Department of Markets (1928)

The Department of Markets was an Australian government department that existed between January and December 1928.

Department of Markets
Department overview
Formed19 January 1928[1]
Preceding Department
Dissolved10 December 1928[1]
Superseding agency
JurisdictionCommonwealth of Australia
HeadquartersMelbourne
Minister responsible
Department executives

Scope

Information about the department's functions and/or government funding allocation could be found in the Administrative Arrangements Orders, the annual Portfolio Budget Statements and in the Department's annual report.

The Department dealt with all matters connected with the marketing of Australian products overseas, including canned and dried fruits, meat, eggs and pearl-shell. It also handled the following matters:-[1]

  • the collection and dissemination of commercial and industrial information;
  • financial assistance in connection with the production of certain crops;
  • trade publicity and advertising overseas;
  • exhibitions;
  • advances to State Governments for the purchase of wire netting by settlers; and
  • rural credits and inter-Imperial trade.

Structure

The Department was a Commonwealth Public Service department, staffed by officials who were responsible to the Minister for Markets, Thomas Paterson.[1]

gollark: Without defined time zones fall back to basing it on the Sun's position (or extrapolated one).
gollark: On the moon.
gollark: There's a 28-day-ish day/night cycle.
gollark: No, you just have... longer hours?
gollark: Actually, come to think of it, you would probably need a pretty powerful microcontroller to hold and handle the whole database of time zone insanity.

References

  1. CA 21: Department of Markets [I], Central Office, National Archives of Australia, retrieved 31 December 2013
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