Special Report. Shanghai, China, April 20, 1933p
Draw a rather optimistic outlook for 1933, showing an improvement in the political and financial situation internally, in spite of deteriorating Sino-Japanese relations.
- Area and population
- Agriculture (includes crops increase/decrease figures of for various cereals)
- Mining and Manufacturing
- Transportation and communication
- Motor vehicles
- Merchant Marine
- Postal, telegraph and telephone service
- Foreign trade
- Imports (Machinery, Electrical Materials, Petroleum Products, Lumber, Dyestuffs, Wheat Flour, Leaf Tobacco and Cigarettes, Raw Cotton, Iron and Steel, Cotton Piece Goods, Leather)
- Exports (Skins and Furs, Wool, Peanuts, Tea, Tungsten and Antimony, Wood Oil, Egg Products, Silk)
- Trade with United States
- Basis of trade statistics
- Conditions in chief trading centers
- Central China and Yangtze Valley
- South China and Hong Kong
- North China, including Manchuria
- Currency and Exchange
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