In the 70's good local honey was typically around a £1 for 1lb. Given inflation and time that equates to approximately £15 for 1lb (454 grams).
What do you value yours at ?
What do you value yours at ?
Early the very early 70's yes ... but remember that inflation was rampant in the early 70's. If it was a £1 in the late 70's then it's pro rata only about £5 now.
About the same http://calculateinflation.com/uk/ I think ...
Do you mean CPI https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_price_index ? This is the 'basket of goods' one. If so, I can't find the CPI data.
A more accurate comparison would be to use the Retail Prices Index (RPI)
I sell mine at the door for £5 per 1lb. I know it's underpriced but our neighbours are good folks and appreciate the honey being sold locally.
This year the time interval between the Honey for sale sign going up and the first sale was 25 seconds.
I was barely into short trousers in the early 70s, and my hazy memories were that £1 was a huge sum (I remember that I had 2 new pence a week and that allowed me to buy so many gobstoppers at the corner shop that it lasted me to the next week and Warlord comic was only 5p); the point is (oh, do get to the point...) I suppose honey was actually relatively more expensive back then than it is now and if it had kept pace with RPI/CPI then we would all be rich(er) or it would have been forcibly privatised! But then I had loads of hair and we were just about to start the adventure that was the common market (I’m having a strange sense of deja vu). Forgive my unreliable memories!
You was lucky. When I were in short trousers there was sweet rationing. Easter eggs was made of marzipan. On one occasion my brother and I rioted when we found a time-expired sweet coupon in the ration book at the end of the month...........
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