Good riddance to the consulting gravy train
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And yet, for anyone who wants to step back and look at the bigger picture, it may also be a blessing. The redundancies will be positive for the British economy overall.
The UK’s outsized consulting industry had become a problem. The industry just kept growing and growing. In 2013, it was worth £7.5bn annually in the UK, but last year that had punched its way through £10bn.
It is now 25pc bigger than it was a decade ago, but the British economy is not 25pc larger (sadly, far from it), and neither, come to think of it, is it 25pc better run either. In a stagnant economy, the advisory industry has been eating up a bigger slice of the overall pie with every year that passes.
There are two problems with that. The first is that consulting is essentially parasitical. There is no need to get into an argument about whether the advice it offers is any good or not.
Some of it is, no doubt, brilliant, some terrible, and the majority slightly mediocre. Consultants work on managing and reshaping existing wealth, but they don’t on the whole create products, or launch new units. They consolidate, rationalise, and slim down existing businesses instead of creating new ones.
The huge rewards on offer syphon off talent. If you can earn £1m a year as a partner at PwC or KPMG then why go through all the pain of launching your own business? After a decade at the top, you will have made £10m, far more than most businesses founders will ever make, and can retire comfortably.
It is far less stressful, there is little risk, and the chances of failure are low. Similarly, why bother running a medium-sized business? The rewards won’t be as generous, and the pressure will be much worse. We can’t really complain if the brightest people with the sharpest minds for business decide to make a career in consultancy. It is the easiest way to make big money.
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This article was originally published by a www.telegraph.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .