embers could  not read
the blueprint  if he referred to  it.  He  would have to begin by explaining
what a reactor is and no one there would admit that he did not already know.
Better to say nothing. 27
Mr. Brickworth I have no comment to make.
Chairman Does any other member wish to speak? Very well. I may  take it then
that the  plans and estimates are  approved? Thank  you.  May I now sign the
main contract on your  behalf? (Murmur  of agreement) Thank you. We  can now
move on to Item Ten.
     Allowing a  few seconds for rustling papers and unrolling diagrams, the
time  spent  on  Item Nine will have  been just two minutes and a  half. The
meeting is going well. But 28 some members feel uneasy about Item Nine. They
wonder  inwardly whether they have  really been pulling  their weight. It is
too late to  query  that reactor scheme, but they would like to demonstrate,
before the meeting ends, that they are alive to all that is going on.
Chairman  Item Ten.  Bicycle  shed for  the  use of  the clerical  staff. An
estimate has been  received  from Messrs. Bodger and Woodworm, who undertake
to  complete the work  for  the sum  of  $2350. Plans and  specification are
before you, gentlemen.
Mr. Softleigh Surely, Mr. Chairman, this sum is excessive.  I note that  the
roof is to be of aluminum. Would not asbestos be cheaper?
Mr. Holdfast I agree with Mr. Softleigh about the cost, but the roof should,
in my opinion, be of galvanized iron. I incline to think that the shed could
be built for $2000, or even less.
Mr. Daring I would go further, Mr. Chairman. I question whether this shed is
really  necessary.  We do too  much  for our staff as it is.  They are never
satisfied, that is the trouble. They will be wanting garages next.
Mr. Holdfast No, I can't support Mr. Daring on this occasion.  I think  that
the shed is needed. It is a question of material and cost...
     The  debate  is  fairly  launched.  A  sum  of  $2350  is  well  within
everybody's comprehension. Everyone can visualize a bicycle shed. Discussion
goes on, therefore, for forty-five  29 minutes, with  the possible result of
saving some $300. Members at length sit back with a feeling of achievement.
Chairman Item Eleven. Refreshments supplied at meetings of the Joint Welfare
Committee. Monthly, $4.75.
Mr. Softleigh What type of refreshment is supplied on these occasions?
Chairman Coffee, I understand.
Mr. Holdfast And this means an annual charge of-- let me see-- $57?
Chairman That is so.
Mr. Daring Well, really, Mr. Chairman. I question whether this is justified.
How long do these meetings last?
     Now begins an even more acrimonious debate. There may be members of the
committee  who  might  fail  to distinguish between asbestos  and galvanized
iron, but every man there knows about coffee--  what it is, how it should be
made, where it should be bought--  and whether indeed it should be bought at
all.  This  item on the agenda will  occupy the  members for an hour  and  a
quarter,  and  they will end  by  asking  the Secretary  to procure  further
information, leaving the matter to be decided at the next meeting.
     It would be natural to ask at this  point whether a still smaller sum--
$20,   perhaps,   or  $10--  would  occupy  the  Finance  Committee  for   a
proportionately longer  time. On  this point,  it  must be  admitted, we are
still  ignorant. Our tentative conclusion  must be  that there is a point at
which  the whole tendency is reversed,  the  committee members 30 concluding
that the sum is  beneath  their notice. Research has still to  establish the
point at which this reversal occurs. The transition from the $50  debate (an
hour and a quarter) to the $20 debate (two and a  half minutes) is indeed an
abrupt one. It would be the more interesting to establish the exact point at
which it occurs.  More than that, it would be of practical value. Supposing,
for example,  that the point of vanishing interest is represented by the sum
of $35, the Treasurer with an item of $62.80 on the agenda might well decide
to present  it as two items, one of $30.00 and  the other of $32.80, with an
evident saving in time and effort.
     31  Conclusions at this juncture  can be merely tentative, but there is
some reason  to suppose that the point  of vanishing interest represents the
sum the individual committee member is willing to lose on a bet or subscribe
to a charity. An  inquiry on  these  lines conducted on racecourses  and  in
Methodist chapels,  might  go  far  toward  solving the problem. Far greater
difficulty may  be encountered in attempting to  discover the exact point at
which the sum involved  becomes  too  large  to discuss  at all.  One  thing
apparent, however, is that the time spent on $10,000,000 and on $10 may well
prove to  be the same. The present estimated time of two and a  half minutes
is  by no means  exact, but  there is  clearly  a space of  time-- something
between two and  four and a half  minutes--  which suffices equally  for the
largest and the smallest sums.
     Much further investigation remains to be  done, but the  final results,
when published,  cannot fail  to  be of absorbing interest and of  immediate
value to mankind. 32
        4. DIRECTORS AND COUNCILS, OR COEFFICIENT OF INEFFICIENCY
     THE LIFE CYCLE of the committee is so basic to our knowledge of current
affairs that  it is surprising  more  attention has not  been  paid  to  the
science  of comitology.  The  first and  most elementary  principle  of this
science is that a committee is organic rather than mechanical in its nature:
it  is  not a structure but  a plant.  It  takes root and grows, it flowers,
wilts,  and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom
in  their turn.  Only those  who bear this principle in  mind  can make real
headway in understanding the structure and history of modern government.
     Committees,  it is nowadays accepted, fall broadly into two categories,
those (a) from which the individual member has something to gain;  and those
(b)  to which  the individual  member  merely has  something  to contribute.
Examples  of  the  B  group,  however,  are  relatively unimportant  for our
purpose;  indeed some people doubt whether they are committees at all. It is
from the  more robust A group that  we can learn most readily the principles
which are common (with modifications) to all. Of the A group the most deeply
rooted and luxuriant  committees  are those  which confer the most power and
prestige upon their members. 33 In most parts of the world these  committees
are called  "cabinets."  This  chapter is  based  on an extensive  study  of
national cabinets, over space and time.
     When  first  examined under the microscope, the cabinet council usually
appears-- to  comitologists, historians, and even to  the people who appoint
cabinets-- to consist ideally of five. With that number the plant is viable,
allowing for two members to be absent or sick at any one time. Five  members
are easy to  collect  and, when collected, can act with competence, secrecy,
and  speed. Of these original members four may well be versed, respectively,
in finance, foreign policy, defense, and law. The  fifth,  who has failed to
master  any  of  these  subjects,  usually  becomes  the  chairman  or prime
minister. 34
     35  Whatever  the  apparent convenience  might  be of  restricting  the
membership  to five,  however,  we  discover  by observation that the  total
number  soon  rises  to  seven  or  nine.  The  usual excuse given for  this
increase,  which  is almost invariable (exceptions  being found, however, in
Luxembourg  and Honduras), is the  need for special knowledge on  more  than
four  topics.  In fact, however, there is another and more potent reason for
adding to the team. For in a cabinet of nine it will be found that policy is
made by three, information supplied by two, and financial warning uttered by
one. With  the  neutral chairman, that  accounts for seven,  the  other  two
appearing at first glance to be merely ornamental. This allocation of duties
was first noted in Britain in about 1639, but there can be no doubt that the
folly of including more than  three able and talkative men  in one committee
had  been  discovered long  before  then. We know little  as  yet about  the
function of the two silent members but we have good reason to believe that a
cabinet,  in this  second stage of development, might be unworkable  without
them.
     There are cabinets in the world (those of Costa Rica, Ecuador, Northern
Ireland,  Liberia, the  Philippines,  Uruguay, and  Panama will  at  once be
called  to mind) which  have remained  in this second  stage-- that is, have
restricted  their  membership  to  nine.  These  remain,  however,  a  small
minority. Elsewhere  and in larger territories cabinets  have generally been
subject to a law of growth. Other members come to be admitted,  some with  a
claim to  special  knowledge  but more because of their  nuisance value when
excluded. Their opposition can be silenced only by implicating them in every
decision  that is made. As they 36 are brought in (and  placated) one  after
another, the total membership rises from ten  toward twenty.  In  this third
stage of cabinets, there are already considerable drawbacks.
     The most immediately obvious of these disadvantages  is the  difficulty
of assembling people at the same place, date, and time. One member  is going
away on the 18th, whereas another does not return until the 21st. A third is
never free on Tuesdays, and a fourth never available  before 5 P.M. But that
is only the beginning  of the trouble, for, once most of them are collected,
there is a far greater  chance of members  proving to be  elderly, tiresome,
inaudible, and deaf. Relatively few were chosen from any  idea that they are
or could  be or have  ever been  useful.  A majority perhaps were brought in
merely to  conciliate  some outside group. Their  tendency is  therefore  to
report what happens  to the group  they represent. All secrecy  is lost and,
worst of all,  members  begin to prepare  their speeches. They  address  the
meeting and tell  their friends afterwards about what they imagine they have
said.  But the more these  merely representative members  assert themselves,
the  more loudly do other outside groups clamor for representation. Internal
parties form and seek to  gain strength by further recruitment. The total of
twenty  is reached  and  passed.  And thereby, quite  suddenly,  the cabinet
enters the fourth and final stage of its history.
     For at this  point of cabinet development  (between 20 and  22 members)
the whole committee suffers an abrupt organic or chemical change. The nature
of this change is easy to trace and comprehend. In the first place, the five
members who matter  will  have taken to meeting  beforehand. With  decisions
already reached, little remains for 37 the  nominal executive to do. And, as
a  consequence of this, all resistance to the committee's expansion comes to
an end. More members  will not waste more time; for the whole meeting is, in
any case, a  waste of time. So the pressure of outside groups is temporarily
satisfied by the  admission of their representatives, and decades may elapse
before  they realize how illusory their gain has been. With  the doors  wide
open, membership  rises from 20 to 30,  from 30 to 40. There may soon be  an
instance of such a membership reaching the thousand mark. But this does  not
matter.  For  the cabinet has  already ceased to be a real cabinet, and  has
been succeeded in its old functions by some other body.
     Five  times in  English history the  plant has  moved through  its life
cycle. It would admittedly be difficult to prove  that the first incarnation
of  the cabinet-- the English  Council of the Crown, now called the House of
Lords-- ever had a membership as small  as  five. When we first hear  of it,
indeed, its more intimate character had already been lost, with a hereditary
membership varying from  29 to  50. Its subsequent expansion,  however, kept
pace with its loss of power. In round figures,  it  had 60 members  in 1601,
140 in 1661, 220 in 1760, 400 in 1850, 650 in 1911, and 850 in 1952.
     At what point in this progression did the inner committee appear in the
womb of the peerage? It appeared in about 1257, its members being called the
Lords of  the King's Council and numbering  less  than 10. They numbered  no
more  than 11 in 1378,  and  as  few still in 1410. Then, from  the reign of
Henry V, they began to multiply. The 20 of 1433 had  become the 41 of  1504,
the total reaching 172 before the council finally ceased to meet. 38
     Within  the  King's  Council  there  developed  the   cabinet's   third
incarnation--  the Privy Council--  with  an original membership of nine. It
rose to 20 in 1540, to 29 in 1547, and to 44  in 1558. The Privy Council  as
it  ceased  to be  effective increased  proportionately in  size.  It had 47
members in 1679, 67 in 1723, 200 in 1902, and 300 in 1951.
     Within the Privy Council there developed the  junto or Cabinet Council,
which effectively superseded the former  in about 1615.  Numbering 8 when we
first hear of it, its members had come to number 12 by about 1700, and 20 by
1725.  The  Cabinet Council  was then superseded in about  1740  by an inner
group, since  called simply  the Cabinet. Its development is best studied in
tabular form. This is shown in Table I.
     TABLE I-- GROWTH OF THE ENGLISH CABINET 
   |  1740  |   5
 |  1885  |  16  |  1945   |  16  | 
 |  1784  |  7  |  1900  |  20
 |  1945  |  20  | 
 |  1801  |  12  |  1915  |  22  |  1949  |  17
 | 
 |  1841  |  14  |  1935  |  22  |  1954  |  18  | 
 | 
      | 
      |  1939  |  23  | 
      | 
      | 
     From 1939,  it will be apparent, there has been a struggle to save this
institution; a  struggle similar  to  the  attempts made to save  the  Privy
Council during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. The Cabinet appeared to be in
its decline in 1940, with an inner cabinet (of 5, 7, or 9 members) ready  to
take its place. The  issue,  however, remains in doubt.  It is just possible
that the British cabinet is still an important body.
     Compared  with the  cabinet  of Britain, the cabinet  of the  39 United
States  has shown an extraordinary resistance to political inflation. It had
the  appropriate number  of 5  members in  1789, still only 7 by 1840, 9  by
1901, 10 by 1913, 11 by  1945, and then--  against tradition-- had come down
to 10 again  by 1953. Whether this  attempt, begun  in 1947, to restrict the
membership will succeed for long is  doubtful. All experience would  suggest
the inevitability of the previous trend. In the meanwhile, the United States
enjoys    (with   Guatemala   and    El   Salvador)   a    reputation    for
cabinet-exclusiveness,  having  actually  fewer   cabinet   ministers   than
Nicaragua or Paraguay.
     TABLE II - SIZE OF CABINETS |  No. of Members |   | 
| 
6   |  Honduras, Luxembourg   | 
|   7   |   Haiti, Iceland, Switzerland
 | 
|   9   |    Costa  Rica,  Ecuador,  N.   Ireland,  Liberia,  Panama,
Philippines, Uruguay   | 
|  10  |  Guatemala, El Salvador, United States
 | 
|  11   |   Brazil,  Nicaragua, Pakistan, Paraguay   | 
|  12   | 
Bolivia,  Chile,  Peru   | 
|   13   |  Colombia, Dominican  R.,  Norway,
Thailand  | 
|  14  |  Denmark, India, S. Africa, Sweden  | 
|  15  | 
Austria, Belgium,  Finland, Iran, New Zealand,  Portugal, Venezuela  | 
| 
16  |   Iraq, Netherlands,  Turkey   | 
|  17   |   Eire, Israel,  Spain
 | 
|   18  |  Egypt, Gt.  Britain, Mexico  | 
|  19   |  W.  Germany,
Greece, Indonesia, Italy  | 
|  20  |  Australia, Formosa, Japan  | 
| 
21  |  Argentina, Burma, Canada, France  | 
|  22   |  China  | 
|  24
 |  E. Germany  | 
|   26  |  Bulgaria  | 
|  27  |  Cuba  | 
|  29
 |  Rumania  | 
|   32   |   Czechoslovakia  | 
|  35  |   Yugoslavia
 | 
|  38  |  USSR  | 
     How  do  other countries  compare  in  this  respect? The  majority  of
non-totalitarian  countries  have  cabinets  that number between  12 and  20
members. Taking the average 40  of over 60 countries, we find that it  comes
to over  16; the most popular  numbers are 15 (seven instances) and 9 (seven
again).  Easily  the queerest cabinet is that of New  Zealand, one member of
which has  to be  announced  as  "Minister  of Lands,  Minister  of Forests,
Minister of Maori  Affairs, Minister in  charge of Maori Trust Office and of
Scenery  Preservation."  The toastmaster at  a  New  Zealand banquet must be
equally  ready  to  crave  silence  for  "The Minister of  Health,  Minister
Assistant  to the  Prime Minister,  Minister  in  Charge of  State  Advances
Corporation,  Census,  and  Statistics Department, Public Trust  Office  and
Publicity  and Information."  In  other  lands this  oriental  profusion  is
fortunately rare.
     A  study  of the British  example  would  suggest  that  the  point  of
ineffectiveness in a cabinet is reached when the total membership exceeds 20
or  perhaps 21. The  Council  of the Crown,  the  King's  Council, the Privy
Council had  each passed  the 20 mark when  their decline began. The present
British cabinet is just short  of that  number now, having recoiled from the
abyss. We  might be tempted  to  conclude from this that cabinets-- or other
committees  --  with  a membership in excess of 21 are losing the reality of
power and  that those with a larger membership have already lost it. No such
theory can be  tenable, however, without statistical  proof. Table II on the
preceding page attempts to furnish part of it.
     Should we be justified  in drawing a  line in that table under the name
of France (21 cabinet members)  with an explanatory  note  to  say that  the
cabinet  is  not the real power in countries  shown  below that  line?  Some
comitologists would accept  that  conclusion  without  further 41  research.
Others  emphasize the need for careful investigation, more especially around
the  borderline  of  21. But that the coefficient  of inefficiency must  lie
between 19 and 22 is now very generally agreed.
     What tentative explanation  can we offer  for  this hypothesis? Here we
must  distinguish sharply between  fact and theory, between the symptom  and
the disease. About the most obvious symptom there is little disagreement. It
is known  that with over  20  members present  a  meeting begins  to  change
character. Conversations develop separately at either  end of the table.  To
make himself heard, the member has therefore  to  rise. Once on his feet, he
cannot help making a speech, if only from force of habit. "Mr. Chairman," he
will begin, "I think I may assert without fear of contradiction-- and  I  am
speaking  now from twenty-five (I might almost say  twenty-seven)  years  of
experience-- that  we  must view this  matter  in the gravest light. A heavy
responsibility  rests upon us, sir, and I for one..." Amid  all this  drivel
the useful men present, if there are any, exchange  little notes  that read,
"Lunch with me tomorrow-- we'll fix it then."
     What else can they  do? The voice drones  on  interminably.  The orator
might just as well be talking in his sleep. The committee of which he is the
most useless member has ceased to matter. It is finished. It is hopeless. It
is dead.
     So much is certain. But the root  cause  of the trouble goes deeper and
has still, in part, to be explored. Too many vital factors are unknown. What
is the  shape  and  size of the  table? What  is  the  average  age of those
present? At  what  hour  does  the  committee meet?  In  a  book for the  42
non-specialist it would be absurd  to repeat the  calculations by  which the
first and tentative coefficient of inefficiency has been reached. It  should
be enough to state  that prolonged research  at the  Institute of Comitology
has given rise  to a formula which is now widely (although not  universally)
accepted by  the experts in this field. It should perhaps be explained  that
the  investigators assumed  a temperate climate, leather-padded chairs and a
high level of sobriety. On this basis, the formula is as follows:
x=(mo(a-d))/(y+p b1/2)
Where m = the average number  of members actually present; o = the number of
members influenced by outside pressure  groups;  a = the  average age of the
members;  d  =  the distance in centimeters  between the two members who are
seated farthest from each other; y  = the number of years since the  cabinet
or committee was first formed; p = the patience of the chairman, as measured
on the Peabody scale;  b = the  average blood pressure of  the three  oldest
members,  taken shortly before the time of meeting.  Then x = the number  of
members effectively present at the moment when the efficient  working of the
cabinet or other  committee has  become manifestly impossible.  This  is the
coefficient of  inefficiency and it is found to lie between  19.9 and  22.4.
(The  decimals  represent partial attendance; those absent for a part of the
meeting.)
     It  would be  unsound  to conclude, from a  cursory inspection of  this
equation that  the  science  of  comitology  is  in  an  advanced  state  of
development. Comitologists and subcomitologists would make no such claim, if
only  from 43  fear  of  unemployment.  They emphasize, rather,  that  their
studies have  barely  begun and that  they are  on the brink  of  astounding
progress. Making every allowance for self-interest-- which means discounting
90 per cent of what they say--  we can safely assume  that much work remains
to do.
     We should  eventually be able,  for  example, to learn the  formula  by
which the optimum number  of committee members may be determined.  Somewhere
between  the  number  of 3 (when a  quorum  is  impossible  to collect)  and
approximately 21 (when  the whole organism begins to perish), there lies the
golden number. The interesting  theory has been propounded  that this number
must be 8. Why? Because it is the only number which all existing states (See
Table II above) have agreed to avoid. Attractive as  this theory may seem at
first sight,  it is  open  to one  serious  objection. Eight was the  number
preferred by King  Charles I  for  his  Committee of  State.  And look  what
happened to him! 44
        5. THE SHORT LIST, OR PRINCIPLES OF SELECTION
     A PROBLEM  constantly  before  the  modern  administration, whether  in
government  or business,  is  that  of  personnel selection.  The inexorable
working of Parkinson's Law ensures that  appointments  have constantly to be
made and the question is  always how to choose the right candidate from  all
who present themselves. In ascertaining the principles upon which the choice
should be made, we may properly consider, under separate heads, the  methods
used in the past and the methods used at the present day.
     Past methods,  not entirely disused, fall into two main categories, the
British and the Chinese. Both deserve careful consideration, if only for the
reason  that  they  were  obviously more  successful  than  any  method  now
considered  fashionable. The  British  method (old pattern) depended upon an
interview  in which the candidate had to establish his identity. He would be
confronted by  elderly  gentlemen seated  round  a mahogany table who  would
presently ask him his name. Let us suppose that the candidate replied, "John
Seymour." One  of the gentlemen would then say, "Any relation of the Duke of
Somerset?" To this the candidate would say, quite possibly, "No,  sir." Then
another 45 gentleman would  say, "Perhaps you are related, in that  case, to
the Bishop  of Watminster?" If he said "No, sir" again, a third would ask in
despair, "To whom  then are  you related?" In the event of  the  candidate's
saying, "Well, my  father is a fishmonger in Cheapside,"  the  interview was
virtually over. The members of the Board would exchange significant glances,
one  would press  a bell and  another tell the footman,  "Throw  this person
out." One name  could  be  crossed off the list  without further discussion.
Supposing the next candidate was Henry Molyneux and a nephew of  the Earl of
Sefton,  his  chances remained  fair  up to the  moment  when George  Howard
arrived  and  proved  to  be  a  grandson of the Duke of Norfolk. The  Board
encountered no serious difficulty until they had to  compare the  claims  of
the  third  son  of  a baronet  with  the second but illegitimate  son of  a
viscount. Even then  they  could  refer to a  Book of  Precedence. So  their
choice was made and often with the best results.
     The  Admiralty  version  of  this  British  method  (old  pattern)  was
different only  in  its more restricted scope. The  Board  of Admirals  were
unimpressed by titled relatives as such. What they sought to establish was a
service connection. The ideal candidate  would reply to the second question,
"Yes, Admiral Parker is my uncle. My father is Captain Foley, my grandfather
Commodore Foley. My mother's father was Admiral Hardy. Commander Hardy is my
uncle. My  eldest  brother  is a  Lieutenant in the  Royal Marines, my  next
brother is a cadet at Dartmouth and my younger brother wears a sailor suit."
"Ah!" the senior Admiral would say. "And what made you think of  joining the
Navy?"  The  answer  to this question, however, would 46 47 scarcely matter,
the clerk present having already noted the  candidate as acceptable. Given a
choice between two candidates, both equally acceptable by birth, a member of
the Board would ask suddenly, "What was the number of the taxi you came in?"
The candidate who  said "I came by bus"  was then thrown out.  The candidate
who  said, truthfully,  "I don't know," was  rejected, and the candidate who
said "Number  2351"  (lying)  was promptly  admitted to the service as a boy
with initiative. This method often produced excellent results.
     The  British  method (new pattern)  was evolved  in the late nineteenth
century as something more suitable for a  democratic country. The  Selection
Committee would ask briskly, "What school were  you at?"  and would  be told
Harrow, Haileybury, or, Rugby,  as the  case  might  be. "What games do  you
play?"  would be  the next and  invariable  question. A  promising candidate
would reply, "I have played tennis for England, cricket for Yorkshire, rugby
for the Harlequins, and fives for Winchester." The next question  would then
be "Do you play polo?"-- just to prevent the candidate's thinking too highly
of himself.  Even  without playing polo,  however, he  was  evidently  worth
serious consideration. Little time, by contrast, was  wasted  on the man who
admitted to having been educated at Wiggleworth. "Where?" the chairman would
ask in  astonishment, and "Where's  that?" after the name had been repeated.
"Oh, in Lancashire!" he would say  at last. Just  for a matter of form, some
member might ask, "What games do you play?" But the  reply "Table tennis for
Wigan, cycling  for Blackpool,  and  snooker  for Wiggleworth" would finally
delete his name from the list. There might even 48 be some  muttered comment
upon people who  deliberately wasted the committee's time. Here again was  a
method which produced good results.
     The Chinese method (old  pattern) was at one time so extensively copied
by other nations that few people  realize  its Chinese origin.  This  is the
method  of Competitive Written Examination. In China under the Ming  Dynasty
the more promising students used to sit for the provincial examination, held
every third year. It  lasted three sessions of three  days each. During  the
first session the candidate wrote three  essays and composed a poem of eight
couplets.  During the  second session  he wrote five essays  on a  classical
theme. During the third,  he wrote five essays on the art of government. The
successful candidates  (perhaps two  per cent)  then  sat  for  their  final
examination  at  the  imperial  capital. It  lasted  only one  session,  the
candidate  writing one essay  on  a current  political problem. Of those who
were successful  the  majority were  admitted to the civil service, the  man
with the highest  marks  being destined for the  highest office.  The system
worked fairly well.
     The Chinese system was studied by Europeans between 1815 and  1830  and
adopted by the English East India Company in 1832. The effectiveness of this
method was investigated by  a committee in 1854, with Macaulay  as chairman.
The  result was  that the  system of competitive examination  was introduced
into  the British Civil Service in 1855. An essential feature of the Chinese
examinations had been their literary character.  The test was in a knowledge
of the classics, in an ability to write elegantly (both prose and verse) and
in  the  stamina necessary  to complete the course. All these features  were
faithfully incorporated in 49 the Trevelyan-Northcote Report, and thereafter
in the system  it  did so much  to  create. It was  assumed  that  classical
learning and literary ability would fit any candidate for any administrative
post. It was assumed  (no doubt rightly)  that a  scientific education would
fit a  candidate  for  nothing--  except,  possibly, science.  It was known,
finally,  that it  is  virtually impossible to find an order of  merit among
people  who  have  been  examined   in  different  subjects.   Since  it  is
impracticable to decide whether one man is  better in  geology  than another
man in  physics, it is at least  convenient to be able to rule them both out
as useless. When all candidates alike have to write Greek or Latin verse, it
is relatively  easy to decide which verse  is the best. Men thus selected on
their classical performance were then sent forth to govern India. Those with
lower marks were  retained to govern  England. Those  with still lower marks
were rejected altogether or sent to the colonies. While it  would be totally
wrong  to describe this system as a failure, no one could  claim for it  the
success  that  had  attended the  systems  hitherto  in  use. There  was  no
guarantee, to begin with, that the man with the highest marks might not turn
out to be  off his head; as was sometimes found to be the  case. Then  again
the writing of Greek  verse might prove  to be the sole accomplishment  that
some candidates had or  would ever have. On occasion, a successful applicant
may  even  have  been  impersonated  at the  examination  by  someone  else,
subsequently proving  unable to  write Greek verse when  the occasion arose.
Selection by  competitive  examination  was  never  therefore  more  than  a
moderate success.
     Whatever  the faults, however, of the competitive written  examination,
it  certainly  produced  better  results  than any  50 method that  has been
attempted  since. Modern methods  center upon the intelligence test and  the
psychological  interview. The defect in the intelligence  test is that  high
marks  are  gained  by  those  who  subsequently  prove  to  be  practically
illiterate. So much time has  been spent in studying the art of being tested
that the candidate has  rarely had time for anything else. The psychological
interview  has  developed today into what is known as ordeal by house party.
The candidates spend a pleasant weekend under expert observation.  As one of
them  trips  over the doormat and  says "Bother!"  examiners lurking in  the
background  whip  out  their  notebooks   and   jot  down,   "Poor  physical
coordination" and "Lacks self-control."  There is no need to  describe  this
method  in  detail,  but its  results  are all about  us and  are  obviously
deplorable.  The persons who satisfy this type  of examiner are usually of a
cautious  and suspicious temperament,  pedantic and smug, saying little  and
doing  nothing. It  is quite common,  when  appointments  are made  by  this
method, for one  man to be chosen from  five hundred applicants, only to  be
sacked  a few weeks  later  as  useless  even beyond  the standards  of  his
department. Of the various methods of selection so far tried, the latest  is
unquestionably the worst.
     What method should be used in the future? A clue to a possible  line of
investigation is to be found in one little-publicized aspect of contemporary
selective technique.  So  rarely  does the  occasion arise for appointing  a
Chinese translator to the Foreign Office or State Department that the method
used is little known. The post is advertised and the applications go, let us
suppose,  to  a  committee  of  five. Three  are civil servants and two  are
Chinese  scholars 51 of  great eminence.  Heaped  on the  table before  this
committee are  483 forms of application, with testimonials attached. All the
applicants are Chinese and all  without exception  have  a first degree from
Peking  or Amoy and a Doctorate of Philosophy from Cornell or Johns Hopkins.
The  majority of the candidates have at one time held ministerial  office in
Formosa. Some have attached their photographs.  Others have (perhaps wisely)
refrained from  doing so. The chairman turns  to the  leading Chinese expert
and says, "Perhaps Dr. Wu can tell  us  which  of these candidates should be
put on the short list."  Dr. Wu smiles enigmatically and points to the heap.
"None of them any good," he  says briefly. "But how-- I mean, why not?" asks
the chairman, surprised. "Because no good scholar would ever apply. He would
fear to lose face if he  were not chosen." "So  what do we do now?" asks the
chairman.  "I think," says Dr. Wu, "we might  persuade Dr.  Lim to take this
post. What do you  think. Dr. Lee?" "Yes, I think he might,"  says Lee, "but
we couldn't approach him ourselves of  course. We could ask Dr. Tan  whether
he thinks Dr.  Lim  would be  interested." "I don't know Dr.  Tan," says Wu,
"but  I  know  his friend Dr. Wong."  By then the chairman is too muddled to
know who  is  to be approached by whom. But  the great thing is that all the
applications  are  thrown  into  the  waste-paper basket, only one candidate
being considered, and he a man who did not apply.
     We do not advise  the universal adoption of  the  modern Chinese method
but we draw from it the useful conclusion that the  failure of other methods
is mainly  due to there  being too  many candidates. There  are, admittedly,
some initial steps by which the total may be reduced. The 52 formula "Reject
everyone over 50 or under 20 plus everyone called Murphy" is now universally
used, and its application will somewhat reduce the list. The names remaining
will still, however,  be too  numerous.  To  choose  between  three  hundred
people,  all well qualified and highly recommended, is not  really possible.
We are driven therefore  to conclude  that the mistake lies in  the original
advertisement.  It has attracted too many applications. The disadvantage  of
this is so little realized that people devise advertisements  in terms which
will inevitably  attract thousands. A post of responsibility is announced as
vacant, the previous occupant being now in the Senate or the House of Lords.
The  salary  is  large,  the  pension  generous,  the  duties  nominal,  the
privileges  immense, the perquisites valuable, free residence provided  with
official car and unlimited facilities  for travel. Candidates should  apply,
promptly but carefully,  enclosing copies (not originals) of  not more  than
three  recent testimonials. What is the result?  A deluge  of  applications,
many from  lunatics and as many  again from retired  army majors with a gift
(as they always claim) for handling men. There is nothing to  do except burn
the  lot and  start thinking  all over again. It would have saved  time  and
trouble to do some thinking in the first place.
     Only a  little  thought  is needed  to  convince  us  that the  perfect
advertisement would attract only one reply and that from the  right man. Let
us begin with an extreme example.
     Wanted-- Acrobat capable of crossing a slack wire 200 feet above raging
furnace.  Twice  nightly,  three  times  on  Saturday.  53   Salary  offered
&sterling;25 (or $70 U.S.) per week. No pension  and  no compensation in the
event of injury. Apply  in person at  Wildcat Circus between the hours  of 9
A.M. and 10 A.M.
     The wording  of this may not be  perfect but  the aim should  be so  to
balance the inducement in  salary  against  the possible risks involved that
only  a single  applicant  will appear. It is needless to ask for details of
qualifications and experience. No one unskilled on the slack wire would find
the  offer attractive. It  is needless to  insist that  candidates should be
physically fit, sober,  and free from fits of  dizziness. They know that. It
is just  as needless to stipulate  that those nervous  of heights  need  not
apply.  They won't. The  skill  of the advertiser consists in adjusting  the
salary to the danger. An offer of  &sterling;1000  (or  $3000 U.S.) per week
might produce  a dozen applicants. An offer of &sterling;15  (or  $35  U.S.)
might  produce none. Somewhere between those two  figures lies the exact sum
to  specify, the minimum figure to  attract anyone actually capable of doing
the job. If there is more than one applicant,  the  figure has been placed a
trifle too high.
     Let us now take, for comparison, a less extreme example.
Wanted-- An archaeologist with high academic qualifications willing to spend
fifteen  years in  excavating the Inca tombs  at Helsdump on  the  Alligator
River. Knighthood or equivalent honor guaranteed. Pension payable but  never
yet  claimed.  Salary of &sterling;2000  (or $6000 U.S.) per year. Apply  in
triplicate to the  Director of the Grubbenburrow Institute,  Sickdale, Ill.,
U.S.A.
     Here the advantages and drawbacks are neatly balanced. There is no need
to  insist that candidates must be patient, 54  tough, intrepid, and single.
The terms  of  the advertisement  have eliminated  all who  are  not. It  is
unnecessary to require that candidates must be mad on  excavating tombs. Mad
is  just  what they  will  certainly  be.  Having thus  reduced the possible
applicants to a maximum of about three, the terms of the advertisement place
the salary just too low  to attract two of them and the  promised honor just
high enough  to interest the third.  We may  suppose that, in this case, the
offer of a  K.C.M.G. would  have produced two applications, the  offer of an
O.B.E.,  none. The result is a single candidate. He is off his head but that
does not matter. He is the man we want.
     It may be thought that the world offers comparatively few opportunities
to appoint slack-wire acrobats and tomb excavators, and that the problem  is
more  often to  find candidates for less exotic  appointments. This is true,
but the same principles can be applied. Their application demands, however--
as is evident-- a greater  degree of skill.  Let us suppose that the post to
be filled  is that of Prime Minister.  The modern  tendency  is  to trust in
various  methods of  election,  with  results  that  are  almost  invariably
disastrous. Were  we  to  turn,  instead, to the fairy stories we learned in
childhood, we should realize  that  at  the  period  to  which these stories
relate far  more  satisfactory methods were  in use.  When  the  king had to
choose  a man to  marry his  eldest  or  only daughter  and  so inherit  the
kingdom, he normally  planned some obstacle course from which only the right
candidate  would  emerge  with  credit;  and  from  which  indeed  (in  many
instances) only the right candidate would emerge at all. For imposing such a
test the kings of that rather vaguely defined period were well provided with
55 both  personnel  and equipment.  Their establishment  included magicians,
demons, fairies, vampires, werewolves, giants, and dwarfs. Their territories
were supplied with magic  mountains, rivers of fire, hidden  treasures,  and
enchanted forests.  It might  be urged that  modern  governments are in this
respect  less  fortunate.  This,   however,  is  by  no  means  certain.  An
administrator able to command  the services of psychologists, psychiatrists,
alienists, statisticians, and efficiency  experts is not perhaps  in a worse
(or  better)  position  than  one  relying  upon  hideous  crones and  fairy
godmothers.  An  administration  equipped  with  movie  cameras,  television
apparatus,  radio networks, and X-ray machines would