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influence of
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Among the circumstances which exereise an influence on the ability of a country for competition
on foreign markets its geographical position plays an important, though by no means decisive, part.
When the‘ geographical situation of a country is referred to as favourable, this statement is correct,
in all but a few cases, with certain restrietions Only, because on the one hand the extent to
which geography favours a given region is not constant but liable to modifieations in the
course. of the economic progress of the world, and on the other hand the geographical situation,
as a rule, can be said to be favourable only in respect of certain markets or of certain classes of
exportable goods. This restricetion applies particularly to inland states which, unless they dispose
of convenient navigable waterways or unless their railway connections with foreign sea-ports
are over short distances only, depend in the main on neighbouring states for marketing their
heavy mass production.
Austria possesses one waterway of importance only, the Danube, and the railway to the nearest
sea-shore leads to Trieste, whose traffic is chiefly with the Orient. The direction which Nature appears
;o have marked out for Austrian exports — apart from the exports to neighbouring countries —
would therefore seem to be chiefly a west-easterly one. It is thus the Balkan countries and the
Near East — in addition, of course, to the Succession States — which one would feel tempted
to call the natural markets of Austria, especially in view of Austrian industry and commerce being
more intimately acquainted with those markets through long experience and possessing a larger
amount of knowledge of the psychology of, and the languages spoken by, the inhabitants of the
territories in question than is possessed as a rule by the nationals of western states. The well-
known economists Messrs. W. T. Layton and Charles Rist, who in 1925 conducted an enquiry into
the economic situation of Austria on behalf of the League of Nations, saw the aptitude, which
Austria. (and in particular Vienna) possesses for trade relations with eastern markets, in the light
of an important asset of the country and the report which these eminent experts made to the
League contains the following sentences on the subject: ‘The advantages of a great commercial
city continue to attract merchants and traders from various parts of the world. Thanks to their
intimate knowledge of the Danubian lands the Viennese merchants are the natural intermediaries
between these countries and western Europe. Of perhaps even greater importance is the fact that
Vienna remains the greatest banking centre of HKastern Europe. The Vienna money market
sontinues to a very large extent to be the channel through which foreign credits are supplied
ver a very wide industrial field and the Viennese banks still retain an interest in important
ındertakings which are full of promise for the future.” The banking organisation of the country
and the support it lends to the export trade will be referred to later in these pages.
With a population of 6,535,000 (census of March 7th, 1923) and an area of 32,396 square
miles, Austria has 19,423 miles of roads, 4274 miles of normal-gauge railways, and the navigation
on the Austrian section of the Danube extends over 226 miles. Austria has been able in consequence
io maintain its position as an important transit centre of European trade,
It is well known that the influence exereised by the geographical position, though it has been
supported in the case of Austria by the economic structure of what have been called the natural
markets of the country and by certain historical facts, has not been allowed a free and unhampered
scope. In so far as the neighbouring countries (in particular the Succession states) and the Balkan
countries’ are concerned, the prevailing school of economic thought has created artificial obstacles
to the mutual exchange of goods. A very vivid and instructive representation of the obstruetions
to European trade, which have been raised by tariffs, has been constructed by Sir Clive Morison Bell
and was on view in September 1926 at the Bank of England. The model was a map of Europe
which showed, however, a wall round each country drawn in proportion to the ad walorem
height of the various tariffs. The map showed Great Britain and the Netherlands having the lowest
tariffs which, if an index were used, would correspond to the number 6, the index number for
Denmark being 7 and for Belgium and Portugal 8. France, Germany and Scandinavia fall in a
group of moderate protectionists with index numbers between 12 and 15. The Central
European. countries starting with Austria at 16, .Rumania 18 and Bul-