HC Deb 04 April 1979 vol 965 cc930-2W
Mr. Marten

asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will publish the index of real take-home pay of the average industrial worker from 1945 to date, taking 1945–46 as 100.

Mr. Robert Sheldon,

pursuant to his reply [Official Report, 29 March 1979; Vol. 965, c. 351], gave the following answer:

The figures below show the real net income of the average industrial worker from 1945–46 to 1978–79. Net income has been used in preference to take-home pay because net income includes family allowance and child benefit, and therefore takes account of the transition from child tax allowances to tax-free child benefit.

Index of real net income of the average industrial worker (1945–46=100)
1945–46 100
1946–47 103
1947–48 104
1948–49 105
1949–50 105
1950–51 106
1951–52 108
1952–53 112
1953–54 117
1954–55 122
1955–56 129
1956–57 132
1957–58 133
1958–59 132
1959–60 139
1960–61 145
1961–62 144
1962–63 143
1963–64 149
1964–65 153
1965–66 154
1966–67 153
1967–68 155
1968–69 155
1969–70 157
1970–71 160
1971–72 163
1972–73 177
1973–74 177
1974–75 177
1975–76 168
1976–77 165
1977–78 166
1978–79 177

These figures assume a married man with two children not over 11, wife not working.

Average industrial earnings have been taken to be the annual equivalents of the average weekly earnings of full-time male manual workers.

For 1945–46 they relate to July. From 1946–47 to 1969–70 they relate to October (for the annual survey of the earnings of manual workers). From 1970–71 they are calculated for the new earnings survey, as the average of the survey figures for April at the beginning and end of each financial year. For 1978–79, the April 1978 figure has been updated to October 1978.

Net income is defined as earnings less tax and national insurance contributions, plus any family allowance or child benefit where appropriate. It excludes other sources of income, on which information relating to manual workers taken separately is not available.

The national insurance contributions are those of a manual adult male who was "not contracted out" of the graduated pension scheme or the earnings related pension scheme.

"Real net income" allows for the effect of changes in prices using the index of prices of consumer goods and services for each Financial year based on table 2 of the CSO publication "The Internal Purchasing Power of the Pound". In recent years, this is based on the general retail prices index. Use of the index for the financial year is more appropriate than use of that for the calendar year, as given in table 2 of the CSO's publication.