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The Pound in Your Pocket

November 1967. Harold Wilson's government devalues sterling and the country panics. Frances Cairncross tells the inside story. From 2017.

Fifty years after it happened, Frances Cairncross looks back at the story of the Devaluation crisis of 1967.

It was one of the iconic phrases that will always be associated with Harold Wilson's premiership: in a TV broadcast, a day after his government had decided to reduce the value of the pound sterling by just over 14 percent against the dollar, Wilson assured the nation that, nevertheless, "the pound in your pocket" was still worth the same.

As a young journalist, Frances Cairncross covered the story - her father, Sir Alec Cairncross, was a senior Treasury official closely involved in the discussions before and the consequences following the November 18th move. He wrote in his diary "at 10.35, I saw the TV screen show a Β£1 note with DEVALUED printed across it..."

With:

Peter Jay
William Davis
William Keegan
David Walker
Robin Butler
Professors Robert Neild
Kathleen Burk

Featuring readings from Alec Cairncross's diary of the period.

Producer: Simon Elmes

First broadcast on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 in November 2017.

Available now

1 hour

Last on

Sat 8 Oct 2022 20:00

Broadcasts

  • Sat 11 Nov 2017 20:00
  • Tue 17 Aug 2021 11:00
  • Tue 17 Aug 2021 21:00
  • Sat 21 Aug 2021 13:00
  • Sun 22 Aug 2021 01:00
  • Sat 8 Oct 2022 20:00