APPENDIX. J
The figures on which the above information is based are given in
the first table at the end of this paper.
NATIVE AND NON-NATIVE PRODUCTION FOR EXPORT.
Details of this are presented in the second table at the end of this
paper. It shows that, for the eleven principal agricultural exports, the
non-native and native productions are about equal; but that the former
owes its comparative position to sisal, the value of which is more than
one-half of that of the whole non-native export of these products. Next
in effect for this equalisation of native and non-native value of
production for export are the higher value of the non-native coffee, as
compared with native, and the sudden revival of the plantation rubber
industry. In a temporary way, the native proportion was lessened by
the unfavourable season (which does not immediately affect the output
of sisal and coffee), the purely native productiors, groundnuts and
millet, being most seriously reduced in output by this.
TABLE 1.
TANGANYIKA TERRITORY. PRINCIPAL Exports, 1913 aAxp 1922-25.
15S.
Export. Quantity. Value. 9, of total Order.
Cwts. £ value.
Sisal on ...L 4 6B0C... 1535 580 .
Hides and skins ... i
Cotton hy :
Copra 5
Groundnuts
Beeswax ... )
Coffee : - 9
Simsim - << )
Rice iz P29
Millet ” » 18.210 ... 3,498
Totals ... 913,910 .. 1,296,105
Plantation rubber 25,740 ... 309,195
Ghee rs oe 6.66560..." -15 400%... B{y¥;
Cotton seed ut
30¢
O15