Wages and Cost of Living in the Victorian Era (original) (raw)

Making a definitive statement about the cost of living in Victorian England is difficult, particularly in the last half of the century, because the economy went through a long period of growth, followed by slumps at the end of the nineteenth century. A worker in 1870 might make 150% what a worker in 1850 made, but because different prices had increased at different rates, the actual buying power of the wages increased only moderately. At the end of the century, prices fell greatly, more rapidly than wages, so that despite a lower wage, the workers buying power actually increased.

The following tables provide a sampling of wage and cost of living information.

Wages

1. According to Porter (176), in the mid-1860s workers in London received the following wages for a 10-hour day and six-day week:

2. These wages reflect weekly pay in the mid- to late '60s (various sources listed below)

3. In better paid positions, particularly the professions, salaries were indicated in annual amounts. Two positions for which information is available are:

Cost of Living for a senior clerk (1844) Rent25/0/0 Taxes5/0/0 Maid7/0/0 Coal 5 tons6/5/0 Candles and Wood2/0/0 Tea7/16/6 Sugar6/14/2 Butter & Eggs9/12/0 Meat18/6/0 Fish2/0/0 Vegetables5/0/0 Beer6/10/0 Washing womansoap and her meals6/13/0 Ironing and mangling1/0/0 Clothing23/6/0 Church and charity3/10/0 Doctor5/0/0 Misc.1/8/0 Amusements1/19/4 Savings6/0/0 Total £150/0/0 Source: Hayward Cost of Living for a typical, rising professional man with a £700 annual income (early 1900s) Rent and Taxes100 Two maids42 Food & Cleaning materials For 4 people104 Washing26 Coal 1 ton/month12 Electric Light18 Wine10 Office expensesTrainfair and lunches30 Insurance25 Dress x280 Savings50 TOTAL£487 Source: Bowley

References

Bowley, A. L., Wages in the United Kingdom in the 19th Century. Cambridge: University Press, 1900.

Burnett, John, A History of the Cost of Living. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1969.

Hayward, Arthur, The Days of Dickens. New York: E. P. Dutton & Company, 1926.

Porter, Dale H. The Thames Embankment: Environment, Technology, and Society in Victorian London. Akron, Ohio: University of Akron Press, 1998.


Last modified 16 July 2003