What kicked everything off was finding figures for British beer exports in the Brewers' Guardian. I collect all sorts of statitics, but especially stuff like this that show how much British beer was being exported to various parts of the globe.
They tell me a few things directly. Like that British exports to the USA were rising sharply, those to Australia in decline, those to the West Indies and India fairly stable. Except for a blip in 1870 when considerably more beer was shipped to India.
But because the figures include value as well as volume, there's other information than can be indirectly gleaned. Why not see how much the beer exported to various locations cost per barrel. It's easy enough to work out.
I know from other sources that the majority of beer shipped to the West Indies was either Stout or Strong Ale. Which means that the average price per barrel should be relatively high. The same should also be true for Australia, where a lot of stronger beers were shipped. I'd expect a list in terms of the average price to look like this, in descending order:
West Indies
Australia
USA
India
British beer exports 1862 - 1872 | ||||||
1862 | 1863 | 1864 | ||||
barrels | declared value | barrels | declared value | barrels | declared value | |
India | 159,140 | £445,801 | 152,588 | £429,564 | 165,037 | £498,449 |
Australia | 153,145 | £563,907 | 166,418 | £645,716 | 124,556 | £506,691 |
British West Indies | 21,014 | £75,220 | 22,100 | £79,393 | 26,887 | £104,037 |
United States of America | 7,780 | £31,446 | 7,644 | £33,053 | 9,830 | £43,681 |
Other countries | 123,748 | £479,280 | 142,881 | £558,512 | 164,176 | £670,304 |
Total | 464,827 | £1,595,654 | 491,631 | £1,746,238 | 490,486 | £1,823,162 |
1870 | 1871 | 1872 | ||||
barrels | declared value | barrels | declared value | barrels | declared value | |
India | 216,663 | £576,960 | 161,859 | £492,885 | 167,597 | £522,593 |
Australia | 89,808 | £369,741 | 80,511 | £324,061 | 88,184 | £359,701 |
British West Indies | 23,402 | £89,007 | 28,013 | £106,243 | 27,199 | £102,491 |
United States of America | 29,512 | £148,409 | 36,402 | £181,195 | 44,360 | £223,579 |
Other countries | 161,814 | £697,556 | 176,335 | £749,389 | 194,616 | £876,219 |
Total | 521,199 | £1,881,673 | 483,120 | £1,853,773 | 521,956 | £2,084,583 |
Sources: | ||||||
"Sessional Papers, House of Lords, Vol. VII, Accounts and Papers", 1864, pages 20-21 | ||||||
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 3, 1873, page 13 | ||||||
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 3, 1873, page 14 |
Why India last? Because I know much of the beer sent there was Porter, which was relatively cheap. The figures bear this out. The average price of the beer sent to India was between 53 and 62 shillings per barrel. No way most of that could be IPA. Because even in Britain, a barrel of IPA cost 60 shillings a barrel:
Allsopp price list from 1871 |
You can see my other predictions were a bit out. The most expensive beer was sent to the USA, followed by Australia with the West Indies only in third place:
British beer exports price per barrel 1862 - 1872 | ||||||
1862 | 1863 | 1864 | 1870 | 1871 | 1872 | |
India | 56.03 | 56.30 | 60.40 | 53.26 | 60.90 | 62.36 |
Australia | 73.64 | 77.60 | 81.36 | 82.34 | 80.50 | 81.58 |
British West Indies | 71.59 | 71.85 | 77.39 | 76.07 | 75.85 | 75.36 |
United States of America | 80.84 | 86.48 | 88.87 | 100.58 | 99.55 | 100.80 |
Other countries | 77.46 | 78.18 | 81.66 | 86.22 | 85.00 | 90.05 |
Average | 68.66 | 71.04 | 74.34 | 72.21 | 76.74 | 79.88 |
Sources: | ||||||
"Sessional Papers, House of Lords, Vol. VII, Accounts and Papers", 1864, pages 20-21 | ||||||
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 3, 1873, page 13 | ||||||
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 3, 1873, page 14 |
What was being sent to the USA that was so expensive?
Not sure why the average price per barrel generally increased between 1862 and 1872. Any suggestions?
I would need to go back and check the research but during the US Civil War, whisky gets taxed so high tastes shift heavily to beer. Then, trade opens up creating markets for Canadian beer that close again in the 1890s. Maybe just general trade conditions?
ReplyDeleteAlan,
ReplyDeleteI can't think of any reason British exports to the US were on the rise in the 1870's. But I'm sure there will be one.