There’s another good reason. Because they show the shift of British exports from the Empire to other markets. In particular, to Belgium.
The table is so big I’ve had to split in in two.
UK beer exports 1946 - 1953 | ||||||||
destination | 1946 | 1947 | 1948 | 1949 | 1950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 |
Channel Islands | 5,342 | 7,021 | 9,958 | 9,693 | 6,505 | 2,721 | 8,959 | 9,815 |
Gibraltar | 5,698 | 7,077 | 6,958 | 7,609 | 8,530 | 8,693 | 8,183 | 8,325 |
Malta | 414 | 521 | 673 | 897 | 336 | 624 | 445 | 484 |
Cyprus | 2,593 | 2,312 | 2,112 | 2,538 | 4,002 | 2,712 | 2,099 | |
British West Africa | 1,574 | 5,797 | 18,044 | 34,626 | 33,811 | 35,593 | 50,636 | 58,049 |
British East Africa | 1,361 | 2,624 | 7,316 | 13,391 | 4,014 | 4,341 | 1,900 | 1,511 |
Aden | 50 | 1,284 | 2,327 | 4,200 | 2,684 | 2,006 | 2,897 | 5,927 |
Bahrein, Koweit, etc | 594 | 5,141 | 7,813 | 4,099 | 4,039 | 5,073 | 4,756 | |
India and Pakistan | 69,278 | 8,130 | 17,075 | 18,076 | 15,333 | 11,890 | 9,451 | 5,617 |
British Malaya | 26,270 | 6,377 | 10,463 | 12,258 | 11,666 | 14,412 | 6,028 | 5,447 |
Ceylon | 2,648 | 7,686 | 3,565 | 6,669 | 6,363 | 5,605 | 5,656 | 8,624 |
Hong Kong | 10,062 | 5,873 | 5,679 | 12,863 | 9,508 | 12,027 | 7,254 | 4,811 |
Australia | 54 | 8,481 | 18,761 | 16,879 | 35,790 | 8,303 | 57 | |
Canada | 313 | 1,598 | 1,281 | 2,090 | 3,352 | 3,680 | 3,892 | |
Bermuda | 22 | 788 | 977 | 1,603 | 2,843 | 1,901 | 1,466 | 948 |
British West India Islands | 251 | 1,045 | 15,087 | 14,009 | 15,459 | 15,213 | 16,112 | 17,123 |
British Guiana | 38 | 175 | 1,991 | 2,752 | 3,871 | 3,247 | 6,056 | 6,594 |
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan | 1,843 | 3,069 | 5,747 | 5,291 | 6,805 | 6,277 | 3,035 | |
Irish Republic | 221 | 3,280 | 11,327 | 6,201 | 4,225 | 5,223 | 4,966 | 4,674 |
Other British Countries | 74 | 972 | 6,470 | 6,719 | 7,153 | 8,927 | 10,260 | 6,570 |
total British | 123,303 | 64,047 | 138,511 | 187,280 | 163,198 | 186,411 | 166,314 | 158,358 |
Belgium | 1,405 | 3,414 | 34,288 | 33,786 | 33,362 | 45,733 | 50,237 | 55,240 |
other non-Commonwealth | 62,710 | 42,219 | 32,299 | 33,061 | 24,650 | 43,289 | 50,839 | 71,341 |
total foreign | 64,115 | 45,633 | 66,587 | 66,847 | 58,012 | 89,022 | 101,076 | 126,581 |
total | 187,418 | 109,680 | 205,098 | 254,127 | 221,210 | 275,433 | 267,390 | 284,939 |
Source: | ||||||||
“1955 Brewers' Almanack”, pages 58-59. |
UK beer exports 1954 - 1960 | |||||||
destination | 1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 | 1960 |
Channel Islands | 11,307 | 11,486 | 12,505 | 14,301 | 16,006 | ||
Gibraltar | 9,648 | 9,147 | 8,291 | 9,110 | 8,552 | 8,243 | 8,440 |
Malta | 353 | 344 | 2,220 | 1,778 | 2,366 | 1,684 | 2,119 |
Cyprus | 1,965 | 3,241 | 10,712 | 8,700 | 20,965 | 14,048 | 9,200 |
British West Africa | 38,051 | 46,050 | 47,811 | 44,705 | 30,079 | 16,656 | 11,928 |
British East Africa | 1,602 | 639 | 874 | 929 | 1,243 | 2,044 | 832 |
Aden | 5,271 | 4,240 | 5,944 | 5,250 | 8,071 | 7,189 | 10,496 |
Bahrein, Koweit, etc | 4,691 | 6,176 | 5,714 | 6,227 | 6,686 | 8,608 | 10,092 |
India and Pakistan | 5,347 | 4,625 | 4,961 | 1,518 | 746 | 889 | 1,262 |
British Malaya | 3,862 | 3,891 | 2,811 | 2,689 | 3,435 | 4,996 | 6,172 |
Ceylon | 1,938 | 2,425 | 2,574 | 2,534 | 2,307 | 1,638 | 1,306 |
Hong Kong | 3,975 | 2,738 | 2,074 | 2,239 | 2,108 | 1,862 | 1,516 |
Australia | 58 | 16 | 3 | 11 | 88 | 158 | 141 |
Canada | 3,674 | 3,992 | 3,785 | 4,041 | 4,657 | 4,420 | 5,452 |
Bermuda | 1,098 | 1,034 | 1,136 | 890 | 990 | 920 | 941 |
British West India Islands | 15,904 | 18,730 | 20,806 | 21,416 | 20,953 | 19,618 | 16,493 |
British Guiana | 6,809 | 8,565 | 6,273 | 5,680 | 2,414 | 2,527 | 4,347 |
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan | 1,853 | 1,213 | 199 | * | * | * | * |
Irish Republic | 6,251 | 8,450 | 7,300 | 7,039 | 5,684 | 6,394 | 6,589 |
Other British Countries | 6,234 | 5,127 | 4,751 | 7,350 | 8,174 | 5,848 | 5,285 |
total | 129,891 | 142,129 | 150,744 | 146,407 | 145,524 | 107,742 | 102,611 |
Belgium | 59,006 | 56,346 | 62,776 | 71,507 | 86,318 | 88,077 | 100,200 |
other non-Commonwealth | 59,127 | 26,938 | 25,357 | 21,475 | 16,843 | 17,536 | 19,682 |
total foreign | 118,133 | 83,284 | 88,133 | 92,982 | 103,161 | 105,613 | 119,882 |
total | 248,024 | 225,413 | 238,877 | 239,389 | 248,685 | 213,355 | 222,493 |
Source: | |||||||
“1962 Brewers' Almanack”, pages 56-57. |
I’m surprised at how well exports held up after WW II. Peaking in 1953 at 284,000 barrels, before sliding back to 222,000 barrels at the end of the decade. Exports were also at a similar level to before the war:
UK beer exports 1934 - 1939 | |||||
1934 | 1935 | 1936 | 1937 | 1938 | 1939 |
216,293 | 232,839 | 325,058 | 340,757 | 281,284 | 283,974 |
Source: | |||||
Brewers' Almanack 1955, p. 57 |
But there was a steady increase in the percentage exported to non-British territories after 1950:
UK exports to foreign countries | |||||||
1946 | 1947 | 1948 | 1949 | 1950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 |
34.21% | 41.61% | 32.47% | 26.30% | 26.22% | 32.32% | 37.80% | 44.42% |
1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 | 1960 | |
47.63% | 36.95% | 36.89% | 38.84% | 41.48% | 49.50% | 53.88% |
As the percentage increased so did the amount exported to Belgium, which by 1960 was received almost 50% of all UK exports. No wonder there are so many analyses of beer sold in Belgium in the Whitbread Gravity Book. Whitbread were big exporters so the Belgian market would have been very important for them.
The biggest falls are in regions from which the UK was withdrawing, such as Africa, India. The numbers are pretty steady in the Caribbean where the UK hadn’t started granting independence. Some of the reduction is probably due to the departure of British troops and administrators.
There must be something behind the sudden slump in exports to Australia. Probably some sort of legislation or import tax.
It’s interesting to note that most other places whose relationship with the UK remained much the same – Gibraltar, Channel Islands, Malta, Bermuda and Canada – exports remained stable or grew. Which confirms to me that the drop in exports to some countries was mostly due to changes in the political situation.
Next: which export destination paid the most per barrel.
5 comments:
I wonder who was doing the drinking in those Muslim countries.
Ex-pats or locals?
StuartP,
I'm sure it was the servants of empire: servicemen and officials.
Ron-I'm still not getting all,of the columns on these wide tables, like these and the ones recently. Can you include an image when they're wide? I really do follow them!
Was maybe the huge amount of British beer in Belgium filling a hole left by the Germans having ravaged as many of the local breweries as they could,to make ammunition and such?
1950s Canada saw plenty of immigrants like my parents. My neightbourhood of suburban Toronto was entirely British accented as a child. They all drank UK beer and spirits in their suburban backyards.
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