"Stop Arguing—and Work"
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I N a slashing attack on Government policy, Mr. Leslie Gamage, M.C., president of the Institute of Export, told the Liverpool branch of the Institute, last week:— " The Government will have to stop introducing subjects of contention concerning the nationalization of this or that, and raising in the minds of employer and worker alike all the old suspicions of one another. . . . Let the Government concentrate its entire energies on the problem of production, and avoid frittering them away propounding ideologies which could well wait for a more propitious moment. Let us hear a little more of increasing output per man-hour and less agitating for a five-day week."
Earlier, Mr. Garnage said: "The overflow of American production directed to export markets is at present a trickle. but will all too soon become a torrent, in which we may well find ourselves desperately striving to retain our balance."