FOREIGN TRADE 3 cial and commercial world. Her bankers and shippers, merchants and manufacturers, with one accord grasped the opportunity that presented itself then and have held the su premacy thus gained for more than a century. Perhaps it was the recollection of what gave Great Britain her start in this field which led the London Spectator to remark, at the outbreak of war in 1914: “The present war gives the United King dom an excellent opportunity to capture the export and import trade of Germany and Aus tria-Hungary.” If England, engaged in the most desperate and expensive war she or the civilized world ever has known, with her enormous resources taxed to their utmost, saw an “opportunity” for trade expansion, how much greater is the chance in this line for an absolutely neutral power, populated with keen business men, and provided by Nature with unparalleled produc tive possibilities; The war in Europe developed the most re markable business situation for the United