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Cost of living in German towns

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fullscreen: Cost of living in German towns

Monograph

Identifikator:
866449027
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-93831
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Cost of living in German towns
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
Stat. Off.
Year of publication:
1908
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (LXI, 548 Seiten)
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Contents

Table of contents

  • Cost of living in German towns
  • Title page
  • Contents

Full text

BREMEN. 
Ill 
It is the custom of most Bremen butchers to sell the meat without bone, 
the bone being disposed of for soup, and the effect is a higher level of prices 
than would otherwise be the case. The best cuts of beef bought by the working 
classes cost in October, 1905, 9\d. per lb., and the general range was between 
this figure and 8^/., except for steak, which cost Is. Id. and is beyond working- 
class households, and shin, which sold at 5^6?. Pork cost 9|d. to lid. per lb. 
Veal, which is little eaten by working-class families, cost from lid. to Is. Id. 
per lb., except shin, which cost 5¿d., and mutton cost from 8jd. to lid. 
A great variety of sausage is sold both by butchers and by special dealers 
in preserved meats, and, as no cooking is necessary, this kind of meat enters 
largely into the dietary of working-class families ; pork and beef are the 
principal ingredients. The sausages most in demand are “ Flock ” sausage, 
costing lid. to Is. 3d., according to quality, and liver, “red” (blood), and 
“ Mett ” (soft pork) sausages, which all cost from 8fd. to lid. per lb. 
Attached to the public abattoir is the customary Freibank, at which inferior 
meat is sold. Meat that does not pass the veterinary inspectors as of standard 
quality is only sold in the raw state if deemed to be quite innocuous ; the 
doubtful meat is boiled on the premises in large coppers. As a rule the best of 
the inferior raw meat fetches five-eighths of the market price of good meat, but 
the average price of the Freibank meat is only one-half that of the quotations 
given above. Boiled beef and veal fetch about 2^d. per lb., and boiled pork 3\d. 
A small deduction—a little over a farthing per lb.—is made for expenses, and 
the rest of the proceeds is handed to the owners of the meat sold. The 
“ Freibank ” is located in a separate building entered direct from the road, and 
sales of meat are as a rule held four times a week, between the hours of 3.0 
and 5.0 p.m. There is always an abundance of buyers, and more often than 
not the supply of meat falls below the demand. The average attendance 
is 250, but at times as many as 400 persons are counted. The buyers are first 
admitted, fifty together, into a large waiting room, and after each has received 
a card they pass into the “ Freibank ” room 10 at once. No one is allowed to buy 
more than 6*6 lbs. (English) of meat, and restaurant and refreshment-house 
keepers are not supplied at all. The soup from the boiled meat is distributed 
to buyers free of charge in quantities of about a quart. The following state 
ment shows the extent to which the “ Freibank ” meat offered for sale has 
increased during the past four years :— 
Year. 
1901- 2 
1902- 3 
1903- 4 
1904- 5 
1905- 6 
Beef. 
Cwt. 
8120 
1010-5 
1482-2 
1569-8 
1874-0 
Kind of Meat. 
Pork. 
Cwt. 
646-1 
825-9 
994-2 
8055 
596 3 
Veal. 
Cwt. 
48-5 
839 
78-7 
54-5 
50-2 
Mutton. 
Cwt. 
5-7 
7-8 
31-3 
27-8 
16 4 
Total 
Quantity. 
Cwt. 
15123 
1928-1 
2586-4 
2457-6 
2536-9 
Value. 
£ S. 
2,412 14 
3,070 5 
4,536 9 
4,125 7 
4,493 18 
There is a special department in the abattoir for hoi ses ; it is equipped with 
all modern improvements, and has its separate entrance and exit. According 
to a recent report of the director, “ with the exception of the department for 
pigs no part of the municipal abattoir has grown so much during the past 
35 years as that devoted to horses. In the first complete year, 1883-4, only 
978 horses and 78 foals were killed, but in 1905-6 2,403 horses and 45 foals, 
making a total of 2,449 against 1,056 22 years ago. Meanwhile, the 
population of Bremen itself had nearly doubled. Horseflesh is sold by 
several butchers, who are prohibited from dealing simultaneously in other kinds 
of meat. The usual price is about 4\d. per lb., though fillet costs a little more 
where this cut is sold separately, and chopped meat may be had as low as 3\d. 
Boiled horsemeat is sold at 4}¿d. and smoked meat at o^d., v hich is the general 
price of horsemeat sausage, of which a considerable amount is sold.
	        

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Cost of Living in German Towns. Stat. Off., 1908.
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