| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5069024 | Explorations in Economic History | 2007 | 27 Pages | 
Abstract
												This paper revisits the issue of the productivity performance of Britain's railways with an improved dataset and modern cliometrics. We find a slowdown in TFP growth between 1850 and 1870, after which it stabilized at about 1.1%. An analysis of company-level productivity performance reveals large discrepancies in TFP growth and substantial cost inefficiency. The evidence suggests that there was managerial failure in companies with agency problems in a context of collusion and high entry barriers. A wider implication is that the neoclassical exoneration of late-Victorian British management may be less convincing for the services sector than for manufacturing.
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											Authors
												Nicholas Crafts, Terence C. Mills, Abay Mulatu, 
											