing cycles was
taking place after 1922; and that to the persistent pressure of
the interest burden, as much as to the general world depression
in trade, was due the lack of resilience in Australian business
conditions. Further, it is clearly evident that, in relation to
Te
fm
60
50
40
30
2. i
0
INVERSE
4
a
Fre
Sm
ri:
1915 1017 foig_ 1921 1923 1925 1927 1929
Fra. XV. NEW LOANS AND ANNUAL INTEREST
Smoothed 5-year moving-average shown heavy. '
loans, the discrepancy between ‘receipts’ and ‘expenditure’, i.e.
the difference between the amount of new loans and the interest
on the existing debt, has been steadily growing ever since, thus
increasing both the necessity for economy and the incentive for
national effort to bridge the discrepancy. That the unhealthy
condition of indebtedness has merely been exacerbated by the
operation of other factors, such as static productivity and the
adoption of ambitious social and building schemes that could
not be justified on the score of either urgency or reproductive
sapacity, cannot reasonably be open to doubt.
A thorough and comprehensive examination of the national
debt in all its aspects still awaits the patient attention of the
economist, notwithstanding the very valuable work that has