CO129-325 - Public Offices & Others - 1904 — Page 466

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

463

The Customs suggest as the simplest courses to adopt either

(a)

For Hong Kong to adhere to the Convention

or

(b)

The prohibition of all bounty-fed sugar. The objections to (a) are (1) that it would entail placing the Hong Kong Refineries in bond, and (2) That it might raise the question as to whether the freedom of fiscal relations as between the United Kingdom and the Colonies includes freedom of fiscal relations as between the Colonies themselves; e.g. whether if Hong Kong adhered to the Convention, it would be bound to penalise Australian or Natal sugar should any such sugar go to Hong Kong. This question has already been carefully considered, both as regards the Crown Colonies and India, and up to now it has been our policy not to let the Crown Colonies join the Convention, while the India Office have promised to consult us before any steps are taken for the adherence of India. This latter contingency is, however, now very improbable.

As regards (b) if what the Officer Administering the Government states in 1898 is correct (which, however, I doubt) it would appear that

(1) No sugar is imported from any bounty-giving British Colony.

(2) No sugar is imported from any country which the Permanent Commission has as yet decided gives bounties.

(3) No sugar is exported from Hong Kong to any contracting Country.

Prohibition would therefore seem the best course

125087

MAP.

Edit History

2026-06-02 02:53:59 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
463 The Customs suggest as the simplest courses to adopt either (a) For Hong Kong to adhere to the Convention or (b) The prohibition of all bounty-fed sugar. The objections to (a) are (1) that it would entail placing the Hong Kong Refineries in bond, and (2) That it might raise the question as to whether the freedom of fiscal relations as between the United Kingdom and the Colonies includes freedom of fiscal relations as between the Colonies themselves; e.g. whether if Hong Kong adhered to the Convention, it would be bound to penalise Australian or Natal sugar should any such sugar go to Hong Kong. This question has already been carefully considered, both as regards the Crown Colonies and India, and up to now it has been our policy not to let the Crown Colonies join the Convention, while the India Office have promised to consult us before any steps are taken for the adherence of India. This latter contingency is, however, now very improbable. As regards (b) if what the Officer Administering the Government states in 1898 is correct (which, however, I doubt) it would appear that (1) No sugar is imported from any bounty-giving British Colony. (2) No sugar is imported from any country which the Permanent Commission has as yet decided gives bounties. (3) No sugar is exported from Hong Kong to any contracting Country. Prohibition would therefore seem the best course 125087 MAP.
Baseline (Original)
463 The Customs suggest as the simplest courses to adopt either (a) For Hong Kong to adhere to the Convention or (b) Is must surely The prohibition of all bounty-fed sugar. The objections to (a) are (1) that it would entail placing the Hong Kong Refineries in bond, and (2) That it might raise the question as to whether the freedom of fiscal relations as between the United Kingdom and the Colonies includes freedom of fiscal relations as between the Colonies themselves; e.g. whether if Hong Kong, adhered to the Convention, it rould be bound to penalise Australian or Natal sugar should any such sugar go to Hong Kong. This question has already been carefully considered, both as regards the Crom Colonies and India, and up to now it has been our policy not to let the Crown Colonies join the Convention, while the Tndia Office have promised to consult us before any steps are taken for the adherence of India This latter con- tingency is, however, now very improbable. As regards(b) if what the Officer Administering the Government states in 19988 is correct (which, however I doubt) it would appear that (1) No sugar is imported from any bounty-giving British Colony. Colign (2) No sugar is imported from any country which the Permanent Commission has as yet decided to give bounties. (3) No sugar is exported fron Hong Kong to any mistake if cor-contracting Country. ++ thy the protest 125087 MAP. Prohibition would therefore seem the best course
2026-06-02 02:53:59 · Baseline
View content

463

The Customs suggest as the simplest courses to

adopt either

(a)

For Hong Kong to adhere to the Convention

or

(b)

Is must surely

The prohibition of all bounty-fed sugar. The objections to (a) are (1) that it would entail placing the Hong Kong Refineries in bond, and (2) That it might raise the question as to whether the freedom of fiscal relations as between the United Kingdom and the Colonies includes freedom of fiscal relations as between the Colonies themselves; e.g. whether if Hong Kong, adhered to the Convention, it rould be bound to penalise Australian or Natal sugar should any such sugar go to Hong Kong. This question has already been carefully considered, both as regards the Crom Colonies and India, and up to now it has been our policy not to let the Crown Colonies join the Convention, while the Tndia Office have promised to consult us before any steps are taken for the adherence of India This latter con- tingency is, however, now very improbable.

As regards(b) if what the Officer Administering the Government states in 19988 is correct (which, however

I doubt) it would appear that

(1) No sugar is imported from any bounty-giving British Colony.

Colign

(2) No sugar is imported from any country which the Permanent Commission has as yet decided to give bounties.

(3) No sugar is exported fron Hong Kong to any mistake if cor-contracting Country.

++

thy the protest

125087

MAP.

Prohibition would therefore seem the best

course

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.