HC Deb 04 December 1972 vol 847 cc332-3W
Mr. Meacher

asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer what is estimated to be the loss under the Basle Agreement to guarantee official sterling area reserves if the £ sterling returned to parity at $2.35 and $2.30, respectively.

Mr. Nott

The arrangements under the Sterling Agreements only provide in detail for the first implementation which became due on 23rd November. Subsequent arrangements are subject to consultations now in progress. I outlined the obligation arising from the first implementation in answer to my hon. Friend the Member for Enfield, West (Mr. Parkinson) on 9th November. It provides that a payment or credit will be made in sterling of the amount which makes good in dollar terms the difference between $2.40 and $2.3506 which was the closing middle Sterling/US dollar rate in London on 23rd November.

Mr. Meacher

asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will state the real value of £100 at each year since 1870 in terms of 1870 prices.

Mr. Nott

Comparisons of the value of the pound over periods during which the whole pattern of expenditure has changed completely are of doubtful validity and can, at best, be regarded only as impressionistic. Also, for many of the years requested the relevant statistics are either very approximate or incomplete. With these reservations, the figures given in the table below represent the purchasing power in each year com- parable to £100 in 1870. Figures for the years 1939 to 1945 are not available.

Year Value (£) Year Value (£)
1870 100 1918 55
1871 100 1919 52
1872 94 1920 45
1873 93 1921 49
1874 97 1922 61
1875 100 1923 64
1876 103 1924 63
1877 100 1925 63
1878 103 1926 65
1879 110 1927 66
1880 106 1928 67
1881 108 1929 68
1882 107 1930 70
1883 111 1931 75
1884 113 1932 77
1885 118 1933 79
1886 124 1934 79
1887 128 1935 78
1888 128 1936 76
1889 125 1937 72
1890 125 1938 71
1891 124 1946 42
1892 124 1947 39
1893 128 1948 37
1894 131 1949 36
1895 136 1950 35
1896 137 1951 32
1896 132 1952 30
1897 131 1953 30
1899 132 1954 29
1900 128 1955 28
1901 126 1956 27
1902 125 1957 26
1903 124 1958 25
1904 122 1959 25
1905 124 1960 25
1906 124 1961 24
1907 119 1962 23
1908 117 1963 23
1909 117 1964 22
1910 116 1965 21
1911 114 1966 20
1912 110 1967 20
1913 110 1968 19
1914 111 1969 18
1915 90 1970 17
1916 76 1971 16
1917 63

Sources:

1870–1914—Unofficial estimates by G. H. Wood.

1914–938—Ministry of Labour Cost of Living Index.

1938–1971—Consumer price index (the implicit price deflator derived from the national accounts estimates of consumers' expenditure at current and constant prices).

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