cover image: The Insurance & Finance Review. November 1930

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The Insurance & Finance Review. November 1930

1930

If all parties concerned the ryots and the land-holders the manufacturer and the trader the financier and the exporter of jute and jute products can as a result of the present agitation in the country evolve some method of securing harmony between production and consumption then undoubtedly a large part of the distress would be relieved. [...] Crowds of city clerks besieged the doors of the Bank of England loans office in the afternoon of October 14th when the market got scent of the coming issue and queues of several hundreds formed outside the Bank at the close of the banking hours seeking prospectuses of the new Indian Loan. [...] Whenever the representatives of this presidency have pressed for at least a share of the jute export duly the Finance Members of the Government of India have always said that Jute being a monopoly of Bengal the producers are in a position to shift the burden of the duty on the shoulders of the consumers. [...] The futures trading committee of the International Chambers of Commerce on perusing the reports received about the methods of the-futures trade in various markets and of the disability imposed in the various countries and a proper observance of futures contracts observed in their report to the International Chambers of Commerce dated July 15th 1930 as follows : 1. Its belief in the value of fu [...] The third important group of factors that went to reduce profits was that clue to the continuance of the unhealthy practices connected with the payment of claims and the maintenance by non-Indian companies of the undesirable policy of dumping tonnage at important ports on the coast throughout the year far in excess of the requirements of the trade.
commerce industry
Pages
29
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120349
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i Nalinaksha Sanyal view
Editorial Notes
217-223 Nalinaksha Sanyal view
Impression about Trade Depression
223-225 G. L. M. view
Present Condition of the Jute Trade
226-230 Nalinaksha Sanyal view
The Future Tendencies of Indian Insurance
231-232 An Insurance Manager view
Company Notes
232-239 Nalinaksha Sanyal view
Notes and Gleanings of the Month
240-242 Nalinaksha Sanyal view

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