Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2011
Merchants formed an important component of British foreign direct investment before 1945. Locating in parts of Asia, Latin America and other developing economies, they often diversified into non-trading activities, including the ownership of plantations. This article examines three such British firms active initially in Asia, though with operations also in North America, Europe, and Africa. Often regarded as handicapped by managerial failings, especially from the early twentieth century, the authors cast these firms as more entrepreneurial and possessing greater managerial competencies than has been suggested. The article argues that their business strategies continued to evolve in the interwar years and that, when viewed as business groups, their organizational forms were robust, though considerable diversity in the performance of the three British firms can be observed. This evidence is shown to have implications for wider debates about the competencies of British management as a whole.
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16 Brogan, J., James Finlay and Company Limited (Glasgow, 1951)Google Scholar, provides an outline history of Finlays.
17 Ray, Rajat K., Industrialization in India (Delhi, 1979), 263Google Scholar. “Managing agent” was the name used to describe British merchant houses in India. They were more usually known as “agency houses” in Southeast Asia.
18 Undated memo c.1945, Finlays archives, University of Glasgow (hereafter UGD) 91/413/2.
19 Brogan, James Finlay, 77–79; J. F. Muir to Gatheral, 22 Sept. 1945, UGD 91/413/1.
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21 All the insurance company principals were British, as were nearly all the shipping companies. The exceptions in shipping were mainly Dutch.
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23 Records of British Borneo Timber, Wilkinson Process Rubber and Wilkinson Rubber Linatex companies, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL; Nickalls, G., ed., Great Enterprise: A History of Harrisons & Crosfield (London, 1990)Google Scholar. Linatex was a thick rubber sheet which was valuable because of its abrasion-resistant properties. It appears to have been almost alone before 1945 as a sophisticated product manufactured from raw rubber. Finding large scale uses and hence markets for Linatex was a significant problem which was compounded by early quality control difficulties in production. Its first large scale use was in wartime, as a cover for fuel tanks in ships and aircraft, but its main post-1945 use was as belting for conveyors in mining (for the movement and sorting of coal and ores), though it also came to be used in pumps and valves.
24 Harrisons & Crosfield appears to have exported some chemicals from Canada before 1920, though such activities were moribund from 1921. In the 1930s Harrisons & Crosfield in Canada gained experience of importing industrial raw materials and intermediate goods through large scale importing from Europe of steel products. Threat of war in Europe was one of the factors behind the move into distribution within North America. Harrisons & Crosfield seized the opportunity to acquire successively two companies which together allowed them to distribute a wide range of products for a number of important chemicals manufacturers. H. J. Williams, typescript history of Harrisons & Crosfield in Canada (1961), Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL. These two moves belonged to a strategy common to many trading companies by the late 1930s: that of acquiring specialized manufacturers' agencies. Agencies for Canadian and U.S. manufacturers were an exception to the general rule that Harrisons & Crosfield acted as overseas sales agents for British manufacturers. The other exception was in Australia and New Zealand, where the company held agencies for local foodstuffs and other manufacturers.
25 R. J. Henderson to Borneo Company, 28 Dec. 1898; letter to Mr. Grenfell, 2 Mar. 1919, MS 27235, Borneo Company archives, GL.
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29 On British overseas banks, see Jones, Geoffrey, British Multinational Banking, 1830–1990 (Oxford, 1993)Google Scholar. The figures for Antony Gibbs are estimates. The firm was organized as a number of interlocking partnerships. This estimate attempts to capture the overall size on the basis of data in the Antony Gibbs archive, GL. The figures for Balfour Williamson are also estimates, since the first set of published accounts relate only to 1949. The estimates rely on these accounts and on a substantial amount of financial data for 1900–38 in Hunt, Wallis, Heirs of Great Adventure: The History of Balfour Williamson & Co. Ltd., Volume 2 (London, 1960)Google Scholar.
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34 Staff lists, Harrisons & Crosfield archive, GL. No data exists on employment in the U.S., Canada and Australia operations.
35 Calcutta to Glasgow, 17 Sept. 1945, UGD 91/413/1. It has proved impossible to reach a similar employment figure for Harrisons & Crosfield and the Borneo Company.
36 This more dynamic view of British merchants/trading is found in some of the existing literature, including Fforde, International Track, and—in the case of Russia—Carstensen, Fred V., “Foreign Participation in Russian Economic Life: Notes on British Enterprise, 1865–1914,” in Entrepreneurship in Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union, ed. Guroff, Gregory and Carstensen, Fred V. (Princeton, N.J., 1983)Google Scholar.
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48 Files on accounts, UGD 91/28/1,2,4.
49 Champdany reports and accounts, UGD 91/162.
50 Annual reports of Harrisons & Crosfield and plantation companies, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
51 Agency agreements, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
52 Ibid.
53 Harrisons & Crosfield, One Hundred Years as East India Merchants: Harrisons & Crosfield, 1844–1943 (London, 1944), 35–6Google Scholar; records of Irwin-Harrisons-Whitney, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
54 Harrisons & Crosfield's “Nectar” brand was mainly exported from the U.K. Within the U.K., before tea activities were hived off into Twining Crosfield, Harrisons & Crosfield undertook blending and packet labeling for named distributors. Harrisons & Crosfield, One Hundred Years, 15–16.
55 Borneo Company board minutes, 19 Dec. 1934, MS 27178/20, GL.
56 Tyson, G., 100 Years of Banking in Asia and Africa, 1863–1963 (London, 1963), 101Google Scholar.
57 Harrisons & Crosfield ledgers, Harrisons & Crosfield archive, GL.
58 Return on capital employed (ROCE) is profit after tax as a percentage of capital employed. Capital employed is share capital (ordinary + preference) + reserves (including profit and loss balance) + debentures + any other long term loans. ROCE has been a standard measure of company performance since the 1950s. It is applicable to the published accounts of earlier periods, given that there has been no fundamental change in the way in which such accounts are prepared. Its retrospective application can be further justified by the fact that contemporaries could have calculated ROCE if they had wished to do so; they had the necessary information. Knowledge of the meaning and usage behind the terminology appearing besides the various numbers on the credit side of balance sheets allows the historian to identify with reasonable accuracy those numbers which comprised the company's reserves.
59 For Finlays' misfortunes in the early 1920s, see Brogan, James Finlay, 107, and “A Few Dates, Facts and Figures in the History of James Finlay & Co.,” n.d., UGD 91/413/10.
60 Arnold, A. J., “‘Publishing Your Private Affairs to the World’: Corporate Financial Disclosures in the U.K., 1900–24,” Accounting, Business & Financial History 7:2 (1997): 162CrossRefGoogle Scholar. If secret reserves did exist, ROCE figures would be slightly lower than those calculated from the published accounts. There is evidence that contemporaries regarded the accounts as a worthwhile source of information. The banks which granted trading companies (and other companies) overdrafts for their head offices in Britain and for their overseas branches were eager to receive the accounts each year for the purpose of assessment of creditworthiness.
61 Longhurst, Borneo Story, 77.
62 Drabble, J. H., Malayan Rubber: The Interwar Years (London, 1991), 304–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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64 Borneo Motors Ltd. annual reports, MS 27373, GL.
65 Borneo Company board minutes, 27 May 1931, MS 27178/19, and 11 Jan. 1933, MS 27178/20, GL.
66 Annual reports and accounts of Harrisons & Crosfield (GL), Finlays (the company), and the Borneo Company (MS 27185, GL).
67 “Statements, Figures, Accounts of More than Passing Interest,” UGD 91/168. This situation was not unique. See Chapman, Merchant Enterprise, 301.
68 Stewart, Ross E., “Scottish Company Accounting, 1870 to 1920: Selected Case Studies of Accounting in its Historical Context” (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Glasgow, 1986), 327–50Google Scholar. There is also an excellent final year undergraduate dissertation on the Champdany case by Alistair Smith, “The Champdany Jute Company Ltd., 1873–1921,” Department of Economic History, Glasgow, Oct. 1988.
69 The shareholders would consequently fall into two distinct groups: those who exited from the company by taking advantage of the selling price offered, and those who decided to remain with the company and who would have an interest in future dividends and future movements in return on capital employed.
70 Champdany board minutes, 1899–1914, UGD 91/178/5.
71 Board minutes of plantation companies, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
72 Ibid.; Stewart, “Scottish Company Accounting,” 261.
73 Harrisons & Crosfield, One Hundred Years, 20–9.
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75 Report of the Organization Committee, 18 July 1919, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
76 Chandler, Scale and Scope, 242.
77 Stewart, “Scottish Company Accounting,” 218.
78 Report of the Organization Committee, 18 July 1919, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
79 Yonekawa, Shin'ichi, “General Trading Companies in a Comparative Context,” in General Trading Companies: A Comparative and Historical Study, ed. Yonekawa, Shin'ichi (Tokyo, 1992), 8–32Google Scholar. For Swires, see London staff ledger, Swire archives, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, JSS 1/5/1.
80 J.F. Calcutta to J.F. Bombay, 11 Feb. 1910, UGD 91/447/6/1.
81 Jones, British Multinational Banking, 49–51.
82 Correspondence in UGD 91/447/2/1.
83 Minute book of managers of Finlay Muir, Calcutta, 1895–1900, UGD 91/110.
84 Stewart, “Scottish Company Accounting,” 186–217.
85 Harrisons & Crosfield, Regulations in regard to Inter-branch Trading adopted by the Board on 6 January 1920, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
86 Stewart, “Scottish Company Accounting,” 214.
87 A. Lampard to V. Ris, 24 Feb. 1911, Harrisons & Crosfield archives, GL.
88 For a study of the Borneo Company after the Second World War, see White, Nicholas J., Business, Government, and the End of Empire: Malaya, 1942–1957 (Kuala Lumpur, 1996)Google Scholar, chapter 6.
89 This argument is explored in Jones, Geoffrey, “Great Britain: Big Business, Management and Competitiveness in Twentieth-Century Britain,” in Big Business and the Wealth of Nations, eds. Chandler, Alfred D., Amatori, Franco, and Hikino, Takashi (Cambridge, Mass., 1997)Google Scholar.