Originally posted by french frank
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Paying to go to parties
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Anna
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A fiver isn't much for a modern teenager...and anyway it depends on what it includes. Some parents give older teenagers an allowance (maybe as much as £20 a week) but that has to include everything...clothes, going out costs, makeup (girls), club subs. It may also have to be earned by housework, cleaning the car, etc, etc.
The changing value of money examples above seem a bit wide of the mark.
A Mars Bar cost 3d (or 1.24p) in my yoof. Now it's about 60p...and it's shrunk, so it's a staggering 50X more expensive. So, on the Mars Bar scale your half-a-crown (12.5p) pocket money would need to be around £6.30 in today's money.
And then there's other countries. In Norway this Christmas, a single parsnip (a horrible old woody one...but individually wrapped) cost 30kr (£3). A small triangle of Brie cost 100kr (£10). So giving avuncular pocket money to Norwegian second nephews and nieces needs a bit of thought. Lobbing then a fiver would buy them 1.6 parsnips. Gee whiz.
Sorry. Getting off topic, but trying to keep Refreshment Room in mind!
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A bag of chips was a bit under shilling in 1970/71.
It was 6 shillings for an adult on the cheap terraces at the Dell. Terrace admission was for a long time broadly the same as a cinema ticket, (through the 70's 80'S) IIRC.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI used to get one 'n' six age 10 in 1970. Probably not far off the value of a fiver today?
Edit: Just looked it up. A shilling and sixpence in 1970 would be worth 98p in 2012 using the retail price index and £1.70 using average wages.
Some of the things we have now weren't even available 40-50 years ago - CDs, DVDs, digital radios and TVs, affordable computers, digital watches, mobile phones.
I can't remember when MacDonalds opened in the UK - maybe mid 1970s. At one time in the 1980s (young) children's parties were sometimes held in MacDonalds - and it wasn't that expensive - though we tended to host them at home. I can remember the Happy Meals and the toys which some children collected.Last edited by Dave2002; 24-01-14, 13:50.
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At University, I lived comfortably on a (maximum) grant of £285 a year. Hall fees were £5 a week, which included food.
When I moved into a shared flat, the rent was 35s a week each, though we were more tightly packed than anyone would put up with now.
You could get ten cigarettes and a box of matches and change out of two shillings. I suppose I must have eaten, but I don't remember much about the price of food.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostA bag of chips was a bit under shilling in 1970/71.
It was 6 shillings for an adult on the cheap terraces at the Dell. Terrace admission was for a long time broadly the same as a cinema ticket, (through the 70's 80'S) IIRC.
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Row B of the Amphitheatre at Covent Garden was 10/6 in 1962, I think.
I don't know at what age I first had pocket money, but it was a penny for each year of my life until I was twelve (1952), when I reached the mighty sum of one shilling. Can't quite remember after that. Nor can I remember what I gave my own children, except that in exasperation I gave my younger son an allowance in his mid-teens so that he could buy his own clothes (not school uniform), because I got tired of arguing about what to buy.
What was this thread about again? Oh, paying to go to parties. Never heard of such a thing. It's quite expensive enough to go to a wedding or celebration at a distance without paying for the actual party,
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Honoured Guest
Paying for parties has been going on for decades. We had a charming near neighbour - a Mrs Payne, I think her first name was Celia or something like that - who was always inviting my husband and me. Unfortunately, they were always on my choral society night so I never got to go, but my husband became quite a regular and he said he met all sorts of interesting folk.
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marthe
The practice of inviting paying guests to a party exists over here as well. We've never been to a "do" of this sort and might consider declining such an invitation. I agree with Mary that it is expensive to be a guest, especially if travel is involved. The cost of travel, hotel, clothing, gifts, tips etc can mount up. Of course, hospitality is meant to be reciprocal even if it means taking all the boys in your son's class to MacDonalds for a birthday party (guilty of this but it was POPULAR back then.)
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