Today, Nicholas Shaxson in his Treasure Islands blog,
arising from his best selling business book of that name, links to a Financial
Times article of 5th May by Chris Giles in the FT Magazine, “At The
Court Of King Mervyn”.
This article is long, compelling and in Shaxson’s word,
“devastating”. This word is over used
these days, perhaps “deconstruction” might be better.
Basically, it says that as King built his Bank of England
career in the initial stages on inflation targeting and control, this came to
dominate its function and purpose and to to demote and disregard other key work
such as maintaining a watch on and control of overall financial stability. He failed to understand the complexity of it
all.
My comparison is that he became afflicted with what I would
call Coal Train Syndrome. It is an
attitude to policy formation and conduct of business that fails to see what the
big problem is and to act on it in time to avoid serious errors of management
and judgement.
It is not only financial policy in the UK and elsewhere that
suffers from this fault it is energy policy, water policy, housing policy and a
raft of other key policies where experts, commentators and politicians become
either fixated on other issues or too attracted by what seem to be easy or more
popular simple answers to complicated and difficult problems.
For much of the first six decades of the 20th
Century the coal supplies in the UK were carried by rail on a mid 19th
basis. This was in four wheel five ton
wagons with only handbrakes. The wagons
until 1948 were owned largely by the mining and coal supply companies and
generally returned empty to sender after use.
From the mines, where they had been largely hand loaded they
were taken to marshalling yards, some quite huge to be assembled into trains
that were sent around the country.
Consequently, you had short trains to run in a localized basis close to
mining areas and then a great many longer trains to further destinations.
Given the amount of coal needed in say, the London area and
in other urban or rural areas further away this meant a huge number of trains
and return empties clanking up and down at around twenty miles an hour and
notoriously prone to derailing and control problems.
In short much of the rail network at any given time was
dominated by this traffic and other traffic planning, whether for parcels or
passengers had to be fitted in around it.
Clearly this meant in devising routing and timetables the coal traffic
imposed quite serious limitations on other options for rail use.
Yet despite by the 1920’s the availability of handling
technology and wagon design for much larger wagons with power braking etc. able
to run at speed and release substantial amounts of track use the rail companies
and then British Railways never got round to dealing with it until the 1960’s.
By which time both the rail network and its financing were
running into real trouble and worse and worse decisions had been and were made
about its potential and future. So when
the Bank of England concentrated on inflation targeting and did not tackle
other problems arising they had fallen into the same trap.
If the FT is right about the King Mervyn regime at the Bank
of England in the first decade of the 21st Century, all I can say is
what a way to run a railway.
Seriously.
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