It dawns on me that there is a
thumping pain in my lower jaw. A delicate pawing with my tongue confirms my
suspicions that one of my back teeth is playing up. Yup, that nerve is
definitely not happy. Did you know that it is possible to estimate a person’s
age purely by looking at their teeth. During the 1960’s dentists were paid
according to the number of fillings they made, hence I have enough shrapnel in
my mouth to make a small saucepan. For over 25 years I suffered the same
dentist fervently drilling into each stain or shadow on my teeth as if his life
depended on it while bemoaning the fact that dentistry is such a poorly paid
profession – then the bugger has the gall to retire at the age of 45! He swans off into the sunset while
I am left to ponder his handiwork and await the onset of metal fatigue. To say my views on dentistry are somewhat tainted
is an understatement, after all the film ‘Marathon
Man’, with Dustin Hoffman and Laurence Olivier, was released in my
mid-teens and if you can sit through the dentistry scene without wincing then
my guess is that you don’t have a single nerve in your head.
It’s no good I am awake now – eventually
my mind turns to the reasons why I am in this position in the first place and
why it was so necessary for me to have to work through the night in the first
place. My mind has still been trying to get to grips with the fallout from this
week’s budget so it was not long before both strands of consciousness
inter-twined with mixed consequences. Being one of ‘the squeezed middle’ in ‘press-speak’ I don’t
feel that the budget has done much to help me (has it ever?). Maybe it was the pain of
the tooth but for some reason my loathing was particularly directed towards
accountants – why couldn’t they go on strike for a change? I find it hard to take any figures quoted from
government sources seriously given that the economists and accountants who have
invariable supplied this information have proved so incompetent in the past. Is
it any wonder given that this country is so bad at maths. It seems to me that most of the figures banded about by politicians
are guesstimates, statistics which are then selectively manipulated in
whichever direction desired to convey them in the best light to support your
point of view – this is modern day accountancy which is very different from the
number-crunching role that was the original credo for accountants.
In my youth an accountant was
someone who in basic terms added up 2 columns of numbers and ensured that they
balanced. Most companies had an Accounts Department which consisted of a couple
of earnest looking gentlemen in Arran cardigans and Hush Puppies who beavered
away in a smoke filled office surrounded by racks of dust covered ledgers. At
my first job after leaving school there were 2 such senior accountants with 1
junior accountant, a trainee accountant and an account’s clerk – within 9
months the department had grown to 60 staff and to this day no one has been
able to tell me why.
You could always tell when one of
them was on the move because a haze of Old Holborn would waft down the
corridor. I can still see their fingers stained in equal measures of nicotine
and red ink when they used to hand me their paperwork. A very different proposition from the Armani clad
army of today in their £500 designer shoes.
These days the term 'creative accounting' seems to equate to anything that the company believe they can get away with. A term which the old pencil pushers took to mean switching the ledger from portrait to landscape, or at a pinch embossing the year on the front of the ledger is now an art form for misdirecting and concealing funds so complex that even an accomplished magician would find the processes hard to track.
These days the term 'creative accounting' seems to equate to anything that the company believe they can get away with. A term which the old pencil pushers took to mean switching the ledger from portrait to landscape, or at a pinch embossing the year on the front of the ledger is now an art form for misdirecting and concealing funds so complex that even an accomplished magician would find the processes hard to track.
Obviously there were other areas
of accountancy besides simple book keeping but in those days things got done. People
who ran departments or companies were allowed to do what was required and the
accountant tied up the loose ends, dotted the i’s and crossed the t’s.
If you wanted to take on a new
venture you would go ahead and do it; if you felt you needed more staff you
would hire them or if you needed new equipment then you would go ahead and buy
it.
Remember the advert of the ‘Bank
Manager in the closet’, that was my understanding of their role in life, if I need
an accountant I want one in the wardrobe, not one in my face.
These days accountants rule the
world, they are no longer number crunchers and hold more sway in the boardroom
than many CEOs. Their involvement in the
decision making processes of many companies is quite frightening. How many
projects or innovations have been scuppered at the stroke of a red pen?
It would seem that every decision
from the 10 year business plan to the choice of coffee stocked in the vending
machines has to be signed off by an accountant. The chances are there is some
unnamed accountancy spy in your office counting the number of times people fart,
while his colleagues investigate whether there is any opportunity to make these
tax deductable or pass on the cost to the customer. The fact that we are still in a global financial
crisis is largely due to accountancy ‘oversights’ in the banking sector.
Accountants may understand
numbers but few of them have any knowledge of the requirements of the industries
they represent, or if they do, they choose to ignore the core principles and
focus solely on the process of creating profit for the shareholders.
Companies now employ teams of
accountants and lawyers purely to exploit loopholes in the tax system. Is it
right that the likes of Starbucks, Google and Amazon should be able to avoid
paying tax in certain countries because some smart-arse accountant has found a
way to reduce the bills by channelling the figures through countries with a
more beneficial tax system?
Accountants everywhere are trying
to shave margins off the running cost of their companies, who in turn need to
employ more managers to apply these decisions and ensure that targets are met.
Life is not all about margins – many companies have already trimmed back their
workforce to the bone during the recession yet still the accountants are
looking for greater savings. You cannot get blood out of a stone. How many
companies are able to provide the same level of service they were 5 years ago? Maybe
4 people could do the work of 5, but are they going to be able to provide the
same level of service? Probably not. Maybe skilled workers could be replaced
with cheaper, lower skilled staff – can a labourer do the job of a master
craftsman? What are the skilled workers expected to do? Employers don’t want to
train up new staff, they don’t want to pay for experienced staff – let’s create
another ‘squeezed middle’ and see what happens when they become too expensive
to employ.
How many opportunities have been passed up because the funding has not been available for investment? How many medical or technical breakthroughs have been missed because the plugs were pulled on the finances? How many jobs have been lost or careers destroyed at the stroke of a pen because it looks neater on the balance sheet? I watched a documentary recently that
discussed the number of musicians and entertainers who would never have seen
the light of day under present economic pressures. Would the likes of Bob Dylan
or The Rolling Stones ever been given a recording contract if they were
starting out today? Would shows like ‘Les Miserables’ or ‘Cats’ ever been
staged? You only have to look at the number and the types of films and TV that
are being made today to see who is holding the purse strings.
No one is prepared to take risks
any more yet the government keep harping on about ‘entrepreneurship’, ‘competition’
and ‘pioneers’. It is incredibly hard to get any new idea off the ground when
it is so difficult to obtain the necessary financial support and it is so easy
for predatory companies to step in and buy up a new company as soon as they
feel that the competition might be threat to their share of the market. And who
is normally the biggest fly in the ointment? The accountant.
The fact that we have so many ‘Science
Parks’, ‘Technology Parks’ and ‘Enterprise Parks’ around the country is
symptomatic of the lack of invention demonstrated by the land developers in the
naming of their cash cows. Most of the Science Parks I have visited consist of
a collection of empty offices, a few call centres, a double glazing company and
a tyre / exhaust replacement centre, while the most enterprising thing you will
find on many an Enterprise Park is a snack van selling venison and peanut butter
burgers.
In this country we have teachers,
doctors, nurses, and many other skilled staff leaving their professions because
they can no longer tolerate the financial pressures being forced upon them. Many
industries report difficulties in recruiting and retaining qualified staff, yet
few employers are willing to train staff or pay for these skills. It is
essential for us to maintain these skills for the future if the economy is to
grow otherwise the work will disappear to other countries who have invested in
the development of these skills and we
will be left with a nation of baristas, part time shop staff and call centre
workers.
The problems back in 2008 should
have been a wake up call for everyone but the only thing that seems to have
changed is that those largely responsible for the financial turmoil through
their lust for profit have learned nothing and are now even more determined to
recover their losses through even greater greed.
And after all that you expect me to get out of bed? To hell with it, a couple of Nurofen for my tooth and I’ll take my chances with the neighbour’s ‘backed up disposal unit’.
And after all that you expect me to get out of bed? To hell with it, a couple of Nurofen for my tooth and I’ll take my chances with the neighbour’s ‘backed up disposal unit’.
Sweet dreams.