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June 1944 Vol. 25, No. 6
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The British Crown encircles not only the
ancient glories of a particular people, but the hope and promise
of a broadening life for hundreds of millions of others.
(This is Part 2 of a discussion of the British Empire.
Last month's Letter dealt with the Dominions, the position
of the Crown, and the general philosophy of the Empire.)
An American, Henry J. Taylor, has just published a book,
"Man in Motion", in which he refers to the British Empire
in this way: "Considering its scope, the British Commonwealth
of Nations is the most remarkable political achievement in
history. It has overcome more tyranny, supplied more safety,
removed more fear, taught more justice, and given more freedom
to more people than any other institution on earth. It is
not only worth preserving, in the interests of free men, but
unless Britain preserves her socalled Empire there will
be no freedom for millions upon millions who are now as free
as they can safely be...Talking about colonial freedom is
one thing. Supplying it is quite another. Furthermore, 80
per cent of the colonials of the world could not, or would
not, use their freedom to maintain freedom. Eighty per cent
of the world's people simply are not ready for what we are
talking about."
The Colonies
Colonial administration is a tremendous task. Ignoring the
Japanese occupation of many of them, there are 40 units in
the British colonies, averaging 47,000 square miles. To govern
them has required the setting up of a Colonial Office, with
the Secretary of State for the Colonies a member of the Cabinet.
In each colony and protectorate there is a governor who is
the direct representative of the King. On the civil service
staff of the Colonial Office are men with special knowledge
of each colony.
Most British colonies were established by private enterprise,
and not by government action. They were all equipped with
representative bodies having control over legislation and
taxation, though the executive power was held in most cases
by nominees of the Crown. Virginia, the earliest English colony
on this continent, was only 14 years old before it established
a representative assembly, the first representative body which
ever existed outside Europe. This precedent was followed in
every subsequent colony with encouragement of the home authorities.
The liberality of the British system is best understood
in contrast with, say, the French, who employ direct rule,
insist on French as the sole language of education, and try
to assimilate the native population to the French way of life.
The British, on the other hand, encourage indirect rule, use
vernacular languages in the early stages of education, and
encourage continuance of the native arts, culture and special
qualities. The colonies of Britain are all travelling at different
speeds, according to their capabilities, along the road toward
complete and final selfgovernment. Britain mainly derives
benefit from her colonies through the provision of opportunities
for young men in the colonial administrative service, and
through the opportunities offered to traders and developers,
such as engineers. Taxes raised in a colony are spent in that
territory, and the United Kingdom supplements local revenue
with contributions from its own exchequer, raised by taxes
on the people of Britain. The complete fallacy of the looselymade
charges that Britain owns and exploits the colonies is demonstrated
by the answer that Britain draws no tribute whatever from
them; she enjoys no trading monopoly in them: she enlists
from them no fighting forces, beyond what are necessary for
defence and police purposes.
Two questions are asked as a part of British development
of a territory: (1) how can this area be developed so as to
make its resources available to the rest of the world? (2)
how can we raise the standard of living of the local people,
and so enable them to play their part as markets for the produce
of other areas? It is true that Great Britain gives preferences
to, and receives preferences from, her colonies, but the absurdity
of a theory that there should be any monopoly of colonial
products is easily demonstrated. People in the colonies are
principally engaged in the production of primary commodities,
partly agricultural and partly mineral. Productive capacity
of these raw materials is growing throughout the world, with
a tendency for the supply to exceed the demand. It is essential,
therefore, for countries with colonial raw materials to widen
their markets, selling to allcomers, and not to conserve
them jealously for their own use. Consequently, countries
in the Empire are encouraged to seek markets.
Internationalization
A statement of policy made in the House of Commons last
summer rejected the suggestion of internationalization of
administration of the colonies, while at the same time welcoming
the establishment in certain areas of permanent international
commissions made up of all states with major strategic or
economic interests in those areas. These commissions, with
representatives of the territories themselves, would consult
on matters affecting security, transport, economics and social
welfare. There are several reasons why international administration
would not be satisfactory. The difficulties of administration
in backward countries are great enough even with staffs made
up of persons of one nation. Lack of experience in handling
native problems might cause not only a slowingup of
development but even a dangerous recession. Moreover, many
of the colonies are highly developed politically, and are
definitely hostile to any form of internationalization. Great
Britain governs her colonial territories as a solemn trust,
and is in honour bound not to trifle with the loyalty of the
colonial peoples as if it were something that can be traded
in.
From a worldwide viewpoint there are two considerations
about colonization. Colonial peoples must be safeguarded against
misgovernment and exploitation, and helped to move forward
until they are fit to take their place in advanced civilization.
The second point is that all civilized peoples must have fair
and equal access to the resources of these regions, with opportunity
to share in their development.
To further the advancement of backward people, there is
needed an intensified effort to improve health, education
and cultural development, and this must be done in such a
way as to graft western world techniques and ideas on the
native base without disrupting native life. The interrelation
of economic and social factors cannot be overstated, and the
Colonial Office is steadily progressing in bringing them together
into harmonious cooperation. Much stress as being laid
upon health, as the basis of all social advancement, but progress
is held back by native ignorance, prejudice and superstition,
and by climatic environment. A Blue Book on colonial matters
issued in 1939 contains an inspiring hundred pages about progress
in social services and development.
Empire Governments
It is impossible to obtain an idea of individual Empire
governments by studying them in alphabetical or geographical
order. Read that way, they seem to spell utter confusion.
They run all the way from the South Atlantic Island of Ascension,
which was governed by the Navy as a ship until 1922, to Eire,
with its constitution of 1937, which calls itself a "sovereign
independent state". But all these forms of government, arranged
in ascending order of relative local selfgovernment,
present a symmetrical series: at the top are the selfgoverning
dominions; at the bottom are such outposts as the Friendly,
or Tonga Islands, about 380 square miles in extent, which
form a sovereign state under British protection. They have
a queen, who is advised by a parliament. The 27,000 natives
are not British subjects, but Tonga declared war on Germany
in 1939. It is an example in miniature of the selfgovernment
sought for each section of the Empire, as a step toward the
most complete autonomy.
Those charged with direction of the Empire believe their
supreme duty to be the preparation for freedom of races which
cannot as yet govern themselves, and thinking people believe
this to be the spiritual end for which the Commonwealth exists.
An American Ambassador called the British Empire "a school
of government that inevitably leads to selfgovernment."
The policy is first to train the backward peoples in the management
of local affairs by. delegating authority to village and tribal
organizations, and gradually to widen this scope. The British
are exceedingly practical. The question in mind when a proposition
comes up is, "Will it work?". They have not become carried
away by theories of government which, however applicable to
certain peoples at certain steps of development, may be wholly
inapplicable to others at other stages. The form of government
must be adapted to the conditions, needs and degrees of political
development of each territory. As a result, the British Commonwealth
remains faithful to ideas of government founded in responsibility,
while many parliamentary institutions planted in unprepared
soil are fast disappearing.
A striking problem arising out of the curious nature of
the association of countries in the Empire is that of immigration
and national status. There is a British subjecthood shared
by all citizens of the Empire, distinguished from the purely
national citizenship granted to them by the particular membercountries
to which they belong. The Dominions are tending to make local
status the basis of rights and duties, and to regard the common
status as implying merely the consequences of common allegiance
to the sovereign, consequences which may be maximized or minimized
in law at the discretion of dominion legislatures. British
subjects going from one part of the Commonwealth to another
find themselves with rights less than those of local citizens
but greater than those of aliens. This is not important in
law, but it has great importance in sentiment, and some Empire
countries would have difficulty in persuading their people
to give up the title "British subject" even though offered
identical rights and duties under another name. The problems
arising out of immigration are not so likely to be as pressing
in the immediate future as they were at times in the past.
There has been no great migration from one part of the overseas
empire to another, and migration from the United Kingdom has
fallen to a mere trickle. Britain has become, on balance,
an immigrant country since 1930, and, as pointed out in our
Letter in January, it is no longer a source of population
for overseas countries.
Empire Resources
The British Empire is occasionally referred to by orators
as having an abundance of every raw material, but in fact
the United Kingdom and her dependencies (omitting the selfgoverning
dominions and India) have a net deficiency of every important
foodstuff except fresh milk, tropical fruits, vegetable oils,
cocoa, tea and coffee. If the dominions' and India's supplies
be added, there is an exportable surplus of wheat, and selfsufficiency
in rye, rice and potatoes. Even so, it is partly dependent
on foreign sources for maize, beef, pork, bacon, mutton, butter,
cheese and sugar. The United Kingdom and the dependent empire
have exportable surpluses of tin, manganese, coal, rubber
and graphite, and are about selfsufficient in bauxite,
vanadium, phosphates, sisal and vegetable oils. If the dominions
and India are brought in, the following are added to the list
of raw materials of which there is an exportable surplus:
lead, nickel, chromium, vanadium, asbestos, platinum, wool,
jute and vegetable oils, and there is selfsufficiency
in iron, copper, zinc, tungsten, magnesite, phosphates, and
timber. The whole Empire remains partly dependent on outside
sources for sulphur and cotton, and largely dependent on outside
sources for molybdenum, antimony, petroleum, potash, mercury,
silk, flax, hemp and manilla. It is readily apparent that
the Empire could have no serious policy of building selfsufficiency.
World Trade
Instead, the Empire seeks worldwide trade. Britain
it was who proved that two merchants of different countries
trading together will both become rich, and each makes the
balance in his own favour, so they do not get rich out of
each other. Britain also found that business in staples is
safer than in socalled fancies, such as those produced
by Japan, because demand for the latter may vanish at any
time. She found, too, the potency of a brand new want. There
was no demand for tobacco in the England of Raleigh's time,
because tobacco was unknown: then it was introduced and almost
immediately became a want: today it is nearer a necessity.
One generation acquires 50 wants, and invents 50 ways of satisfying
them, but each in turn engenders two new wants. Britain's
inventive genius and her largescale industries with
their specialized products have put a new premium on wide
markets. By 1870 Britain's trade was $530 million more than
the trade of France and America combined, but such a commanding
position could not be maintained in the face of the rapid
industrialization of every other modern state. In 1890 her
lead was only $40 million, and at the outbreak of war in 1914
the combined trade of France, the United States, Germany and
Japan was more than double that of Britain. Outside Britain,
the trade of the Empire grew from $230 million in 1810 to
$10,805 million in 1926. In 1810 all save a negligible amount
was with Britain; by 1926 only $3,326 million was with Britain,
roughly onethird, and in 1938, $2,900 million.
Before this war, the British Empire was transacting about
28 per cent of the total trade of the world, a decrease from
the 36 per cent of 1914. Those who picture the Empire as a
closed trading monopoly will find this table illuminating:
| UNITED KINGDOM |
PROPORTION
OF TRADE WITH: |
| |
|
British Empire |
United States |
Other Countries |
| |
|
|
Per cent |
|
| Imports from: |
1913 |
24.9 |
18.4 |
56.7 |
| |
1938 |
40.4 |
12.8 |
46.8 |
| Domestic Exports to: |
1913 |
32.9 |
9.4 |
57.7 |
| |
1938 |
49.9 |
4.3 |
45.8 |
In the last full year before the war, Canada imported $425
million worth of goods from the United States and $186 million
worth from the British Empire, while she exported $346 million
worth of goods to the United States and $443 million worth
to the Empire.
The Ottawa Agreements
Britain doubtless gained on throwing open her markets to
the whole world in 1846, when she invited other European nations
to cooperate in the development of vast lands, to send
settlers to live in freedom under the British flag, and to
increase the trade of these lands with the rest of the world.
There were many intermediate steps between that situation
and the Ottawa Conference in 1932, but all were logical. There
was a conflict between the political and economic motives
for economic cooperation. Fears were driving, and wants
leading. The world depression pushed the Empire countries
toward a defensive policy. The objective was, in part, to
reestablish reasonable prices for the primary products
on which the Dominions were so largely dependent, but there
were external political as well as economic repercussions.
There is no evidence of the establishment of an economic bloc,
though much of the outside world believed that such a bloc
was in the making, and the illwill and retaliation thus
engendered added to the difficulty of an already tense international
situation. Because the Ottawa Agreements have been cited recently
as one of the causes leading to war, it is well to examine
their true significance. In the first place, why should there
not be special economic arrangements among the countries of
the Commonwealth? It is a political organization, loose as
we have seen, but nevertheless real. It is valuable as a means
of preserving peace and order among its members and as a contribution
toward peace and order in the world. If that organization
could be strengthened by economic or other ties, that would
be of value to the whole world. This was especially true in
an era when other countries were trying by all means in their
power to render themselves selfsufficient, largely from
political motives. They abandoned economics in favor of preparing
themselves for aggression. There was, as evidenced by breakdown
of the World Economic Conference, no chance of success in
a frontal attack, so this community of nations decided to
take positive action which might be an example to the world.
It was the decision of the conference, expressed in its final
resolution, that "by the lowering or removal of barriers among
themselves the flow of trade between the various countries
of the Empire will be facilitated, and that by the consequent
increase of the purchasing power of their peoples the trade
of the world will also be stimulated or increased."
Defence
Jurisdiction in defence matters is no more clearcut
than in economic questions. The basic principles of the defence
of the Empire are: each part shall provide, as far as it is
able, for its own defence, and its forces shall take part
in the common defence of the commonwealth when and to the
extent its government and legislature so decide. This great
Empire was not built up by, nor does it depend upon, the use
of military power. No large forces are needed to keep it in
subjection. Except in time of war, when armies have to be
hastily improvised, the military forces of the Empire are
less than those of some European states of second rank. And,
be it noted, when the existence of this Empire is threatened,
as in the last war and in this, its subjects do not seize
the opportunity to revolt, but make generous and spontaneous
sacrifices for its defence.
The British Empire has more to lose and less to gain from
war than any human organization ever formed. It seeks above
all the peaceful conduct of world trade, and the steady development
of colonies. For Britain this war is not a question of conquest
of territory, or of the rectification of frontiers, but defence
of a whole conception of life and of government. And what
organization on a world scale could have been tested as searchingly
in its inner loyalties, and so triumphed in the test, as the
Empire in 1940? From the greatest and the smallest, from the
strongest and the weakest, from the most advanced and the
most simple, there flowed into London assurances that Empire
countries would go down or come through together. The fact
that they are coming through together is one of the facts
that matter most in world politics.
After the War
When the war is won, what part will this Empire play in
the world? The exhaustion and paralysis of certain sections
are so great that restoration must be a slow process andwill
be extremely difficult. Britain has declared her willingness
and eagerness to participate with likeminded nations
in an effort to help build in the world a security it has
not heretofore known, and this spirit was confirmed at the
recent conference in London. Perhaps UNRRA is a step toward
this objective, as the first international sharing of a major
task with postwar implications. The signatories to that
agreement are bound to work for rehabilitation of peoples
occupying distressed countries. It is a new conception of
cooperation of all the free world for the good of all
mankind. And yet, is it so new? The British Empire, after
much experiment, adopted this method of mutual cooperation
to solve its problems, and proved that difficulties can be
solved by discussion where they certainly could never have
been settled by force. All parts of the commonwealth have
accepted the principles of the collective system for regulation
of international relations. The British Empire now assures
justice and liberty to onefourth of the world's population,
and would, if it could, bring them peace and contentment also.
Since August 1942 Canada has been providing 15,000 tons
of cereals a month to Greece, and a representative of the
Red Cross who was in charge of administration of relief in
that country said these free gifts represent the difference
between starvation and survival for half the population of
Greece. The goodwill engendered by such acts is being extended
through UNRRA. The President of this bank said last January:
"I personally believe that large outright gifts of food, raw
material, finished goods and machinery to backward and devastated
countries will in the long run, and even from the most selfish
point of view, not only contribute most to human welfare,
but both in the short and long run be in the best interests
of those nations which can afford to make the gifts." Out
of such cooperation may grow a new conception of world
affairs, in which even the least idealistic nations may be
compelled to take their place, seeking world welfare rather
than individual aggrandisement.
Foremost among collaborators must, in the nature of things,
be the British Empire and the United States. The community
of friendship between these two world organizations is founded
upon community of language, ideas and ideals. It is a good
thing to concentrate upon points of agreement, of which there
are many more than points of difference. It is, said Prime
Minister Churchill in April, practical to aspire to a closer
functional unity within the Empire while at the same time
retaining association with the United States and others. "I
have never conceived that fraternal association with the United
States would militate in any way against the unity of the
British Commonwealth and Empire," he said, "or breed illfeeling
with our great Russian ally with whom we are bound by a 20years
treaty." On another occasion Mr. Churchill declared the Empire
seeks no narrow or selfish combination. "The tremendous and
aweinspiring fact stares the British and American democracies
between the eyes, that acting together we can help all nations
safely into harbour, and that, if we divide, all will toss
and drift for a long time on dark and stormy seas."
This war is not likely to end in the dominance of a supreme
state or a group of supreme states. The experience of the
Empire, detailed earlier in this Letter, indicates the futility
of such a plan. Progress for individual states, and for the
world, will result from more intimate collaboration. To this
the prime ministers of the dominions, and the prime minister
of the United Kingdom, have pledged their support. The Empire
they represent is far from perfect, but it is being constantly
improved because of the criticism of its own people through
their press, parliaments and institutions. Throughout all
its affairs blows the cleansing wind of democracy, based on
freedom of speech, of religion, of the press, and of association.
These are the fundamentals of the British Empire way of life.
The members of the Empire have faced every question affecting
race, religion and status, and by long experience the Empire's
statesmen have acquired both the habit and spirit of toleration
and just treatment.
These are some of the reasons why the Empire stands. As
Churchill phrased it: "How are all these communities and races
joined together? Why is it they wend their way along the stony
uphill road in company? There is only one answer to that:
it is because they want to. In fact, they want to very much.
If it were not so, there is no means to compel them. But they
want to. They want to not only in the piping times of peace,
but even more closely they draw together in the most horrible
shocks and agonies of war.
Published by RBC Financial Group. All editions from the RBC
Letter collection are available on our web site at www.rbc.com/responsibility/letter.
Our e-mail address is: rbcletter@rbc.com.
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