Economic policy
Found in 1300 Collections and/or Records:
Official: Cabinet: Committee on the Baghdad [Iraq] to Haifa [Israel] railway and pipeline., 29 Feb 1928 - 07 May 1928
Official: Cabinet: Conclusions 16 - 21., 11 Apr 1929 - 09 May 1929
Official: Cabinet: Correspondence and notes., 04 Feb 1909 - 19 Jul 1909
Official: Cabinet: Correspondence and notes., 15 Feb 1928 - 04 Dec 1928
Official: Cabinet: correspondence and papers., 13 Jan 1922 - 04 Aug 1922
Official: Cabinet: Dardanelles Committee: miscellaneous papers., Sep 1915 - Nov 1915
Official: Cabinet: Distressed Areas Committee., 07 Dec 1928 - 18 Dec 1928
Official: Cabinet: Emergency Business Committee: papers 1 to 20 plus index., 27 Apr 1929 - 10 May 1929
Official: Cabinet: Emergency Business Committee: papers 21 - 40., 10 May 1929 - 13 May 1929
Includes suggested replies to questions put to Conservative candidates on a variety of issues including: employment conditions; importation of dyestuffs; agriculture; taxation of motor vehicles; war pensions; migration; sea defence works; the rent restriction act; education policy regarding women teachers; and old age pensions.
Official: Cabinet: Finance Committee: papers., Oct 1915 - Nov 1915
Includes papers on various subjects including: army finances and suggested savings; the adverse balance of foreign trade; details of the importation of goods classified as "not of prime necessity" including various items of food, drink, etc; draft interim reports and an interim report of the Finance Committee pointing out Great Britain's serious economic difficulties created by World War I and including a statement by [1st] Lord Reading [earlier Rufus Isaacs].
Official: Cabinet: Foreign affairs., 1911
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office prints., 10 Jan 1927 - 20 Dec 1927
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office: prints., 23 Jan 1928 - 17 Nov 1928
Includes printed papers about affairs in the Soviet Union (including economic and agricultural difficulties) by Foreign Office officials including: Reginald Leeper; Sir Ronald Lindsay (8); P Gent (5); Harold Nicolson; Joseph Addison; Alvary Gascoigne (4); Sir Thomas Hohler and Horace Rumbold. Also includes covering letters from Sir Maurice Hankey, Cabinet Secretary, and a paper on the situation in Egypt.
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office prints., 02 Oct 1924 - 19 Dec 1925
Official: Cabinet: Imperial Conference: various papers., 05 Oct 1926 - 22 Nov 1926
Official: Cabinet: Industrial Control: papers., Sep 1915 - Oct 1915
Includes papers on various subjects including: a report of the industrial control committee on shipping; notes on the shortage of shipping due to World War I and its effect on the trade of Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa; problems of transporting wheat to the United Kingdom from North America; freight rates; state control of coal mines and profits and export of coal; and comparison of imports (of food, minerals, etc) before and after the war.
Official: Cabinet: Irish Home Rule: printed papers., 07 Jul 1910 - 30 Nov 1911
Official: Cabinet: Irish Home Rule: printed papers., 06 Nov 1911 - 16 Apr 1912
Official: Cabinet: Naval Programme Committee., 25 Aug 1927 - 02 Feb 1928
Official: Cabinet: Naval Programme Committee: Correspondence., 30 Jul 1927 - 20 Feb 1928
Official: Cabinet: Naval Programme Committee: oil fuel reserves., 19 Nov 1927 - 22 Feb 1928
Includes: papers on the need for reserves of oil fuel for the navy due to the change from coal to oil fuelled warships; a statement by the Admiralty on the oil fuel situation; costs of storing oil fuel; committee minutes; a draft report to the Cabinet discussing economies suggested by WSC, Chancellor of the Exchequer and internal Treasury correspondence.
Official: Cabinet: Naval Programme Committee: papers NP (27) 1 to NP (27)7., 25 Aug 1927 - 20 Dec 1927
Official: Cabinet: Naval programme: notes., 04 Feb 1909 - 05 Nov 1909
Includes printed notes by WSC for the Cabinet on the financial position of Germany and its impact on naval building in Germany; on the naval estimates 1909-1910 and the need for protection against German naval armaments. Also includes a paper by Reginald McKenna [First Lord of the Admiralty] arguing for naval expansion and a paper on the Imperial Conference for Defence.