3
duction of those articles. Total exports exceeded imports, in 1926
1927 and 19928, as follows :—
Rubber
companies
‘n Canada.
Manufac-
turing
companies.
All rubber manufactured goods.
19286
19217.
1928,
Exports ... ih ee ee ve
Imports ... oe we won a5
Re-exports* es vee vee vee
£00v £000 £000
5,440 5,874 6,262
660 | 689 753
28 14 17
* These include the value of re-exports of raw rubber as well as rubber manu
factures.
80. The development of the manufacturing industry in Canada
is of special interest. Several of the principal companies in Canada
were founded by United States companies and some are still con-
trolled by their parent organisations, which, in several cases, have
allocated to their Canadian branches the care of certain export
markets. In Appendix V we give certain particulars of 15 of the
larger Canadian companies, some of which have been Canadian
from inception, whilst others though started by American inter-
ests have subsequently passed under Canadian control. The in-
formation in Appendix V shows that although the companies may
concentrate on certain markets they do not concentrate rigidly
on special lines of goods. Tyres and shoes or tyres and soles and
heels are not uncommonly produced by the same company. The
largest rubber manufacturing companies in Canada’ are the Good-
year Tyre & Rubber Co., of Canada and the Dominion Rubber Co.
The production of the former company is some 6,000 tyres a day.
Both companies, in addition to tyres, manufacture footwear and
mechanical goods. The Dunlop Tyre & Rubber Goods Co., of
Toronto is associated with the Dunlop organisation of Great
Britain and is engaged largely on tyres. The Gutta Percha &
Rubber Co., Litd., a purely Canadian concern, has a wide range of
products covering most kinds of footwear, mechanical goods and
tyres. With some firms the manufacture of goods other than tyres
is the more important activity. As will have been clear from our
analysis of the international trade in rubber goods, the Canadian
industry has in the course of very few years achieved an important
position among the countries of the world in which rubber goods
ire manufactured.
XVIL—-THE INDUSTRY IN AUSTRALIA.
81. In Australia there are some 60 factories in which rubber
products are manufactured and which employ approximately 4,000
workpeople. The three principal Australian rubber manufacturing
ompanies are :—
. Dunlop-Perdriau Co.; North Australian Rubber Mills:
Hardies’ Rubber Co.