90 AUSTRALIA'S RELATIVE DISADVANTAGE IN
trade’ or ‘adverse balance of trade’ is seen to depend rather on
She ratio at which goods of one country are exchanging for the
goods of another, or on the rising and falling advantage inci-
dental to that trade, than upon a ‘balance’ which may be quite
as fallacious and deceptive as a government ‘surplus’. Stated
in another way, (i) the disadvantage in net terms may be due
to changes in the demand or supply of international trade goods
by which the people of one country must give more of their
own goods in exchange for the goods of the other country than
they did previously; or, (ii) the disadvantage in gross terms
may be due to an over-indulgence in international credit which
amounts to furnishing the national house on the hire-purchase
system; a plan which may result eventually in ownership, but
which always entails a long struggle to satisfy the demands of
the mortgagee, and too frequently leaves insufficient living
expenses out of the national income. In the second case the
non-merchandise factors in overseas trade become the most
potent of the immediate causes which depress living standards,
expecially at those times when national production is for any
reason suddenly diminished.
[t must now be noted that the progress of a borrower follows
a certain logical sequence. It will be seen that there are well-
defined phases in the economic history of a new country which
constitute a definite evolution from youth to maturity, an
evolution that is determined by the relation between the
amount of fresh capital and the interest payments on the old
capital. A country in the early stages of borrowing, i.e. when
the amount of fresh capital is greatly in excess of the interest
payments, tends to have an excess of imports—an ‘unfavourable’
balance of trade—which may persist over a longer or a shorter
period during which the new capital is arriving. If we assume
a steady continuance of borrowing, it is clear that a time comes
when the new capital arriving is just balanced by the annual
payment for interest on the old capital, and at this point
axports tend, approximately, to equal imports. This is a stage
of great financial instability when the equilibrium of trade is
most easily overset, and when the trade crisis is perennially
imminent. But, as borrowing still continues, the annual interest
bill comes, more or less quickly, to exceed the volume of
new capital arriving, the country becomes a mature borrower,