Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - LIVE: The Myth of the Million Dollar Tulip Bulb
Episode Date: January 20, 2023Recorded before an audience at the Bristol Festival of Economics (11/17/2022) The Dutch went so potty over tulip bulbs in the 1600s that many were ruined when the inflated prices they were paying for ...the plants collapsed - that's the oft-repeated story later promoted by best-selling Scottish writer Charles Mackay. It's actually a gross exaggeration. Mackay's writings about economic bubbles bursting entertained and informed his Victorian readers - and continue to influence us today - but how did Mackey fare when faced with a stock market mania right before his eyes? The railway-building boom of the 1840s showed he wasn't so insightful after all. For a full list of sources used in this episode visit Tim Harford.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, I'm Michael Lewis. My first book, Lyres Poker, told the story of my time in Solomon
Brothers, which was then one of the world's most powerful banks. In three years, I went
from trainee to successful banker. It felt back then like a modern day gold rush.
I thought at the time I was documenting
like an unprecedented event that would never repeat itself.
It turned out it was just the beginning of an era that never ended.
I've recorded for the first time a full audiobook version of Liars Poker.
You can get it now at pushkin.fm
Pushkin
This episode of cautionary tales is all about speculation
Scramble for shares and spring flowers and it was recorded in front of a live audience at the Bristol Festival of Economics.
If you'd like to explore these ideas in print, I'm writing about them in a cover story
for the Financial Times magazine.
That's available in the UK in print on the 28th of January or online at ft.com.
Now, the stage is set.
Enjoy a special live episode of Corsian Retails.
Applause
One frosty winter morning at the start of 1637, a sailor presented himself at the counting
house of a wealthy Dutch merchant and was offered a hearty breakfast of fine red herring.
The sailor noticed an onion lying on the counter, at least he thought it was an onion.
Here's what happened next, according to a Scottish writer telling the tale
two centuries later.
Thinking it no doubt very much out of its place
among silks and velvets,
he slightly seized an opportunity and slipped it
into his pocket as a relish for his hearing.
He got clear off with his prize
and proceeded to the key to each his breakfast.
The Scottish writer was named Charles McKay
and the story is in his book
Extraordinary Popular Delusions
and the Madness of Crowds.
It's one of very few works of economic history
to have been an enduring bestseller
from its first publication in 1841
through to the 21st century.
Thanks largely to its vivid storytelling.
MacI goes on to explain that the sailor had made a mistake.
Seeking a zesty accompaniment to his fish, the sailor had unwittingly pilfered not an
onion, but a rare tulip bulb,
which was a problem because this was one of the strangest of all financial booms,
the tulip mania, during which the choiceist bulbs went for astonishing sums,
including the one the sailor had just grabbed for his breakfast.
But, including the one, the sailor had just grabbed for his breakfast. Hardly was his back turned when the merchant missed his valuable, simple Augustus, worth
3,000 florens, or about 280 p.m. sterling.
Relative to the wages of the time, that's well over a million dollars today. For a brief moment of tulip mania, a
sempere augustus tulip bulb was worth far more than its weight in gold.
Have long been fascinated by the stories of Charles McKay, especially today as we seem
surrounded by things which might or might not be financial bubbles, cryptocurrencies and NFTs, meme stocks, or even just a precarious
stock market. A lot of it seems to make no sense. Just as the world Charles McKay described
where you might accidentally eat a million dollars as a breakfast garnish seems to make
no sense either. And I wondered, could I understand the crazy financial markets of today by following Charles
Mackay as a guide into the past?
Maybe I could.
And I learned much more than I could have hoped, but they weren't the lessons that Mackay
had intended to teach me.
I'm Tim Hartford, and you're listening to cautionary tales
recording live at the Bristol Festival of Economics.
Let's start with the obvious.
That delightful story about the hungry sailor who accidentally
ate a million dollars as a side dish for his herring. It's not true. It can't be true.
Who leaves a million dollar treasure lying around on a shop counter or anywhere else?
Indeed, the first thing I learned as I explored the tulip bubble is that Mackay was wrong about most of it.
Anne Goldgar, a historian of the tulip mania,
explains that Mackay's account is plagiarized
from an earlier source, which in turn relied
on moralizing pamphlets designed
to discredit financial speculators.
The picture Mackay paints, says Goldgar,
is based almost solely on propaganda,
cited as if it were fact.
Nobody's denying that the Dutch became very excited
about tulips in the 1630s.
Over the preceding decades,
a thrilling range of new plants had been arriving in Europe,
such as potatoes, peppers, tomatoes, Jerusalem artichokes, French beans, runner beans,
and of course, the tulips themselves.
Tulip bulbs were sufficiently unfamiliar to be mistaken for vegetables, on at least
one occasion someone roasted some bulbs with oil and vinegar,
which is the germ of truth in Charles Mackay's preposterous tail.
But tulips, of course, are much nicer to look at than to eat.
And some, infected by a virus, changed from simple, bold coloured petals to exquisitely varied patterns.
And what happened? The newly wealthy Dutch merchant class began to do what wealthy
classes of people often do. They paid a lot of money for rare and beautiful things
that they could show off to their friends.
Today's influencers brandish Birkin handkin, Handpags, or Board,
Ape, Yacht Club, NFTs, please don't make me try to explain them. It's a crypto thing,
it's a digital status symbol, Paris Hilton's involved. The Dutch fashionistas were no
different except they splashed the cash on rare tulips. And the more rich Dutch merchants
tried to get the rarest blooms, the more expensive they became. One fabulously wealthy Dutch
politician built a garden filled with artfully positioned mirrors surrounding a few rare
tulips, mirror multiplied into a multitude. The choice's blooms were so costly even he
couldn't afford to fill his garden. The philosopher, Eustus Lipsius, wasn't impressed
by the tulip connectors.
What should I call this but a kind of merry madness? They do vain gloriously hunt after strange herbs and flowers, which
having gotten, they preserve and cherish more carefully than any mother doth her child.
But it didn't last. Of course it didn't. In February, bold wholesalers gathered in Harlem, a day's walk west of Amsterdam, to find that nobody wished to buy.
Within a few days, Dutch tulip prices had fallen tenfold. But what today should we make of it?
For Charles Mackay, the moral of the tulip mania and his other tales is that, whether we're talking about a financial bubble or a religious cult, people go mad in crowds.
One doesn't need hindsight to see it. If you can think calmly and independently, it's obvious. was writing with hindsight, 200 years after the fact.
And he seemed much more interested
in cartoonish exaggeration than inaccurate history.
It's not just the fake story about the sailor
and his expensive breakfast,
it's the idea that the tulip mania was all consuming.
The Dutch economy destroyed in the flames
of the burning desire for tulips.
The rage among the Dutch to possess them was so great that the ordinary industry of the
country was neglected, and the population even to its lowest drags embarked in the tulip
trade. But the historian and Goldgar couldn't find a single bankruptcy attributable to the
tulip mania. Two economic historians William Quinn and John Turner agree. The tulip mania
isn't even in boom and bust their global history of financial bubbles. It had negligible economic
impact they explain. It was too unremarkable to merit inclusion,
but on my quest to understand how bubbles work,
that raises a question.
If Mackay was wrong about the tulip mania,
what else was he wrong about?
Charles Mackay was born in 1814 in Perth, Scotland. Today his fame rests entirely on his
writing about historical manias such as the tulip bubble and the South Sea bubble. He
was just 27 when the first edition of extraordinary popular delusions emerged and promptly became
a bestseller. However, in his time, he was even better known as a poet and
a hugely popular lyricist, imagine a cross between Robert Frost and Paul McCartney.
McCuy was also a prominent journalist, and in the mid-1840s, he was editor of a small but
influential newspaper, The Glasgow Argus.
Given Mackay's interest in investment bubbles, his reputation is perhaps the leading historian of Mania's
and his editor's pulpit at the Glasgow Argus.
It's fascinating to see what he made of the British investment scene in the 1840s.
That investment scene was dominated
by a fast emerging technology, the railway.
Let's try to picture the early days of the railway
by telling a tale as vivid and exciting
as anything in Charles McKay's book.
And a tale which happens to be verifiably true.
The place,
Parkside, a railway station halfway between Liverpool and Manchester in the northwest of
England.
The year, 1830.
The occasion, the grand opening of the world's first intercity railway.
A host of dignitaries is in attendance, including the Prime Minister, Napoleon's conqueror,
the Duke of Wellington himself.
The local member of Parliament, William Huskerson, is also there.
A little tender as he recovers from surgery. Huskerson's doctor has told him to stay home and rest,
but he could hardly miss the big day. The great railway engineer George Stevenson is there,
with his famous locomotive, Rocket. Seven other locomotives are travelling in a procession, each pulling short trains bedecked
with diverse flags and carrying hundreds of distinguished passengers between them.
The locomotive, Northumbrian, leads the procession.
Let's let the Manchester Guardian take up the story.
Nothing could exceed the grandeur of its starting, the brilliancy of the Cortege, the novelty
of the site.
Considerations of the almost boundless advantages of the Stupendous Power about to be put into
operation gave the spectacle an interest unparalleled.
Called forth sublime conceptions of the mind and energies of man.
Some of the trains stop at Parkside Station to refuel.
William Huskerson is one of several gentlemen who gets out for a stroll.
When he sees the Duke of Wellington, he goes to greet him.
While in the act of shaking hands, Harold Sound announced the approach of the rocket engine
on the opposite rail.
Several voices exclaimed,
come in, take care, Mr. Hoskison!
Famously accident-prone,
and walking awkwardly after his surgery, Hoskison Divers.
Thinking first, to get out of the way of the approaching locomotive by walking away from
the Duke of Wellington's stationary train. Then, turning back to stand between the two
railway lines, pressing himself close to the Duke's train. Then, fearing that there wasn't
enough room and deciding to climb on board the Duke's train.
The unfortunate gentleman became flurried and rapidly caught hold of the door,
but unhappily in endeavouring to ascend,
he missed his footing,
and either fell, or was thrown down by the door.
The rocket coming up at the instant
went over his leg and thigh
and fractured them in a most dreadful manner.
The entire was the work of a moment.
An instant previous he was in the full possession of health and spirits
in our lay bleeding in mangled before his friends.
To portray the scene that followed would be impossible.
Mrs Huskisson, or to discreame of horror and sank apparently under a reflection.
William Huskisson MP is remembered today as the first victim of a fatal railway accident.
Still, for an exciting new industry, there is no such thing as bad publicity.
George Stevenson may have sensed that as he rushed the dying huskies into hospital.
How else? On a locomotive.
Corsion retails will return after the break.
Hi, I'm Michael Lewis. My first book, Lyres Poker, told the story of my time in Solomon Brothers,
which was then one of the world's most powerful banks. In three years, I went from trainee
to successful banker. It felt back then like a modern day gold rush. I thought at the
time I was documenting an unprecedented event that would never repeat itself. It turned
out it was just the beginning of an era that never ended.
I've recorded for the first time a full audiobook version of Liars Poker.
You can get it now at pushkin.fm.
The newspapers were fascinated.
The unfortunate death of William Huskerson ensured the whole world knew about this new
technology. The Liverpool to Manchester Railway was soon being heavily used, and the railway
shareholders were making fat profits. Then the Liverpool and Manchester line were surely
just the start. The railway promised fast, convenient transport of both passengers and cargo across the land,
once a few health and safety issues have been resolved.
Over the next few years, the railway age gathered steam.
Small private companies popped up to raise finance for various lines connecting other cities.
The promised rich rewards for investors, and by the mid-1840s, a dramatic expansion
seemed inevitable.
The bullish consensus was that Great Britain would go from 2,000 miles of track to 20,000
by the decades end.
Promoters scrambled to register their new schemes with authorities, while people scrambled to
hand over their money
to those promoters.
The boom in railway stocks was beaten only by the boom
in advertising for new railway schemes.
Recently, it seemed impossible to read anything
without bumping into someone selling crypto something.
By 1845, it was impossible to pick up a newspaper without seeing a solicitation
for investors in a brand new railway. The railway times had a huge circulation. It printed
three supplements a week to carry all those advertisements. There were more than a dozen
weekly journals specializing in the railways, most of these titles freshly
launched in 1845.
There was a daily railway paper, the Iron Times.
Even the economist introduced a special section covering the railways.
The ability to draw in advertising money from railway promoters was simply irresistible.
At least the Victorians were spared Elon Musk boosting Dogecoin.
Dogecoin.
Echriptocurrency initially created as a satire of cryptocurrencies.
One Dogecoin boomed from a tiny fraction of a cent to nearly a dollar,
and then slumped back to a few cents
again. Such tulip, very mania, wow. But the great and the good of the Victorian age enthusiastically
plunged into railway stocks. Charles Babbage, Charles Darwin, John Stuart Mill, and William Makepiece Thackerie all invested
in the railways, either directly or through their families.
So did three future prime ministers.
Come to think of it, so did the actual prime minister Robert Peel.
Emily and Anne Bronte were big fans of railway shares and hurried to invest in the York and North Midland line.
Their sister Charlotte wasn't so sure, as she explained in a letter to a friend.
I'm very glad to be able to answer your kind inquiries by an assurance that our small
capital is as yet undiminished. The York and Midland is, as you say, a very good line,
yet I have been most anxious for us
to sell our shares, and it will be too late.
I cannot, however, persuade my sisters to regard the affair precisely from my point of view.
Indeed, Charlotte Bronte was in the minority.
The country was going mad for the railways.
The price of railway stocks doubled in two years,
but that understates what was really going on.
Many investors would pay just a 5% down payment
to obtain a toehold in a share.
It was called Scrip.
But if you had paid one pound for Scrip
in a 20 pound share,
then the 20 pound share doubled in price.
Well, then you're just made £20 on an initial payment of just £1.
No wonder people got excited.
Speculators enthusiastically traded the script,
feeling like financial wizards as prices rose
and flipping their initial investment for a profit. Not too many people seem to have
thought about the fact that they'd paid £1 a week's wages for a £20 share and they were
still on the hook for the other £19. And even fewer thought about what would happen if
share prices stopped rising and started to fall.
There were some skeptics. The most prominent was the Times newspaper, and the skeptics
had some sharp questions. Would that dramatic growth in railway mileage really happen? If
it did, could it ever be profitable? Plenty of people were willing to pay to travel between prosperous bustling,
Liverpool and Manchester, but would rural lines be so lucrative?
Were railways really as cheap to build and to run as their promoters claimed?
And when railway companies ran parallel lines in competition with each other,
what would happen to fares?
For insight into the debate, wise heads listened to Charles Mackay. The nation's
foremost scholar of investment bubbles, the historian Andrew Odlisko has carried out an
exhaustive study of everything Mackay wrote and commissioned others to write
in the Glasgow Argus in 1844, 1845, and 1846, the peak years of the railway investment boom.
So what did the great bubble historian think of the railway boom?
Had another mania broken out right in front of his perceptive eyes?
had another mania broken out right in front of his perceptive eyes?
Absolutely not," said Mackay.
We think that those who sown the alarm of an approaching railway crisis have somewhat exaggerated the danger. That was written late in 1845.
Mackay explicitly refers to some of the historical manias he so famously described in extraordinary
popular delusions and slaps down those who drew any parallels.
It may appear wise to the careless or to the ignorant to trace resemblances.
Those however who look more deeply into the matter, and think for themselves, cannot discover sufficient resemblance
of cause to anticipate a similarity of effect.
He has a point.
The tulip mania was a silly fuss about flowers.
The railways are iron and flame, speed and progress.
They're different.
So much difference as to lead to the very opposite conclusion
from that reached by the alarmists.
Mackay, to his credit, warned his readers to watch out for the inevitable fraudsters
and opportunists, but he insisted that the fundamentals of the railways, both as a transformative
technology and as a profitable investment were absolutely sound.
It wasn't like the tulips and all those other silly old delusions of crowds, not at all.
And an expert like Mackay could tell a difference.
With railways, the foundation is broad and secure.
They are a necessity of the age. They are a property real and tangible
in themselves, and they must of necessity increase and lead to still further and more beneficial
developments. Mackay was aware of the skeptics, and he sometimes published skeptical pieces by others.
But this bullish essay on railways as an investment opportunity was no outlier.
Mekai wrote several times on the topic and says Andrew Odlisko, he appears never to have
wavered in his belief that there would be abundant profits.
We think the alarmists are in error, and that there is no reason whatever to fear for any
legitimate railway speculation.
MacKie's argument seems plausible enough at first sight.
Tulips are silly.
Railways are important.
A necessity of the age.
A property real and tangible in themselves.
If you want to invest without being caught up in a bubble, then just follow Mekai's
maxim.
Look for a broad, secure foundation based on a necessity of the age.
Don't be distracted by fads and fashions.
There's only one problem.
This investment advice doesn't work.
The modern equivalent of the Railways was the worldwide web.
It was, like the railways, a necessity of the age and wood, like the railways, of necessity
increase and lead to further and more beneficial developments.
But that doesn't change the fact that if you put money into almost any.com company in
1999, you'd have lost most of it over the next two years.
Nor a fripper is such as tulips, necessarily bubbles.
Comparin contrast the difference between the rare tulip bulb and the Birkin handbag.
They're both quintessential examples of conspicuous consumption by the wealthiest of collectors.
Both the rarest tulip bulbs and the rarest Birkin bags
cost as much as a house.
The difference is that the bottom quite quickly
fell out of the market for rare tulips, and
it hasn't for Birkens.
Not yet.
Perhaps it will.
But as far as I can figure out, the price has been rising for long enough that it's perfectly
possible to have spent most of your working life building up a pension entirely based on
investing in Birkins.
Then there are the ambiguous investments.
Is gold a frivolous investment or a necessity of the age?
Gold produces no stream of income.
It has some industrial and ornamental uses,
but it's chiefly valued because people expect
that they'll be able to find someone to take it off their hands, quite likely, at a profit.
That's almost a textbook definition of a bubble, but if gold is in a bubble, it's been in a bubble
for several thousand years. As for cryptocurrencies, Dogecoin is absurd by design, but the blockchain,
the clever decentralized spreadsheet that underpins cryptocurrencies, that may just be revolutionary
or not. Are we looking at tulips or railways? And if we really knew, would that help? With his outrageous stories
about tulip madness, Charles McKay made it seem easy to spot a financial bubble, but
perhaps it wasn't as easy as he thought. Because shortly after Mackay published his enthusiastic editorial, The Railway Bubble was
about to burst in a catastrophic fashion.
Corsnery Tales will return in a moment.
Hi, I'm Michael Lewis.
My first book, Lyre's Poker, told the story of my time in
Solomon Brothers, which was then one of the world's most powerful banks. In three
years, I went from trainee to successful banker. It felt back then like a modern
day goal rush. I thought at the time I was documenting a like an unprecedented
event that would never repeat itself. It turned out it was just the beginning of an era that never ended.
I've recorded for the first time a full audiobook version of Liars Poker.
You can get it now at pushkin.fm
Charles McCuy was championing the Railways at the very peak of the railway mania, late in 1845, within a matter of weeks,
shares in railways fell by a fifth.
That's a problem if you own a full share, but it's a catastrophe if you've just bought
some script to flip it for a profit.
You've spent a pound, a week's wages, and on paper you've already lost four times that amount.
Nobody's going to take the script off your hands.
And so you're legally obliged to pay another £19 to complete the purchase.
That's money which you don't have.
And which the share won't be worth when you've paid it.
At the close of 1849, Charlotte Bronte lamented,
My shares are in the York and North Midland railway. The original price of the shares in
this railway was £50. At one time they rose to £120. They are now down at £20. And it
is doubtful whether any dividend will be declared. Ah, yes. About the York and North Midland railway.
Sorry, Charlotte. But it was run by George Hudson,
a flamboyant politician and entrepreneur nicknamed the Railway King.
It turned out to be the enron of the age, a massive accounting scandal and a disaster for investors.
Surely, such a thing could never happen today.
But even the honestly-run railway companies were suffering from an economic downturn,
rising interest rates, too many duplicate lines, and fundamentally, impossibly optimistic expectations.
Within a few years, railway shares had fallen from their peak
by two thirds.
It was the sheer scale of investment in the railways that
made the slump in prices so catastrophic.
In the peak year, the amount spent on railways
by private investors nearly matched
the entire budget of the British government,
which was at the time in the process of maintaining
an empire and waging a series of expensive wars.
The cost of building all the approved railways
would have been almost twice the country's
entire annual output. Historians say there's simply no parallel. No investment scheme has
ever sucked in so much of a leading economist output. It was as though the entire industrial
and financial base of Britain had shifted to mobilize for an all-out war,
except that the generals were railway engineers, and the enemies were the canal boat and the
horse drawn coach.
When so much money was at stake, the slump was ruinous.
Vast sums had been invested, Vast sums had been lost.
Charlotte Bronte herself had just seen Jane Eyre become a best seller, so was cushioned
from the disaster, but she was quite aware that others were not so lucky.
This business is certainly very bad, worse than I thought and much worse than my father has any idea of.
I want perhaps to be rather thankful than dissatisfied.
When I look at my own case and compare it with that of thousands besides, I scarcely see room for a murmur.
Many, very many, are by the late, strange railway system deprived almost of their daily bread.
That phrase, the late, strange railway system speaks vividly of the bewilderment investors
felt.
They could scarcely comprehend what had happened to them and their money.
Writing two years later, the contemporary chronicler, John Francis, vividly told the tale.
No other panic was ever so fatal to the middle class.
It reached every half, saddened every heart in the metropolis.
Entire families were ruined.
There was scarcely an important town in England, but what beheld some wretched suicide.
The economic historians, William Quinn and John Turner,
argue that a bubble needs three elements to inflate,
just as a fire needs three elements to keep burning.
For a fire, those elements of fuel, heat, and oxygen.
For a financial bubble, it's marketability, speculation, and cheap money. Yes, I know
that's not quite as catchy. Marketability means that you can easily buy and sell assets
such as that cheap script. Marketability sets the stage for speculation.
Speculative investors don't buy with an eye on the fundamentals, but in the hope of quickly reselling at a profit.
Speculation can create a self-fulfilling spiral.
Just as a burning fire creates its own heat,
hopeful speculators cause rising prices,
and rising prices draw in new hopeful speculators.
And finally, there's cheap money.
If people are able to borrow easily at low interest rates,
they can take bets with borrowed money.
When prices rise, they feel like geniuses.
When prices fall, they lose everything.
The railway mania had all of those elements, but then so have most modern financial markets
for the last 30 years or more.
And they're not all bubbles.
Just as when you have fuel, heat and oxygen, you still need something else to start a
fire.
A spark.
Why does some investments find a spark?
Like bored apes and dogecoin and birkin bags?
While others don't, I don't know.
How do you tell if some new investment craze will fizzle out just as quickly as Dutch
tulips or keep its value for as long as birkin bags or gold. I don't know.
By following Charles McKay as a guide, I haven't learned to make sense of today's financial
markets, but I have learned one thing. When McKay said, you don't need hindsight to see a bubble,
that it's obvious if you think calmly and independently.
He was wrong. Charles McCuy must have been aghast that the collapse of the railway boom.
He wasn't just bullish about the railways, he was right at the extreme of the enthusiasts.
Most railway bulls anticipated 20,000 miles of railway by 1850.
That figure was eventually reached, but not until the 1900s.
Mekai predicted that there would eventually be 100,000 miles of railway line in Britain.
We never got close.
Charles Mekai wasn't wrong to argue that people can suffer from collective delusions,
but his account lacks a crucial element.
Humility.
Mackay's exaggerated caricatures made it seem so easy to spot bubbles,
but it's not so easy to see a bubble when it's all around you. Bubble historian Andrew Odlisco described the railway mania
of the 1840s as, by many measures,
the greatest technology mania in history.
And it's collapse was one of the greatest financial crashes.
Charles McKay stood right in the middle of it,
looking around at it, debating it, and pondering
his own work on financial manias, and he utterly misperceived what he was witnessing.
Those who forecast great things for the railways weren't wrong.
The lines built in the 1840s still form the backbone of the country's rail system in the 21st century.
Those who forecast great things for the internet in 1999 weren't wrong either.
But none of this justified investment optimism.
The railways were a disaster for their investors.
And the railway bubble caused vastly more hardship than the tulip mania ever could.
Don't feel too sorry for Mackay himself. His reputation appeared untarnished by his spectacular
era. In 1850, when the poet Laureate William Wordsworth died, Mackay was said to be in the running
to replace him. Instead, he became the editor
of the most red newspaper in the country, the illustrated London News. And later, foreign
correspondent for the Times of London, covering the American Civil War.
Of course, Charles Mackay found time to revise his best-selling book, extraordinary popular delusions. So what did he have to say about
the railway bubble? Not much. In the 1852 edition there is a footnote which reads,
the South Sea Project remained until 1845 the greatest example in British history of the infatuation
of the people for commercial gambling.
The railway mania was even bigger than the South Sea bubble, and Mackay obviously knows
that, but he can't quite bring himself to say so directly.
Instead, he adds,
The first edition of these volumes was published sometime
before the outbreak of the Great Railway
Mania of that and the following year.
And that footnote is the only acknowledgement
that the railway mania even existed.
The most famous historian of bubbles
had a front row seat for the largest speculative bubble
in British history.
Afterwards, he had absolutely nothing to say about it.
His silence speaks loud and clear.
A central source of this episode was Andrew Oblisko's research paper,
Charles McIath's own extraordinary popular delusions
in the railway media.
A full list of our sources visit tin-halfa.com.
This live edition of Portrait's Hales was written by me, Tim Harford with Andrew Wright.
It featured the voice columns of Stella Harford and Stuart McLaughlin.
It was produced by Ryan Dilly.
The original music is the work of Pascal Wise. Our sound engineer was Harvey Eidl's,
with thanks to Zoe Steppen-Mill and the team of the Bristol Festival of Economics.
Courshrew's hails is a production of Pushkin Industries.
Like the show, please remember to rate, share and review.
If you want to hear the show, add three and listen to Swim Street Courshrew's tale short.
Sign up for Pushkin Pass from the show page
in Apple Podcasts or Pushkin.fm slash bus.
Hi, I'm Michael Lewis. My first book, Lyres's Poker, told the story of my time in Solomon Brothers,
which was then one of the world's most powerful banks.
In three years, I went from trainee to successful banker.
It felt back then like a modern day gold rush.
I thought at the time I was documenting
a like an unprecedented event that would never repeat itself.
It turned out it was just the beginning of an era
that never ended.
I've recorded for the first time a full audiobook version of Liars Poker. You
can get it now at pushkin.fm