The story with the BBC Micro was that the BBC wanted to promote computer literacy in the UK, and needed a standard, inexpensive home computer with a high-quality BASIC to do it - and by "high quality", they meant that none of the ubiquitous M$ derived BASICs would do. As a side-effect, they also wanted a machine that could overlay text and graphics on a broadcast TV signal with minimal added hardware.
Acorn at the time had the Atom, which was a reasonably powerful machine but came with a very simple OS and BASIC. They were however working on a new version, and convinced the BBC that they could do a high-quality BASIC to the BBC's specifications on a 6502, which remained the least expensive CPU with sufficient capabilities on the market. This freed up enough of the parts budget to include a huge amount of expandability, including built-in A/D converters (analogue joystick/paddle interface), sockets for expansion ROMS, a LAN interface (not Ethernet, think more like LocalTalk) and a floppy drive controller.
You might wish to compare the prices of the BBC Micro and the various contemporary Apple machines. The former was always triple digits of pounds sterling; the latter were often quadruple digits of US dollars, despite Woz' genius at minimising circuitry.
With the Atari ST arriving in 1985, it's worth noting that the first ARM CPU was built that year - as a BBC Micro Second Processor, of course, because it was originally an Acorn product! It took a couple more years to reach retail in the Archimedes, but now ARM is *the* most popular CPU in the world - you probably have at least half a dozen of them in your smartphone, and another half-dozen in various inconspicuous parts of your PC. Its original development was funded by the success of the BBC Micro.
But the BBC Master didn't arrive until 1986. Really, it was a stopgap until the Archimedes could be developed properly.
And now the benchmark results:
Code:
A: 0.18
B: 0.31
C: 5.32
D: 16.1
E: 37.05
F: 1898.95