31 % oe 2 y eo GC 1 ie 0 C Ss + e reehold as such, and if, for some reason, there must be taxation of free-10ld and ‘not leasehold land, the obections which we feel to the present system might in great measure be removed by granting very long leases, ay, 9%-year leases, at fixed rents, vith no reappraisement and consejuent liability to increase of rent luring the 99 years, and with full compensation for unexhausted imsrovements at the end. But this omes very near to freehold, which we are inclined to think is really the sounder system. 10. Turning to the question of the size of the area which one person (inluding in that term a partnership >r company) should be allowed to hold, we found that the mind of the Governnent and, indeed, the minds of many men who, having regard to their personal interests, might be expected to take the opposite view, are fixed on the dea of getting as many people as possible directly on to the land, and not on the idea of making the maximum possible economic use of the land, that is to say, of getting the maximum of wealth production from it Conse quently, when the leases of large areas ‘all in, the Government asks itself what ig a living area, i.e., what is the minimum area on which a man ought :0 be able to make a decent living. The land is then subdivided accord-‘ngly. In past years it was unloubtedly subdivided into too small areas, and people overcame the diffity to some extent at least by ‘ dummying * and aggregation. Tor :xample, a man would take one area n his own name, ‘another in his wife’s, another in his brother’s, and 30 on. Things are hetter now, and the “living area’ thas now come to be about 20,000 to 60,000 acres, according to the locality, i.e., an area carrying, say, 6,000 sheep (there are many who think that it should he increased to an area carrying, say, 10,000 sheep), but the idea of the ‘living area ”’ and of the maximum number of people who can be got directly on to the land governs it all. There may be insuperable political difficulties in the way of much larger areas, but there is a considerable body of opinion that such ireas properly handled by persons of wdequate capital mean a higher class f sheep and more wealth production, soth in point of quantity of wool per were and of quality of wool, than could re got from the same area split up nto a number of ‘living areas.” Large areas are more econcmical in he matter of overhead expenses, yuildings, shearing sheds, machinery ind the like, than a number of small es. 11. Inasmuch as Australia so largely lepends upon wool production it seems >bvious that the most economical use of the land suitable for it would be hat best calculated to promote the vealth, prosperity and population of \ustralia generally, though the in-Tease of population might not be ound on the wool-growing land itself. Phere is a general reluctance to admit ‘his proposition, though there is a general admission of the premise on vhich the argument rests; an instance, serhaps, of a tendency to take short wd not long views in economic natters. Yet we had indications of he drawbacks of the comparatively mall area, called the ‘living area,” efore our eyes, as, for instance, when ve passed from a big station where the ywner had little temptation to overstock through the land of a ¢ selector ’ on a ‘living area.” The ormer had ample winter pasture; the atter was almost grazed bare. The emptation to increase a small profit vy over-stocking had been too strong; here was no reserve of grass, and even short drought would be sure to land he selector in serious difficulties. We eard in many quarters of a dangerous endency towards deterioration in the juality of wool owing to the ¢ small nen’ not being able to obtain first-Jass stud stock as the ‘big men ”’ wre, and having to be content with vaying the rejected stock of their arger neighbours. 12. It is, of course, impossible for us 0 suggest what the size or the wverage size of a holding ought to be, ut it does seem to us that it ought to be such that, with proper capital, the maximum economic use from the s0int of view of wealth production can ne made of it: and that it is on this