Inspection and efficiency at the eighteenth-century Bank of England

Murphy, Anne (2015) Inspection and efficiency at the eighteenth-century Bank of England. Histoire et Mesure, XXX (2). pp. 147-169. ISSN 1957-7745
Copy

This article explores the impact of the reforming zeal that emerged during the 1780s on British public finances, in particular, the Bank of England. Although a private company and, therefore, exempt from examination by a Parliament-appointed Commission for Examining the Public Accounts, the Bank did establish its own investigation. Charged with examining all aspects of the Bank’s business, three of the institution’s directors spent a year interviewing staff and observing practice. Their recommendations for reform were limited but the system of inspection once started was not halted. The result was tighter internal controls and maintenance of the efficiency for which the Bank was already justly feted.


picture_as_pdf
Accepted_Manuscript.pdf
subject
Submitted Version
Available under Creative Commons: BY 4.0

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core RIOXX2 XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span MODS METS Data Cite XML MPEG-21 DIDL OpenURL ContextObject HTML Citation ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads