6 JUNE 1925, Page 28

At the present moment we seem to have reached one

of those blocks in the traffic so fat as industrial progress is concerned, and it is not surprising that.- continued unemployment and unsatisfactory foreign trade figures should ;be occasions_ for great anxiety. A few months ago when there was relief at. the. passing of the Dawes plan and when America was showing renewed confidence in Europe it looked as though some_ progress might be coming, but the movement was slow, and while there has been firmness in securities, and favourable move- ' ments in the exchanges showing increasing confidence in this country as a financial centre where money can safely be deposited, there seems to have been little or no improvement in the industrial position. Nor, I am afraid, will there be much in this short._ article to 'iudicaie whether a radical change -Ka. the -better is at hand, but inasmuch as something at all events is gained by a clearer recognition of the facts of the case I propose to suggest some of the main causes of the present " block " and the obscure outlook and then to mention one or two directions where, I think, it may fairly be said that there are not wanting some signs of a change for the better.