7.
of immediate control. The trade being there, chances of
ready sale are greater and a shipment coming to London has first
the opportunities, without additional expense, of that market,
and, failing a good market, can be conveniently railed to any
other centre. Moreover, it is nearly always possible to obtain
London freight in the producing-centre, whereas goods may have
to wait some time for a steamer that is calling at other ports.
Again, many importing firms are not represented in the outports
and are therefore reluctant to ship to any other port than London
anless they are able to sell their goods c.i.f., or unless there
appears to be good prospect of a sale before the goods arrive,
for when the goods are once landed, it is difficult for such firms
to arrange the ordinary ex-store selling without incurring the
expense of appointing an agent for the purpose.
Reference has already been made to the fact that the fluidity
of distribution of meat supplies in this country is such that
supply and demand can be rapidly equated and prices main-
tained at a fairly uniform level. Whilst this is so, it is frequently
alleged that, since all the importers on a provincial market have
asually the same price for similar goods, these are fixed for the
whole country by consultation among importers in London. It
is evident, however, from the structure of the trade, and apart
from any understandings, that the tendency to uniformity of
prices follows naturally from concentration of control in one
centre. Though Smithfield is not an ordinary produce exchange,
yet, by the continuous movement of buyers and sellers, prices
soon become level in that market; each firm with provincial
oranches is in continual touch by telephone with them and,
except for such movements as are purely local and transitory,
country prices must tend to be stabilised somewhere around
Smithfield prices. Moreover, the provincial managers look to
London for their information and guidance, and both will be
given under the influence of Smithfield. Since meat is a highly
perishable article, there are, of course, limits to control from
the centre, and a reasonable degree of initiative must be left to
local managers who have to adapt their selling to the peculiar
circumstances of their own locality, but this merely means that
control is resilient and not that it is unreal and ineffective.
(d) Cold Storage—Cold stores are the reservoirs of imported
meat; they form an integral part of the distributive system
and enable supplies to be roughly equated to demand. Never-
theless, large quantities of imported meat reach the consumer
without passing through a cold store at all, for practically all
the chilled and much of the frozen passes direct ex-ship to
market-stalls, depots, and even retailers’ shops.* Distribution
ex-ship is the ideal, for not only are the charges and extra
handling avoided which are incidental to storage. but the meat
* Less than one-third of the meat which comes into London is cold-
stored. (* Revort of Roval Commission on Food Prices.’ paracravh 263. )