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Chapter IV. Industrial Production

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Extract

In the four quarters from the end of 1979 to the end of 1980, industrial production fell 12 per cent and manufacturing 14 per cent. The average changes for the year were 8 per cent and 9 per cent. The largest previous post-war fall in manufacturing, in 1974-5, was 8 per cent over two years. In the first quarter of 1980 manufacturing output would, but for the steel strike, have been only slightly below the average level that had been maintained through 1977-79. In the subsequent quarters, excluding the recovery of steel output, it fell 6 per cent, 3 per cent and 3½ per cent (Statistical appendix table 2). There are only two manufacturing sectors in table 1 that do not show a decline for the year as a whole. It is essential to emphasise the unprecedented extent and size of this fall because individual industrial falls of 10 or 15 per cent can otherwise look like exceptional disasters, requiring special explanations and demanding special measures of assistance. Although there were of course influences that made the position of individual industries even worse than that implied by the general fall in demand (some of these are discussed in the next section), it is against the background of a general fall of 9 per cent that their relative importance must be measured.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1981 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Footnotes

(1)

All aggregate figures used in this chapter exclude production of oil and gas, MLH 104; this index number has reached a level of over 30,000 (1975=100). The conventional indices of industrial output are used, not the new series for ‘implied level of output’; these are available only for some industries.

References

page 69 note (2) CBI, Industrial trends survey, 79, January 1981.

page 71 note (1) c.f. National Institute Economic Review, No. 93, August 1980, p. 9. NEDO has now presented a convincing summary of the evidence that United Kingdom fuel costs for industry are relatively high in National Economic Development Council, International comparisons of industrial energy prices, NEDC (80), 83, 1980.