British Motorcycles:
Total Production:
1945 49,000
1946 84,240
1947 111,600
1948 130,800
1949 154,800
1950 171,270 for motorcycles, 43% + of production was exported, if you add bicycles to the value of exported goods the total rises to £32,172,197!
Four biggest markets in 1950;
Australia 22,171 @ £2,041,923; There must be quite a lot of stuff out there in Aussie-land!
USA 8,582, @ £987,700; Bit of a surprise here the USA resisted importing machines as much as possible!
Canada 6,225, @ £500,160;
Switzerland 4,338 @ £495,690;
Now you know why, some years later it made so much sense to abandon the Commonwealth & other trading partners & join the Common Market, look at our trading partners in 1950!
Well R, I know monetary values have changed, but I would be more than happy now, today, to be producing & exporting that number from (1950) of motorcycles from Blighty!
Firms: BSA, Triumph, AMC/AJS/Matchless, Norton, Ariel, Velocette, Vincent, Royal Enfield, P & M & Douglas would be your main 4 stroke suppliers, plus many Villiers-engined derivatives Ambassador, Norman, e.t.c.
BSA was by far the largest motorcycle producer in the World in 1950, by a big margin, aided by war reparations & and copying & mirroring of the German DKW engine, that became the beloved Bantam & this model had a massive effect on BSA in the 1950s, as most of you would know!
Sadly it all went "titsup", if you are not born with wealth already there, it only comes through work & a Nations prosperity mainly comes through real jobs in real production, they may go on now in the News about how much the "City" brings in, but the real cost of investment abroad, to the Country is massive in British jobs & a skewed wealth distribution & this seems to be not really accounted for, most wealth created @ present is limited in circulation & not distributed as evenly as in early post-war Britain, jobs in production allowed wealth to filter down, through the respected social hierarchical groups.
Admittedly modern production techniques are not labour intensive, but surely something has to be done, otherwise most of us and our children in the future, will only know an England with part-time jobs in Supermarkets a very shaky retail sector and extremely badly tarnished & corrupt? Financial Services & Insurance sector & the disappearance of Small Businesses & pubs on a scale last seen in Cromwellian times!
Anyhow a new series on China on Monday nights is interesting in that Niall Ferguson on the "nature of the Beast" is informative about the Modern Global World!
And Mary Portas's Bottom Line has given light at the end of the tunnel to some.
As Peter Kay says "you can't go back"! But is he right?
Cheers
JBW