HC Deb 10 June 1974 vol 874 cc467-9W
Mr. Heseltine

asked the Secretary of State for Employment if he will set out the numbers of days lost per thousand employees for each year since nationalisation in each of the following nationalised industries: (1) the National Coal Board, (2) the Central Electricity Generating Board, (3) the electricity boards, (4) the National Bus Company, (5) the Railways Board, (6) the British Steel Corporation, and (7) the gas boards.

Mr. Booth

Except for coal mining, separate information about working days lost through industrial stoppages in the nationalised industries is not readily available and could only be provided at disproportionate cost. Information for the coal mining industry, which consists very largely of the National Coal Board, is as follows:

STOPPAGE OF WORK DUE TO INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES
UNITED KINGDOM
Working days lost per 1,000 employees in the coal mining industry
1948 600
1949 950
1950 550
1951 450
1952 850
1953 500
1954 600
1955 1,400
1956 650
1957 650
1958 600
1959 475
1960 700
1961 1,100
1962 500
1963 550
1964 500
1965 750
1966 225
1967 225
1968 125
1969 2,700
1970 3,050
1971 175
1972 32,700
1973 (provisional) 275

Mr. Heseltine

asked the Secretary of State for Employment if he will set out the average numbers of days lost per thousand employees in manufacturing industry in each year since 1948.

Mr. Booth

Following is the information:

STOPPAGE OF WORK DUE TO INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES:
UNITED KINGDOM
Working days lost per 1,000 employees in all manufacturing industries*
1948 125
1949 50
1950 70
1951 70
1952 100
1953 175
1954 90
1955 90
1956 150
1957 700
1958 90
1959 550
1960 200
1961 175
1962 550
1963 100
1964 175
1965 225
1966 100
1967 175
1968 425
1969 475
1970 750
1971 800
1972 1,000
1973 (provisional) 750
* These rates are calculated on estimates of employees in employment which prior to 1971 were based on counts of national insurance cards and from 1971 were based on the annual censuses of employment. The census-based employment figures are somewhat lower and this gives rather higher incidence rates. The rate for all manufacturing industries in 1971, if based on card count figures, would have been 750.

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