HC Deb 09 April 1923 vol 162 cc882-3W
Captain TERRELL

asked the President of the Board of Trade the value of imports during 1922 of dairy produce, poultry, eggs, bacon, pork, hams, barley, vegetables, and fruit; and whether the per- centages of these imported articles are getting larger every year?

Lieut.-Colonel BUCKLEY

The following statement shows the declared value of the imports into the United Kingdom during 1922 of the articles specified in the question, together with the corresponding values of the imports in the year 1913:

Thousand £s ('000 omitted).
1922. 1913.
Butter 37,316 24,084
Cheese 12,438 7,035
Poultry 1,243 992
Eggs, in shell 11,302 9,591
Bacon 35,530 17,429
Hams 8,585 3,068
Pork 3,536 1,665
Barley 6,069 8,077
Vegetables, raw 12,040 5,492
Fruit, raw 24,725 9,844
Total 152,784 87,277
Information is not available regarding the percentage of the imports to the total consumption in this country of the articles in question. In comparing the values of the imports of 1922 with those of 1913 the higher level of prices in 1922 must be taken into account. The imports in 1922 of the articles specified represent a value approximately 70 per cent. greater than if those imports had been returned at the same average values as in 1913, so that the aggregate increase in the volume of these goods imported was about 3 per cent. The increase of the population of the United Kingdom during the same period was about 4 per cent.

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