the error of confounding exportation and importation, which gives this country a very different place to that which is its right.
Here are the figures showing how the production of wheat is distributed:—
| Country. | Period. | Year. | ||
| 1894-1903. | 1904. | 1907. | ||
| United States | (bushels of 60 lbs.) | 576,000,000 | 504,000,000 | 601,000,000 |
| Russia | ” | 360,000,000 | 605,000,000 | 547,000,000 |
| France | ” | 316,000,000 | 290,000,000 | 336,000,000 |
| Austro-Hungary | ” | 180,000,000 | 170,000,000 | 197,000,000 |
| Argentine Republic | ” | 76,000,000 | 147,000,000 | 177,000,000 |
| Italy | ” | 119,000,000 | 143,000,000 | 148,000,000 |
| Spain | ” | 93,600,000 | 91,800,000 | 109,600,000 |
| Germany | ” | 116,000,000 | 144,000,000 | 101,700,000 |
| Canada | ” | 63,000,000 | 67,300,000 | 82,000,000 |
| Roumania | ” | 57,600,000 | 50,700,000 | 54,800,000 |
| England | ” | 54,000,000 | 36,700,000 | 47,000,000 |
| Bulgaria | ” | — | 50,700,000 | 42,800,000 |
| Asiatic Countries | ” | — | 340,000,000 | 364,000,000 |
| Australia | ” | — | 59,400,000 | 82,000,000 |
| Other European Countries | ” | — | 78,800,000 | 65,400,000 |
| African Countries | ” | — | 47,000,000 | 54,800,000 |
| Other American Countries | ” | — | 29,000,000 | 27,000,000 |
| —————— | —————— | |||
| Totals (approx.) | 2,890,000,000 | 3,030,000,000 | ||
This table shows that in 1907 the Argentine occupied the fifth place as a wheat-growing country.
If we compare this production of wheat with the minimum ration of 793·8 lb,[50] which is considered indispensable to human nutrition, we see that apart from European Russia, with its 116 million inhabitants, there is left for the remaining 300 millions of Europeans, less a quarter, as we have explained above—that is, for a population of 225 millions—about 1,200,000,000 bushels of wheat. This quantity represents an average of 151·5 lb. per head per annum, or a deficiency of 249·7 lb. per head.
[50] There seems something improbable about this figure. For one thing, very few people could eat over 2 lb. of wheat—representing over 3 lb. of bread—per diem; and white bread forms no important part of the diet of most populations. Probably the figures represent the amount of bread necessary to a hardworking labourer, whose dietary consists chiefly of bread—a diet only common to the south of England.—[Trans.]
The population of Germany, estimated at 59 millions, has only 147·4 lb. of wheat per head, making a deficiency of 644·6 lb. per inhabitant.
The United Kingdom furnishes its 42,500 inhabitants with only 50·6 lb. of bread per annum, leaving a deficiency of 741·4 lb. per head.
Thus Europe, which, without Russia, produces more wheat than the rest of the world, does not produce enough for her own consumption, low as it is. It is therefore necessary to seek out these wheat-producing countries which are in a position to make up this deficiency. Now at the present time there are very few such countries; they are Russia, the United States, the Argentine Republic, Canada, and India, and among these it is the Argentine for which the most important place seems to have been reserved.
Russia has hitherto been one of the great providers of wheat to Europe; but it would seem that this position is not one that she can retain. Russia is far from having attained the degree of agricultural evolution which the Argentine has achieved; it is true that she exports 80 per cent. of her wheat harvest, but then the Russian peasant eats only rye bread. Of the 326 millions of acres of cultivated land in Russia, 30 millions only are devoted to wheat, or rather less than double the area used for the same cereal in France, or just double the wheat-area of the last Argentine harvest.