AGRICULTURAL. SURVEY OF EUROPE. Ill 
in Yugoslavia than in Rumania to the east, where changes in land 
tenure have been more marked. 
On the whole, Yugoslavia is recovering her normal agricultural 
status and it will only be a very short time before the kingdom will 
be producing as much grain as in the years before the war, except 
as modified by the influences just described. 
The Kingdom of Yugoslavia, organized as it was out of part of 
the wreckage of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the little Princi- 
pality of Montenegro, with the old Kingdom of Serbia, as a political 
nucleus, is not yet an economic unit. It has not yet been bound 
together by railroads and trade routes. It has as yet no financial 
organizations strong enough to organize the internal trade in grain. 
Once Yugoslavia is unified economically as well as politically it will 
not only oecome self-sustaining in its grain supply, but it will have 
both a theoretical and a practical surplus for export. 
ADDITIONAL COPIES 
OP THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE PROCURED PROM 
THE SUPERINTENDENT OP DOCUMENTS 
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFPICE 
WASHINGTON, D. C. 
AT 
15 CENTS PER COPY 
