You would not normally think that management theorists are
peddling sclerotic ideas. You would think that people who are working in
business are more supple and more flexible than those who traffic in religious
or secular dogmas. After all, companies pay good money for the advice offered
by management theorists. It’s difficult to believe that they are being taken
for a ride.
And yet, that is what a recent comment in the Economist’s
Schumpeter column. It even compares today’s management theorists to the Catholic
Church in the early Renaissance and says that their field is ripe for a
Reformation.
Like today’s political commentariat management theorists
have latched on to a certain number of dogmas and will not let go. They have
built their business on a foundation of erroneous beliefs. They are so
thoroughly convinced of the truth of their big ideas that they are impervious
to reality.
Schumpeter presents its narrative:
Management
theorists sanctify capitalism in much the same way that clergymen of yore
sanctified feudalism. Business schools are the cathedrals of capitalism.
Consultants are its travelling friars. Just as the clergy in the Middle Ages
spoke in Latin to give their words an air of authority, management theorists
speak in mumbo-jumbo. The medieval clergy’s sale of indulgences, by which
believers could effectively buy forgiveness of their sins, is echoed by
management theorists selling fads that will solve all your business problems.
Lately, another similarity has emerged. The gurus have lost touch with the
world they seek to rule. Management theory is ripe for a Reformation of its
own.
You will note that the magazine is taking out after the
theorists on the grounds that they have sanctified capitalism. Schumpeter is
not going to critique capitalism. He will argue that Western
economies are being stifled by government bureaucracies. They are often
capitalistic in name only.
Schumpeter begins with this dogma:
The
first idea is that business is more competitive than ever.
True or false?
Schumpeter says that it is false. The business world is less
competitive than before. Businesses are doing more consolidating than competing:
The
most striking business trend today is not competition but consolidation. The
years since 2008 have seen one of the biggest-ever bull markets in mergers and
acquisitions, with an average of 30,000 deals a year worth 3% of GDP.
Consolidation is particularly advanced in America, says a report in 2016 by the
Council of Economic Advisers, which also showed how companies engaged in
consolidation are enjoying record profits.
And then there is the dogma of entrepreneurialism. We all
believe in entrepreneurs, especially because, after going to so much trouble to
learn how to pronounce the word, we feel obliged to use it.
Schumpeter explains:
A
second, and related, dead idea is that we live in an age of entrepreneurialism.
Are we seeing the growth and development of a myriad of
small businesses? Are these businesses driving job creation and pulling the
nation out of its chronic malaise?
Last night I saw a television report on entrepreneurialism.
It took us to Washington, D.C. and asked us to consider how the Trump economic
agenda would create more food trucks. That’s right, what the nation really
needs is more food trucks. That’s the future of business expansion!
As for the facts on the ground, Schumpeter reports:
In
America the rate of business creation has declined since the late 1970s. In
some recent years more companies died than were born. In Europe high-growth
ones are still rare and most startups stay small, in part because tax systems
punish outfits that employ above a certain number of workers, and also because
entrepreneurs care more about work-life balance than growth for its own sake. A
large number of businesspeople who were drawn in by the cult of
entrepreneurship encountered only failure and now eke out marginal existences
with little provision for their old age.
In short, government bureaucracy has made it extremely
difficult and extremely risky to start a small business. For most people the
point is obvious. Small businesses have the most difficulty
because they do not have the funds to pay for compliance officers.
This suggests that in America and Europe big government has
been stifling capitalism. Management theorists should be helping their clients deal with government regulations, not put their heads in the sand and pretend that it's not a problem. Instead of preaching the gospel of
capitalism they ought to be demonstrating against an increasingly intrusive
government.
Capitalism is still the great policy, but socialistic
governments have put it on life support.
Management theorists are also selling the idea that the
internet has helped business to accelerate decision-making, production and
distribution:
The
theorists’ third ruling idea is that business is getting faster.
And yet, whatever advantages a business might glean by
collecting more information more quickly has been counterbalanced by the
intrusive government bureaucracies.
Schumpeter refutes the notion:
And in
many respects business is slowing down. Firms often waste months or years
checking decisions with various departments (audit, legal, compliance, privacy
and so on) or dealing with governments’ ever-expanding bureaucracies. The
internet takes away with one hand what it gives with the other. Now that it is
so easy to acquire information and consult with everybody (including suppliers
and customers), organisations frequently dither endlessly.
The last point sounds like a page out of Francis Fukuyama.
It says that a world order based on free trade was the inevitable outcome of
the movement of the World Spirit. And that its progress cannot be reversed. Schumpeter suggests that it was not inevitable and will not necessarily survive.
Schumpeter writes:
A
fourth wrong notion is that globalisation is both inevitable and
irreversible—the product of technological forces that mere human decisions
cannot reverse.
Of course, the trend seems to be pointing away from
globalization and toward a revival of mercantilism:
In
1880-1914 the world was in many ways just as globalised as it is today; it
still fell victim to war and autarky. Today globalisation shows signs of going
into reverse. Donald Trump preaches muscular American nationalism and threatens
China with tariffs. Britain is disentangling itself from the European Union.
The more far-sighted multinationals are preparing for an increasingly
nationalist future.
Schumpeter concludes that management theorists have
gotten so mired in their dogmas that they has missed out on the pervasiveness
of government meddling in the private economy. They have failed to adapt to a
changing world:
The
backlash against globalisation points to a glaring underlying weakness of
management theory: its naivety about politics. Modern management orthodoxies
were forged in the era from 1980 to 2008, when liberalism was in the ascendant
and middle-of-the-road politicians were willing to sign up to global rules. But
today’s world is very different. Productivity growth is dismal in the West,
companies are fusing at a furious rate, entrepreneurialism is stuttering,
populism is on the rise and the old rules of business are being torn up.
Management theorists need to examine their church with the same clear-eyed
iconoclasm with which Luther examined his. Otherwise they risk being exposed as
just so many overpaid peddlers of dead ideas.
7 comments:
In "False Dawn", published 15+ years ago, John Gray compared claims of Capitalism Triumphant to Marxism and other Utopian dogmas.
All "False" when fully accepted. Tho some have various degrees of truth and/or utility.
Religion is un-falsifiable in This world.
Why, as a military speechwriter, did I buy and read the book? (And agree w/its logic?)
I wrote hundreds of speeches. Starting w/blank screens, pristine legal pads.
Got direction for a few. Harrowing. Horripilating.
"Rich, I want 4K words about Leadership. For a major convention of several thousand executives. ASAP. The Pentagon is watching."
It's said (perhaps rightly) that early heart attacks is the Occupational Hazard of Speechwriters. All those I know had at least one by 40-something. Michael Gerson in his 30's.
Books - lotsa books - helped. The nightmares started after I retired. I'll never write another. -- Rich Lara
Francis Fukuyama's "The End of History and the Last Man" was all the rage when it came out. It was the model of the technocratic book, as it was all about technology and how it's making us crazy. The thing Fukuyama seemed to forget was: who created the technology?
It is, quite possibly, the most naive, vacant, stupid premise ever devised by the mind of man. It is a startling reflection of today's academy, and the decline of the humanities. It shows man no longer knows himself, nor wants to. We have empowered technology as an amusement and distraction, not as a tool. We gaze into the Glowing Box, waiting eagerly for the bright flash of pixels to give us answers and meet our needs.
Once you don't believe in the human condition, in man's fall, you'll believe anything. It all just sounds ducky. Until the next idea.
Liberal democracy is an advancement in human consciousness and possibility, but we forget it is fragile. We're still merely Roman farmers with an electrical grid. Take electricity away, and the luxurious system we've adapted to falls apart.
I just ordered 2 books on that very subject! Roger Scruton & John Gray.
Didn't read the FF opus. Thought it was optimistic. One World and all that. Sam Huntington was his mentor.
I 100% agree. Homo sapiens is fractured at the roots. Always will be. I'm not quite a Believer, but I believe that.
Gray says we're worse off than the Romans. More disparate, less stable.
I needed heat & electric. 7 below the other day. Skoal. -- Rich Lara
We'll get more business startups by removing most of the bureaucratic and tax disincentives.
From "The Generals Are Coming" post on December 15...
Rich Lara @December 16, 2016 at 9:24 AM:
"Still mourn The Civil War."
I'm very curious about this, Rich. Please elaborate.
See my old post 'Management Mentalities', which channels Peter Drucker.
Too few Charlie Kellstadts, too many Son Irvings.
http://photoncourier.blogspot.com/2004_06_01_archive.html#108835321560249258
Ignatius: I live near Waukegan. In front of the Municipal Bldg, stands a large 20-foot green copper CW Memorial of the Union Army boys of IL who fought & died & were crippled. I always salute it.
Latest research posits 850,000 (mostly unmarried) of our best young men were lost, N & S. Morbidity rates were shoddy (a CW term) then. Many came home to die.
That means young women w/o husbands. W/o children. Today, their unborn descendants would be tens of millions.
I enlisted in the Army in Waukegan. Since, I've read much about our National Catastrophe. Tho my grandparents came here in early 20th C, I feel part of the American Saga.
Joseph Ellis writes our Founders knew there would be a terrible reckoning. But couldn't avert it.
We're the ONLY country that suffered so ending slavery. It was necessary. The Union destroyed, America would be a congeries of hostile entities.
"There is much ruin in a Nation". Strangely (to me) Af-Ams couldn't care less. I care dearly.
The historical novel, "The Killer Angels", is a beautiful encapsulation of our tragedy. Sorry to be so lugubrious. -- Rich Lara
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