Journalism is the enemy of history when it comes to constructing a scholarly account of recent conflicts, according to Britain’s leading military historian, Antony Beevor, who spoke recent at the famous Hay-on-Wye book festival.
I was struck about how dismissive Beevor was to economic history.
Beevor also threw himself into the debate on the history curriculum, after education secretary Michael Gove enthusiastically embraced Niall Ferguson’s campaign for “real history” at the Guardian Hay festival.
Children should be taught narrative history, said Beevor. “History is a question of cause and effect. You need to take events in order to make sense of them.”
Asked whether local history might be incorporated into this grand-sweep approach he said: “How far you go into the local weaving industry or iron industry – I’m sorry, I think that tends to be tourist history rather than real history.”
I’ve enjoyed Beevor’s books. He is a great narrative historian. Every academic historian looking to improve his or her writing style should read Beevor. However, his dismissive attitude to industrial history suggests a degree of myopia as a military history– factories make the guns that win the wars. Rich countries don’t always win wars, but money is the sinew of war. History is indeed about cause and effect.
The federal government recently announced the names of the holders of the 19 new Canada Excellence Research Chair (CERC) chairs. The chairs program was designed to allow Canadian universities to capture top international scientific talent. Each chairholder gets a budget of $10 million a year for up to seven years. The chairs are coming to Canada from the United States, Britain, France and elsewhere, a welcome reversal of the normal stream of good researchers who leave Canada for US universities. Brain scientist Adrian Owen, who is moving to the University of Western Ontario, is pretty typical of the new chairs. He is profiled in this short video.
For press and blogosphere reaction to the CERC program, see here, here, here, and here.
There have been several criticisms of the CERC program.
1) There is the right-wing criticism that this isn’t a good use of taxpayers’ money. Scientists who want money for research should rely on private donations. We should put this money into tax relief for hard-workin regular Canadians, not money for eggheads. [NOTE: when they were in opposition, Conservative MPs used to make fun of some of the research topics funded by the government, reading a highly selective list of funded topics out into Hansard].
2) None of the 19 chair recipients are women.
3) None of the new chairs will be taking up jobs at Montreal universities. The program was biased against Quebec.
4) That the $190 million for the new chairs isn’t that much money in the grand scheme of things and the Harper government has actually reduced funding for research in real terms. See here.
Let me reply to each criticism in turn.
Criticism 1. Investing in basic science is a very good use of tax money. Much of what the federal government currently spends money on right now is useless and should be cut (I’m thinking of the “Canadian military” and a host of acronyms). Funding science, however, is one of the things governments should do. The funds that went into Stanford University’s electrical engineering department produced a massive return for society — the area near Stanford became the centre of the global electronics industry, known today as Silicon Valley. Provided it is done correctly, government funding for research can have massive social benefits. Check out this book:
Criticisms 2 and 3 are attempts to politicize decisions about how research funds are allocated. All of the research shows that government funding for research and development is most likely to produce positive outcomes when political factors are left out of the equation. The last thing we need is for politicians to manipulate the research funding process so as to put cash into their own ridings. Industry Minister Tony Clement deserves credit for not bucking to political pressure and assigning these chairs with electoral considerations in mind.Of course, it helps that there aren’t any universities in his riding of Parry Sound-Muskoka! He can afford to be impartial about which universities can get the cash.
Similarly, taking gender, hair colour, province of residence, religion, etc, into account would distort the process and undermine the argument about social benefits that I have made in replying to Criticism 1. The issue of discrimination against women in science is an important one, especially since the academic culture in some important science producing nations is still very sexist. (I’m thinking of Japan here, although none of the 19 chairs is coming to us from that country) That being said, there are a whole host of other reasons may be underrepresented at the peak levels of science. I’m not a scientist and thus can’t speak authoritatively on issues of sexual differences, but I know that respected scientists are divided on the issue of whether innate differences between men and women may influence their career paths. See here. There is no reason to suppose that the population of leading scientists will represent the general population, since leading scientists are, almost be definition, eccentric oddballs. In many cases, the top people in many fields are driven people whose obsession with research may border on OCD. Top scientists are more likely to be men because they are willing to be forgo a normal family life. In fact, it is likely that the top performers in science and other competitive fields are disproportionately gay men, since they have the freedom from childcare duties that allows them to spend all of their waking hours in the lab, practicing the violin, or whatever it may be. This doesn’t mean that the top researchers are necessarily happier people than second-tier academics (in fact, I suspect otherwise), but they do produce more science, which is the commodity that taxpayer is buying with this program.
Let me make the following historical analogy. During the Second World War, the US government assembled a team of top physicists to try to make an atomic bomb. This team was decidedly unrepresentative of the US college-educated population, let alone the US population in general. It was disproportionately foreign-born and Jewish. Would anybody now argue that it would have been in the interests of the United States to have imposed a quota so that, say, a certain number of Baptists from Tennessee would have to be hired as scientists by the Manhattan Project? I know that the analogy between peacetime and wartime science isn’t perfect, but I think you see the point I am trying to make.
Ground Zero After First Atom Bomb Test
Criticism 4: good point. Canada spends only 1.6% of GDP on R&D, whereas the United States spends 2.5%. The more generous funding of science in the United States appears to translate into a greater output of quality scientific articles (quality being defined by citation counts). 4.5%% of the most-cited scientific publications are by Canadian authors, whereas 49% of the most-cited publications are by Americans. This suggests that in per capita terms, the United States produces more somewhat scientific research than Canada. See here.
The annual meeting of the Canadian Historical Association has just ended. University of Guelph historian Matt Hayday has shared some thoughts on the state of political history at the CHA on his blog.
New data shows that both pre-tax and after-tax income inequality has increased in Canada.
We need to keep in mind, however, that our Gini coefficient, 32.6, is still pretty low, at least according to the UN’s Human Development Report. Other countries have higher measurably inequality. In the US, the Gini coefficient is 40.8. In the UK it is 36. See below.
Question: why is Canada’s income distribution relatively egalitarian?
M – Economy and inequality
HDI Rank Country Gini Index
1 Norway 25.8
2 Australia 35.2
3 Iceland .. 4 Canada 32.6
5 Ireland 34.3
6 Netherlands 30.9
7 Sweden 25
8 France 32.7
9 Switzerland 33.7
10 Japan 24.9
11 Luxembourg 30.8
12 Finland 26.9
13 United States 40.8
14 Austria 29.1
15 Spain 34.7
16 Denmark 24.7
17 Belgium 33
18 Italy 36
19 Liechtenstein ..
20 New Zealand 36.2
21 United Kingdom 36
22 Germany 28.3
23 Singapore 42.5
24 Hong Kong, China (SAR) 43.4
25 Greece 34.3
26 Korea (Republic of) 31.6
27 Israel 39.2
28 Andorra ..
29 Slovenia 31.2
30 Brunei Darussalam ..
31 Kuwait ..
32 Cyprus ..
33 Qatar ..
34 Portugal 38.5
35 United Arab Emirates ..
36 Czech Republic 25.8
37 Barbados ..
38 Malta ..
39 Bahrain ..
40 Estonia 36
41 Poland 34.9
42 Slovakia 25.8
43 Hungary 30
44 Chile 52
45 Croatia 29
46 Lithuania 35.8
47 Antigua and Barbuda ..
48 Latvia 35.7
49 Argentina 50
50 Uruguay 46.2
51 Cuba ..
52 Bahamas ..
53 Mexico 48.1
54 Costa Rica 47.2
55 Libyan Arab Jamahiriya ..
56 Oman ..
57 Seychelles ..
58 Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) 43.4
Most G20 countries favour a new tax on financial activities designed to discourage speculation. Canada has said that it has no plans to impose such a tax. This raises the possibility of Canada becoming something of a tax haven and Toronto becoming a real global financial centre at long last.
The Globe reported yesterday that “Should the Americans and Europeans press ahead with taxes on their banks while Canada holds firm in its opposition – an increasingly likely scenario – foreign banks operating in financial centres such as New York and London might look at picking up and moving to Toronto.”
This would be good news for Canada and very good news for Ontario, since Canada’s financial capital is also the political capital of Ontario. Ever since the advent of continental free trade and the deindustrialization of the Great Lakes states, its primary trading partners, Ontario has been struggling to find a new role for itself in the global economy. Ontario used to be Canada’s wealthiest province because it was where most of the manufacturing was. But now the factory jobs have moved to Asia and Ontario’s per capita GDP has fallen to close to the national average. Dean Acheson said in the 1950s that “Great Britain has lost an empire and has not yet found a role”. That sentence applies equally to Ontario in 2010. Having lost its empire, its captive markets in the other nine provinces, with the coming of free trade and globalization, Ontario has been floundering. Now it has the chance to become a global financial centre, which would deliver vast numbers of high quality not to mention green jobs to Ontario people.
Financial services are very mobile and very responsive to regulatory changes. When the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was enacted by the United States in 2002, business fled from Wall Street to London, cementing London’s place as the world’s preeminent financial centre. Of course, this raises the question of why all of the Wall Street firms didn’t simply flee to Toronto, which is much closer to New York, in the same time zone, and has cheaper real estate as well. Another advantage is that Toronto has a very multilingual workforce, which means that it is easy to find people who speak commercially important languages such as Mandarin.
So why didn’t the Sarbanes-Oxley refugees come to Toronto instead of crossing the ocean? Part of the reason is that London already had a certain critical mass as a financial centre, whereas Toronto’s Bay Street did not. Another factor was that Canada lacks a national security regulator. There is no equivalent of the SEC or the FSA in Canada. Even though the Toronto Stock Exchange is Canada’s national stock exchange, even province regulates securities issued in it. By all accounts, this is a major hurdle to Canada attracting global business.
This is why I was a bit depressed when I saw that the federal government draft legislation for a national securities regulator would allow provinces to opt out. See here. This is bad news. How Canada hope to take advantage of the imposition of a bank levy in other industrialized countries if we don’t get a national securities regulator in place soon?
The Ontario Government and the Mayor of Toronto need to start playing hardball on this issue. They need to use their clout in Ontario to get the federal government to coerce the other provinces into accepting a national securities regulator. Above all, Financial Minister Jim Flaherty needs to get his ass in gear and insist on a national securities regulator. Flaherty’s own riding, which is in a Toronto suburb that used to be a manufacturing hub, illustrates why it is imperative that Toronto be made into a global financial centre. And this can’t be done without a national securities regulator.Will somebody stand up for Ontario?
Jim Flaherty, MP for a rustbelt suburb of Toronto, should create new economy jobs for his constituents
Baker Library Historical Collections, Harvard Business School is pleased to announce the opening of a new exhibition “The High Art of Photographic Advertising: The 1934 National Alliance of Art and Industry Exhibition”. The exhibit will run through October 9, 2010 in the North Lobby, Baker Library | Bloomberg Center.
In 1934, a stunning photographic exhibition sponsored by the National Alliance of Art and Industry (NAAI) and the Photographic Illustrators, Inc. opened at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York. The show featured works by the top photographers of the day- including Russell Aikins, Margaret Bourke-White, Nickolas Muray, John Paul Pennebaker, and William Rittase – with a particular emphasis on advertising and industrial images. A year later the NAAI donated over 100 prints from the exhibition to the Harvard Business School, which at the time was actively collecting photographs for exhibition and classroom use.
“The High Art of Photographic Advertising,” organized by Baker Library Historical Collections, revisits the original 1934 exhibition, exploring the synergy between photography and corporate culture of the time and how 75 years later, the collection survives as a telling chapter in evolving perceptions about photography’s artistic,
commercial, and cultural significance.
My question to readers of this blog is: which historical books would you recommend to Canadian politicians as summer reading? If you had to give just one historical book to each Canadian MP to read, what would it be? You have an unlimited budget– it can be a paperback book or a $100 hardback– but you need to think about which book is most likely to have a positive influence on MPs that would ultimately translate into better public policy.You also should select a book they are likely to read as opposed to simply leave on the shelf.
I know that some people are tempted to joke that Canadian MPs aren’t as bright as their British counterparts and that maybe we should just assign them some children’s books. The fact is there are some intellectual people in the Canadian parliament — the Speaker Peter Milliken is one of them. I would appreciate it if people could take this exercise seriously.