[Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market by Walter Bagehot]@TWC D-Link bookLombard Street: A Description of the Money Market CHAPTER VII 17/57
Nobody could expect great attainments in economical science from such a board; laborious study is for the most part foreign to the habits of English merchants.
Nor could we expect original views on banking, for banking is a special trade, and English merchants, as a body, have had no experience in it.
A 'board' can scarcely ever make improvements, for the policy of a board is determined by the opinions of the most numerous class of its members--its average members--and these are never prepared for sudden improvements.
A board of upright and sensible merchants will always act according to what it considers 'safe' principles--that is, according to the received maxims of the mercantile world then and there--and in this manner the directors of the Bank of England have acted nearly uniformly.
Their strength and their weakness were curiously exemplified at the time when they had the most power.
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