4
dent to a just understanding of the economic changes and possi-
bilities in the Empire.
XXVIL—TECHNICAL SKILL AND LABOUR.
117. Rubber is a difficult material and the fundamental principles
upon which its treatment depends are as yet imperfectly under-
stood. Consequently opportunities for research into its treatment
and use exist. We deal in a later section with the provisions made
for research and scientific control. During the last 20 years: the
industry has changed over very largely from traditional rule of
thumb methods to the very general use of scientific investigation.
Another instance of the change in progress is afforded by the open-
ing of courses on rubber at technical schools. In Great Britain,
for example, ‘this educational development has been fostered by
the Institution of the Rubber Industry which was founded in 1921
“to promote a better understanding and a closer relationship
between all branches of the Rubber Industry and to encourage and
widen the scope of technical education in order to secure the well
trained Chemist, Engineer, Technologist and Operative to main-
tain and enlarge the Rubber Industry.” The Institution has
assisted in founding Rubber Schools in connection with the
Northern Polytechnic in London and the Trades School,
Manchester. It also.conducts examinations and grants diplomas
of efficiency in General Rubber Technology, Science (Chemistry
and Physics) applied to rubber and in Engineering (Mechanical
and Electrical) connected with rubber.
Much of the labour in a rubber factory—the proportion depend-
ing of course on the type of goods produced—must be skilled, either
as the result of long experience or of technical training combined
with experience. Although improvements in factory processes
are of great importance, particularly in some of the old established
works, it seems very unlikely that rubber manufacture will ever
become an automatic process. Skilled supervision will still be
required and much of the labour employed will be classified as
skilled or at least semi-skilled. For the production of many types
of rubber goods labour charges will still figure largely in the pro-
ductive costs of even the most up-to-date factory.
118. The type of labour in the rubber manufacturing industry
depends upon the particular class of goods manufactured. In the
rubber shoe and garment making trades, for instance, women
workers predominate, while in the tyre trade the number of women
is smaller and the greater proportion are men. . ‘Throughout the
industry, the heavy preparatory operations of compounding,
callendering and tubing are carried out by men, the employment
of female labour being restricted to making up work where this
is relatively light in character. The making of waterproof garments
6228 oa
Skilled
labour:
technical
education.
Variety of
types of
labour.