Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-qks25 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-08T17:42:21.447Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chapter I. The British Economy: 1965 To Mid-1967

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Extract

In terms of total output, 1965 appears just as much a ‘stop’ year as 1961. Indeed the movement of output since 1962 matches closely the movement in the last recovery from 1958 to 1961, (chart 1). It is true that the 1965 figures are incomplete, and liable to revision; but the revisions are not likely to be massive enough, nor the rise in output in the fourth quarter big enough, to invalidate the general comparison. This year, there is no great conflict of evidence arising from divergent movements of the output, incomes and expenditure measures. We estimate that output in the fourth quarter of 1965 was about 1½ per cent higher than a year earlier; at most the figure is unlikely to be above 2 per cent, which was the rise during 1961.

Type
The Economic Situation: Annual Review
Copyright
Copyright © 1966 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Chapter Igives a brief general account of economic developments during 1965, and a summary of the forecast (assuming present policies) up to the middle of 1967; it concludes with some comment on economic policy.Chapter IIgives a more detailed account of the past, sector by sector, and sets out the basis of the forecasts.Chapter IIIis the annual production chapter—including an attempt to derive from the general economic forecast a view about the prospects of different industries.Chapter IVgives the world background.

References

Notes

note (1) page 4 This similarity does not depend on the base period chosen. The chart would be essentially the same, if the indices, instead of being based on the years 1958 and 1962, were based on the second halves of 1958 and 1962, or on the fourth quarters of 1958 and 1962. (It would certainly not be sensible to choose as a base period the bad winter quarter at the beginning of 1963 : see the graph on the movement of output, 1955-1965, chart 29, page 82.)

note (2) page 4 See page 13. The Central Statistical Office is now pro ducing an estimate of national output derived from production figures (Economic Trends, January 1966, page iii).

note (1) page 5 This may overstate the fall; the seasonally adjusted figures of ‘other personal income’ dipped in the second quarter in 1963 and 1964 as well as in 1965.

note (2) page 5 For a list of the measures, see the ‘Calendar of economic events : 1965’, page 85.

note (3) page 5 This assumes that imports of manufactured goods and semi-manufactures were some £100 million lower than they would otherwise have been. The import content of the substitute home production (after allowing for stock reductions) was perhaps £10 million.

note (1) page 6 The figure would have been over £60 million higher, if the capital and interest payments on the North American loan had not been deferred. The various measures of the balance of payments deficit are compared in table 2, page 8.

note (2) page 6 This was certainly helped by the sale of the British minority holding in the Ford Motor Company, which brought in £131 million. But even if this item is excluded—so long as a ‘normal’ positive balancing item of £70 million is included— there was still a very small positive balance in 1961.

note (3) page 6 This is the percentage for total unemployment, including the temporarily stopped.

note (1) page 8 Cmnd. 2915.

note (1) page 9 What the effects on consumers' expenditure would be, if incomes policy were to have a stronger effect on the movement of prices and money incomes than we have allowed for, depends partly on the scale of the effect, but mostly on the timing. Thus if, over the next 12 months, the rate of increase of both prices and money incomes, especially wages, is moderated in precisely the same degree so that real incomes are much the same as they would otherwise be, then there is no reason to alter the consumers' expenditure forecast. Inasmuch as the moderation worked through to export prices, exports might be somewhat higher than forecast. If the effect on exports were very large, then some further containment of consumer demand might be necessary. But this is a some what remote contingency.

If the moderation of wage increases occurred in advance of the moderation in consumer price increases, real consumers' expenditure would fall, thus accelerating the emergence of ‘room’ in the economy. To the extent that the moderation of wage increases keeps export prices lower than they would otherwise be, some of this room would be filled by larger exports, so that the effect on aggregate demand would be less than on consumer expenditure alone. Vice versa, if the moderation of price increases preceded the moderation of wage increases. The widely held view that the intensification of incomes policy and a ‘tougher’ Budget are direct alternatives seems to be much over-simplified, not to say misleading.

note (2) page 9 There are various stockbuilding and continuing substitution effects to be allowed for in calculating this figure : the full-year effect of keeping the surcharge on is probably more than £60 million.