Minimum prices already operating. Rational- isation of the indus- fry, For some time the rubber industry in the United Kingdom has endeavoured to reach agreement on the minimum price for the lowest quality of any article manufactured, and a certain amount of success in certain lines has been achieved. Price maintenance is only possible however, if a fair price is fixed. If the price is fixed too high the door is opened for price cutting and secret agreements. On the other hand a minimum price for a stated minimum quality would concentrate competition on the quality of the article made rather than chiefly on the price. Without an agreed minimum price it is difficult to maintain a minimum standard of quality. The manufacturers of Canadas and the United States, who compete keenly in the United Kingdom market. have come into the arrangements which have already been made. Agreement with European manufacturers has been more difficult and in many lines impossible. Incidentally, the competition from the Furopean manufacturers prevents the minimum prices from being fixed too high. Always bearing in mind that the rubber industry covers a very large number of different trades, the United Kingdom manufacturer does not suffer unduly from the competi- tion of the manufacturers of Canada or the United States who make and maintain good quality products. The chief difficulty is - with certain continental manufacturers exporting cheap and often inferior goods. There is no dumping in the strict sense, but in some instances, continental wages are low and the quality is often poor with the result that the goods sell at cheap prices. 132. Minimum prices for lowest quality already operate in respect of :— (1) Hose and other mechanicals. (2) Hot Water Bottles. (3) Certain varieties of Sports goods, such as football bladders. An international price convention is in operation in regard to playing balls, boots and shoes, ebonite and hard rubber goods. These price conventions have already benefited the industry and checked the lowering of quality resulting from excessive competi- tion. They have operated as a factor in reducing distribution costs, as purchasers buy in larger quantities when there is stability of price. The discussions necessary have led to a very valuable interchange of information in regard to general costs and methods of manufacture. 133. The report made by a leading firm of Accountants to the India Rubber Manufacturers’ Association on the possibility of standard costing throughout the industry contains the following paragraph :— “It appears to us that the majority of concerns in the in- dustry continue to exist to-day in varying degrees of profit-