CITY 49
6February2021 THE WEEK
Commentators
Lockdown beganlastyearwithacrazefortheNetflixseriesTiger
King,saysLex. But, clearly,“theold-world joyofreading”has
reasserteditself.BloomsburyPublishingreports itnowexpects
annualprofits tobe “wellahead”ofexpectations. TheBritish
publisher,knownfor theHarryPotterseries,hasan“eye forthe
zeitgeist”. Its recenthits–suchas ReniEddo-Lodge’sWhy I’m
NoLonger Talkingto WhitePeople AboutRaceandDishoom’s
Indiancookbook–“afford anilluminatingsnapshotoflifein
2020”.Otherbestsellerlistsalso“show aworld insearchof
socialawarenessand feelgood schmaltz”,though thecontinued
popularity ofOrwell’s 1984 hintsthat“darker fearsremain”. All
told,NielsenBookScanreckons 202 million printbooks,worth
£1.76bn, weresoldintheUKlastyear.Such numbersfade beside
the past “heavy-hitters”suchasHarryPotter(500million in
globalsales), 1972 ’sThe JoyofSexorthe Bible.But the “upward
trajectory” articulatesacomforting truth:inc haotic times,the
best shelter is to be found“between the covers ofagoodbook”.
“Roughjusticecomesinmanyforms,”saysAlistairOsborne.
WasTomHayesavictimofit?TheformerUBSandCitigroup
traderhasbeenreleasedfromjailmorethanfiveyearsafterbeing
convictedof“rigging”thebenchmarkinterestrate,Libor.Given
thatHayesappearedtoacknowledgehiscrimesontape,“many
thinkhegothisjustdeserts”.Butdigdeeperand“it’shardto
escapetheconclusion”thatHayeswasa“fallguy”–acasualtyof
theSeriousFraudOffice’s“sprayshotapproachtoprosecutions”.
TheSFOdubbedHayes the“ringmaster”ofascam but, ashe
observes, “everybody” –includinghisbosses–“knewwhatIwas
doing.Therewasno subterfuge.” Moreover,whomexactlywas
he conspiringwith?“TheSFO triedtoanswer thatbyprosecuting
six brokersfromIcap,RPMartinandTullett Prebon. But they
wereallacquitted.”UBS endedup paying$1.5bnoffines;Hayes
was handeda14-yearsentence,“thesameforsexuallyassaulting
achild”.This“ludicrous” sentencewaseventuallycut,buthe’s
now fightingtohavehisconviction quashed.“Whatever the
outcome ofthat,hiscase isno triumphforBriti sh justice.”
HowistheUKeconomydoingintheinternationalgrowthstakes,
asksDavidSmith.Notsowell.AccordingtotheIMF,lastyear’s
10%contractionwasmuchworsethantheperformanceofthe
US,whichlost3.4%,andJapanandGermany,whichdeclinedby
5%.Perhapsthe“safestthingtosayisthattheUKwasamong
aclutchofpoorlyperformingEuropeancountries,alongwith
France,ItalyandSpain”.Somefavourthe“trampolinetheoryof
economicrecoveries”.ButthedisappointingnewsisthatBritain’s
projectedrecovery–4.5%thisyearand5%next–isbehindthat
ofSpainandFrance,inspiteoftheEU’s“vaccinationimbroglio”.
Why?Onereasonisthatourownsuccessfulprogrammeisn’tyet
“deliveringliberty”.Anotheristhe“serious”tradefrictioncaused
byBrexit.Butathirdisthathavingspentastaggering£ 280 bn
fightingCovid,thereis“littleofficialtalkofprovidingapost-
pandemicfiscalboost”.TheChancellormightsaythebeststim-
ulusissimplyliftingrestrictions,but“othercountriesareadopting
abelt-and-bracesapproach”.Timewilltellwhichworksbest.
“As digital technologies come to dominate everyindustry, engi-
neers are rising from the workbench to the boardroom in record
numbers,”says Harryde Quetteville.According toareport from
headhuntersCris tKolde r, awhopping 28% ofchie fexecutivesat
S&P 500and Fortune500 companiesin 2020 hadanengineering
degree–“beatenonlybybusiness degrees (34%)andmore than
theentire liberal arts put together”.What’s more ,theyappear to
be effective.In 2018, 34 ofHarvard Business Review’s “best-
performingCEOsint he world” were engineers,overtakingthose
with MBAs forthe fi rsttime.Membersofthe professionsay it’s
no surprisethat their“fusion oftechnical expertise andpragmatic
problem-solving” is indemand atatime when “real-world
delivery”counts.Indeed, today’s“entrepreneur-engineers”, like
Tesla’s Elon Musk,are th eBrune ls of theage.Sadly, in the UK we
havebaggage.Wedon’t ce lebrateengineers, or backthem ,ast hey
do in America–perhaps because Britain was home to theoriginal
industrialrevolutionand allour te mplates refer to150years ago.
Instead of harking back toaglorious past, “we need to update it”.
JeffBezos
Fewcompanieshavethrived
likeAmazonduringthe
pandemic.Theonlinegiant,
startedinagaragebyJeff
Bezosin1994,hasjust
deliveredrecordquarterly
sales,breakingthe$100bn
barrierforthefirsttime,said
CallumJonesinTheTimes.
Agoodmoment,reckons
Bezos,tostepdownas
CEO.“Inventionistheroot
ofoursuccess,”hewrote
tohis“fellowAmazonians”
thisweek,asheranthrough
itsgreatesthitsonthe
journeyfromonlinebook-
sellertoglobaldominance.
“Ifyougetitright,afew
yearsafterasurprising
invention,thenewthing
hasbecomenormal.”
Bezos,57,whowillremain
executivechair,ishanding
thereinstoAndyJassy–
bossofthecompany’scloud
computingarm,Amazon
WebServices–whohas
longbeenhisheirapparent.
Still,thechangecomesata
“strangetimeforAmazon”,
saidDominicRusheinThe
Guardian.Itsstockrosemore
than 75% last year, taking
Bezos’s private fortune to
$185bn. Yet it faces pressure
from workers complaining of
“mistreatment” during the
pandemic, and “increasing
political scrutiny of the size
and power of its business”.
What’s next for Bezos
himself, asked The Daily
Telegraph. The options
are endless for one of
the world’s richest men.
Stepping down will allow
more time to focus on his
space exploration firm (Blue
Origin), his climate change
initiative (The Earth Fund),
and his newspaper (The
Washington Post). But
former execs are “sceptical”
about how much power the
founder and largest share-
holder will actually relin-
quish. As they observe,
“Jeff Bezos likes control”.
Britain’s
stuttering
recovery
DavidSmith
TheSundayTimes
Rough justice
for Libor’s
“fall guy”
AlistairOsborne
TheTimes
Apandemic
publishing
boom
Lex
FinancialTimes
The future
belongs to
engineers
Harry de Quetteville
The Daily Telegraph
City profile