CRISIS OF 1840-3 17
before the veto of the British authorities was received or the
Crown Law Office could intervene. As for the landowners
Governor Gipps reported that ‘persons with colonial property
as the only wherewithal to meet engagements were drawn in
crowds to the insolvency court’. The condition of the newly-
arrived immigrants was a keen embarrassment to the govern-
ment, but far more pitiable was the lot of the town workers,
who were glad to take half a crown a day when work was pro-
curable.
It will be seen that the features of this crisis follow fairly
closely the orthodox sequence of events, but a closer examina.
tion will reveal how nearly the main features agree with the
movements we should be led to expect by the theory of inter-
national trade. Here was a community of small population,
wholly dependent upon primary industries, and drawing its
Dhecessary developmental capital from Great Britain alone.
The tendencies in finance and trade accord very fully with later
movements on a larger scale in Australia and in other countries
of recent settlement. It becomes of interest, therefore, to analyse
in greater statistical detail the conditions that pertained in
Australia for the decade between 1833 and 1843. In particular,
it becomes important to trace the effects on the monetary
system of the introduction of capital at a more rapid rate than
it could be absorbed; and to observe the trend of overseas
trade as a consequence of this expansion of capital. The small
volume of trade as compared with later years and the small
number of banks then operating do not in any way vitiate
comparison, butratherserve, by eliminating subsidiary elements,
to strengthen the conclusion that the same fundamental factors
have been affecting Australian prosperity from the early days
of settlement.
We may consider, first, the movement of commodities into
and out of Australia for the period, and the resulting trade
balance. The predominance of imports begins as early as 1828,
when the capital importations begin to be noticeable. By 1833
& swelling flood of imported commodities was Pouring into
the colonies in a volume far greater than could be turned
to economic uses. And each year thereafter saw a greater and
more rapid accretion to the flood which was already choking
the channels of trade. With the continuance of these conditions
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