Thursday 2 June 2022

A platinum performance

As Britain basks in a long weekend, it is a sobering thought that for those of us of a certain age the Platinum Jubilee marking the Queen’s 70 years on the throne may be the last major royal celebration in our lifetime. After all, Prince Charles will be older than the Queen is now if he ever celebrates his Silver Jubilee. It puts into perspective the fact that seven decades in the job really is a long time and the Britain over which Queen Elizabeth reigned in 1952 is in many respects barely recognisable today, especially with regard to the economy.

The economy now and then

There was a sense of expectation and excitement at the dawn of the second Elizabethan era as it was popularly known in 1952. After all, the UK was the world's third largest economy in the early-1950s, behind the US and USSR and, hard though it may be to imagine today, was Europe's industrial powerhouse. But beneath the surface, all was not well. The UK was, to all intents and purposes, bankrupt in 1945 and had been the biggest recipient of US aid under the auspices of the Marshall Plan. One of the key elements of economic policy in the early 1950s was thus to generate as much export income as possible in a bid to stay afloat.

Britain’s economy was still dominated by heavy industry in the 1950s but the rapid pace of economic reconstruction in Germany, which resulted in output exceeding UK levels by 1955, meant that the UK faced increasingly stiff competition for its manufactured goods. The next twenty years were characterised by 'stop-go' policies in a bid to relieve pressure on sterling, which was fixed to the dollar under the Bretton Woods agreement whilst the 1970s and 1980s were dominated by industrial strife as the government and unions locked horns in a bid to restructure the economy.

Such were the economic difficulties which the UK faced in 1952 that consumption of a number of goods was still rationed. The rationing of tea did not end until October 1952; sugar consumption was rationed until February 1953 and only in 1954 did cheese and meat rationing end. These were definitely not the “good old days.” Despite nostalgia for the 1950s, life is in many ways a lot sweeter today (sugar rationing notwithstanding). On average, people today are materially much better off than in 1952. Real GDP per head, for example, has quadrupled over the past 70 years (chart below) whilst the real cost of what were once luxury items has fallen. Take the example of cars, where the best-selling Morris Minor would have cost £631 in 1952 (£14,004 in 2022 prices) compared to £15,485 for the cheapest Vauxhall Corsa, the UK's best-selling car in 2022. However, an average car at the start of the Queen’s reign cost two years’ salary compared to six months in 2022. The relative fall in the price of cars has contributed to a huge surge in the number of vehicles on the road, from 2.5 million in 1952 (50 per 1000 head of population) to 37.5 million today (556 per 1000 head of population).

Perhaps one of the most notable changes since 1952 has been the technological revolution in communications, with the advent of the computer and the mobile phone changing the way in which people interact with the wider world. Less than two million households owned a TV in the black and white world of 1952, whilst households had to wait for the GPO to connect them to a system in which telephonists manually operated the exchanges. Today, anyone can walk into a shop to pick up a mobile phone from which they can immediately watch all sorts of media content and communicate with people anywhere in the world. As for computers, they were the stuff of science fiction. In 1952, IBM introduced its first fully electric system with 1Kb of RAM at a monthly leasing rate of $15,000 (£5,350 at 1952 exchange rates). A machine with 8000 times as much RAM can be bought today for around £200.

Radical social change

It is interesting to reflect on political change over the past 70 years. Winston Churchill was Prime Minister in 1952, heading a government which was very much rooted in Britain’s imperial past. In 1953, Churchill suffered a stroke which was kept secret from the public and he largely remained out of the public eye for five months. Imagine being able to get away with that in today’s world dominated by social media. The contrast between the government of Churchill and that of Boris Johnson is immense and embodies the extent to which the relationship between the rulers and the ruled has changed over the years.

Many aspects of British life in the early 1950s are very difficult to capture in terms of the data alone. For a portrayal of the hardships experienced by a large proportion of UK residents, interested readers are referred to the social history of post-war Britain by David Kynaston[1]. This paints a picture of cramped housing, dirty cities (the Great London Smog of December 1952 is believed to have contributed to the deaths of 4,000 people), lack of educational opportunity and a very steep path to the better economic times which lay ahead. Life in the UK (and indeed in many other European countries) was no picnic in 1952.

Seventy years of asset returns

Whilst the economic environment in 1952 was far from comfortable, financial markets were less volatile than they are today. An estimate of the rolling 10-year coefficient of variation for UK equity prices was at multi-year lows in 1952, although despite recent equity movements the degree of volatility on this measure is at its lowest since the mid-1950s. Over the last 70 years, UK equity prices have soared by over 10,000% (an average annual gain of 6.9%), though once we account for inflation this translates into a more modest 353% (annual average of 2.2%).

Another asset which has performed well over the course of the Queen's reign is housing. Back in 1952, the average house cost just shy of £1,900 but since the average gross annual wage in 1952 was a mere £314 (£6352 at today's prices), the price of a house was six times the annual wage. Today, an “average” house costs eight times the annual average wage. Over the Queen’s reign  house prices have risen at an average annual rate of 7.3% or 2.2% per annum in real terms which serves to support the old investment adage of "safe as houses."

Lessons for the future

Given the difficulties in forecasting trends even over the coming months, I am certainly not going to try and forecast how the UK economy will look in 70 years’ time, particularly since the problems we face today are unique in the post-1945 era. But it is interesting to reflect on past trends and assess whether there are any takeaways for the future. One feature of the UK over the period has been the relative stability of UK GDP growth (the post pandemic collapse notwithstanding). Real GDP growth has averaged 2.4% per annum since 1952 but this has slowed to an annual average of just 0.9% since 2008 (biased downwards, of course, by the 2020 collapse). But productivity growth remains one of the UK’s biggest challenges, with multifactor productivity barely growing, and with the population growing more slowly now than in the early years of the Queen’s reign (the baby boom came to an end many years ago) it is difficult to imagine the economic speed limit rising above 2% anytime soon.

One of the UK's economic success stories over the first 40 years of the Queen’s reign was the reduction in the huge debt overhang, which peaked at almost 238% of GDP in 1947. In 1952 the debt-to-GDP ratio was still at 162% and it continued falling to bottom out below 30% in the early-1990s. Economic events over the past 15 years have pushed it back to around 95%. The decline in the debt ratio was driven in part by rapid growth although as noted above, this is likely to be relatively sluggish over the coming years. Inflation also helped to erode the debt burden. Over the past 70 years, the UK has recorded an average CPI inflation rate of 4.6% which is more than double the BoE’s target rate. Stripping out the period 1971-81 results in an average of 3.3%. This may be close to the rate that the BoE will have to live with in the medium-term in order to help reduce the debt burden and may be an argument for raising the inflation target band from 1%-3% to 2%-4% (that is a debate for another time). Either way, the debt ratio is unlikely to fall rapidly in the coming years in the face of sluggish growth and big demands on government finances.

Whatever one’s views on the role of monarchy, it is nonetheless fascinating to reflect on the changes over the past 70 years. It serves as a reminder that for all the concerns about the current direction of travel, nothing is set in stone.



[1] David Kynaston (2009) ‘Family Britain, 1951-57’, Bloomsbury Publishing

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