§ Mr. Cassellsasked the Secretary for Mines the number of employ és, year by year, in collieries in Great Britain for the following years, 1929 to 1936, inclusive?
1019W
§ Captain CrookshankFollowing is the statement:—
Average Number of Persons employed in and about Coal Mines in Great Britain. Year. Wage-earners. Clerks and Salaried Persons. 1929 … … 939,367 17,307 1930 … … 914,328 17,048 1931 … … 851,623 16,241 1932 … … 803,615 15,709 1933 … … 773,640 15,451 1934 … … 772,831 15,379 1935 … … 754,300 15,174 1936 … … 756,000 (Provisional). Not yet available.
District. Per ton disposable commercially. Wages Cost. Costs other than Wages. Proceeds. s. d. s. d. s. d. Northumberland 7 6¾ 4 7 12 8 Durham 8 3 4 11 13 3 Yorkshire 9 1½ 3 11¾ 14 2¾ North Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire 8 7¼ 3 9¾ 14 4½ *South Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Cannock Chase and Warwickshire. 10 2 4 1 16 2 Lancashire, Cheshire and North Staffordshire 10 11¾ 5 1 17 3½ †South Wales and Monmouthshire 10 1½ 5 8¾ 15 6¼ *Cumberland, North Wales, South Staffordshire, Shropshire, Bristol, Forest of Dean, Somerset and Kent. 10 5 4 7 15 8 Scotland 8 4¾ 3 11¼ 13 8¾ *Great Britain 9 2 4 6 14 8 * Provisional figures. † Nine months ended 31st October, 1936. I regret that district figures are not available for the year 1913, but in that year wages costs in Great Britain amounted to 6s. 10 ½d. per ton, costs other than wages to 2s. 5 ½d. per ton and proceeds to 11s. 0d. per ton.