Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

TALKING WOOL

ORIGIN OF SECRETARIAT WEALTH OF THE DOMINIONS Though the work of the International Wool Secretariat is of direct importance to New Zealand —and not alone to w-00l growers, for national revenue concerns all —the secretariat, to the majority of New Zealanders, 1b simply a name. Its objectives are far more widely known in Britain, where it carries on the work of talking wool and selling the wool idea to British and Continental consumers, in the manufacturing, wholesale and retail trades, to the considerable benefit of Dominion growers. In brief this is the story of the setting up of the Wool Secretariat. In January, 19‘37, there met in Melbourne representatives of the wool

growers of Soutli Africa, New Zealand and Australia in order to determine how they might best promote the interests of their industry. At the Melbourne conference it was unanimously decided to establish in London a permanent secretariat to be known as the International Wool Publicity and Research Secretariat, which would have at its disposal the sum of £50,000 sterling annually, contributed by the three Dominions from statutory levies on all wool exported, in the following proportions: Australia 60 per cent., New Zealand and South Africaapproximately 20 per cent. In August, 1937, the International Wood Secretariat was established in (London, there being one representative each for Australia, South Africa and New Zealand, Dr. I. Glumes Ross, LMr A. F. Du Plessis and Mr 'F. S. Arthur respectively. Objectives and Approach The objectives of the International Wool Secretariat may be summarised as the furtherance of the interests of I the wool industry as a whole by whatever methods are conducive to that end, and not the promotion of Australia, New Zealand or South Africa interests separately, but collectively, and moreover, the interests of British wool growers and manufacturers of other major wool-producing countries. Though the secretariat has not been functioning actively for long the ground work covered during the first year after its establishment in 1937 and the setting out of a clear policy of approach have now 7 brought tangible results: the voice of the secretariat is certainly heard in the great woo l'/m manufacturing trade of Britain. The secretariat has examined thosa economic trends in tlie wool industry which may or do affect its future in this or that country; the influence of price fluctuations of the "aw materials; the relationship between per capita

ably be employed. It was finally decided that the secretariat should finance a special programme of research at Torridon Wool Industries Research Association Laboratory, Leeds. In addition to the more applied aspects of scientific research, a research fellowship in Wool Chemistry at Cambridge University has been established and two research assistants appointed at Leeds University, one in wool physics and the other in wool chemistry. The whole of the secretariat's scientific research programme is at present being carried out in Great Britain. This entails an annual expenditure of approximately £12,000. Publicity in Many Forms This year the secretariat has set up a special wool development department, which will handle the detailed work of centralising all information and ’ co-ordinating propaganda activities; will provide a source of information for all sections of the wool industry and allied trades and will initiate and control the various propaganda activities undertaken. The wool development department has, for instance, organised a ‘‘wool fabric library” of immense interest and importance to manufacturers and traders generally, with a branch library and advisory centre at the Paris Bureau. A ‘‘creative” division looks after artwork, assistance to individual, manufacturers, posters and displays, or even complete designs and layouts for exhibitions in England and abroad. The promotion division of the wool development department has a very wide field of action in ensuring the collaboration of all interested trade associations and individual manufacturers in the promotion of wool and in interesting the consumer public in the wider and newer uses of wool. Special fashion shows have been held in London and Paris, at the Leipzig Fair and at other European fashion centres and the work has been carried over the Atlantic by the appointment of an agent in the United States, so that though the getting together of Australia, New Zealand and

consumption ;.r-d wage levels; the directions in wnich wool is being displaced, etc. Finally, it lias endeavoured to clissify the fields in which new methods of distribution and marketing or of publicity may be expected to lead to Increased consumption of wool. Scientific Research Within recent years the industry has developed Its own research organisation, but it is as yet on a much smaller scale and with resources far from commensurate with the importance of the industry and the increasing competition which it must face. The secretariat conceive it a vital necessity that they should co-operate to the fullest extent in ttie work of building up a scientific organisation capable of dealing with every fundamental and applied problem which affects the technical efficiency and competitive power of the wool industry. A study was made of existing wool research organisations in Great Britain and on the Continent in order to determine in what direction scientific assistance could most profit-

South Africa in Melbourne in 19.'J7 had not so wide a significance as to appear to warrant the name International Wool Secretariat, the activities have now taken on a true international importance.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT19390701.2.132.43

Bibliographic details

Waikato Times, Volume 124, Issue 20845, 1 July 1939, Page 26 (Supplement)

Word Count
888

TALKING WOOL Waikato Times, Volume 124, Issue 20845, 1 July 1939, Page 26 (Supplement)

TALKING WOOL Waikato Times, Volume 124, Issue 20845, 1 July 1939, Page 26 (Supplement)

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert