76
1920 with the formation of the Research Association of British
Rubber Manufacturers which was organised with assistance from
the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. The
Association does not take the place of the scientific staffs at works,
but supplements their activities. Its primary function is to under-
take fundamental investigations into the utilization of rubber for
which the factory laboratory has frequently neither the time nor
the facilities, and to disseminate scientific and technical data and
information regarding the treatment of rubber, and apparatus for
'aboratory and factory control.
Research
Association
of British
Rubber
Manu-
facturers.
137. The problems already dealt with in the laboratories of the
Association cover a wide range of general interest to all sections of
the industry. In addition a Library and Information Bureau has
been developed in which the information in scientific and technical
journals bearing on rubber is classified and indexed. The abstracts
so obtained form the basis of the ‘‘ Summary of Current
Literature >’ which is issued monthly to members. The organiza:
fon of a section dealing with trade and commercial intelligence of
interest to the rubber industry was contemplated but is at present
in abeyance. Some 300 university graduates in science are now
employed in the various branches of the rubber industry in the
United Kingdom and the Association focus much of their activities
to attracting the attention of manufacturers to the services which
trained scientists can render.
138. The Association is organised on a voluntary basis. In
accordance with general practice the grants made by the Depart-
ment of Scientific and Industrial Research have decreased; in 1925
they were £2,000; in 1928 they were £800. It is estimated that,
excluding the cable manufacturers, the firms who are members
of the Association utilise about 70 per cent. of the raw rubber
absorbed by industry in Great Britain and represent about 70 per
cent. of the capital invested in the industry. Considerable
difficulty has been experienced in arriving at a basis for the assess-
ment of contributions. The wide range of products covered by the
rubber industry, and the variation in the proportion of rubber
used in manufacturing different articles rendered difficult assess-
ments based on the value of output, or of capital employed in the
industry. A large measure of agreement was obtained in 1929 to
the imposition by statute of a levy at the rate of 1/25 of a penny
a Ib. on rubber used in manufacture in the United Kingdom.
If this measure had been passed into law the Research Associa.
tion would have received in 1929 an income of some £15,000.
The pressure of Parliamentary business, however, prevented its
consideration. Steps are being taken to finance the Association
by voluntary subscriptions supplemented by departmental grant.