blog dds: 2026-07-15 — Barings, Boeing, and Bots
Diomidis Spinellis blog
Barings, Boeing, and Bots
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For decades the accepted management wisdom has been<br>for managers to delegate tasks and<br>for organizations to outsource activities that aren’t core to their operations.<br>Yet, when the proposed delegate or supplier is an AI agent, these<br>established practices are suddenly portrayed as irresponsible,<br>dehumanizing, or even immoral.<br>Much of this resistance has all the marks of a moral panic:<br>a novel technology is judged through its most alarming failures, its benefits<br>are discounted, and its use is treated as crossing a boundary rather<br>than as another management decision.<br>Here’s the thing: delegating work to an AI agent is neither inherently<br>wise nor inherently reckless.<br>As with human delegation and organizational outsourcing, what matters<br>is the task, the controls, and who remains accountable.
Managers delegate because their time, attention, and expertise are limited.<br>A capable subordinate may know more about a task, be closer to the<br>relevant information, or simply have the time required to perform it<br>properly.<br>Delegation can also develop employees by giving them progressively more<br>demanding responsibilities.<br>However, managers delegate execution, not accountability.<br>Effective delegation requires a clear outcome, sufficient<br>authority and resources, appropriate constraints, progress checks,<br>and an escalation path should things go wrong.<br>A task shouldn’t be delegated<br>when its consequences exceed the delegate’s authority or competence,<br>when the manager can’t evaluate the result, or<br>when the work is so sensitive that failures can’t be<br>detected and corrected in time.<br>We would rightly be appalled if an airline pilot delegated<br>landing to an untrained flight attendant and remained in the cabin<br>chatting with a passenger.<br>On the other hand pilots routinely delegate well-defined flight phases<br>to the autopilot.
Poor delegation can amplify information asymmetry,<br>misaligned incentives, and misplaced confidence.<br>A delegate may hide problems, optimize the measured target rather than<br>the desired outcome, or continue along a failing path because admitting<br>failure is costly.<br>The 1995 collapse of Barings Bank<br>is a striking example.<br>Nick Leeson effectively controlled both trading and the corresponding<br>back-office operation, while ambiguous reporting lines left nobody<br>clearly responsible for supervising him.<br>This allowed unauthorized trading and concealed losses to continue until<br>they brought down a 230-year-old institution.<br>The resulting inquiry, rather than blaming delegation,<br>found that management had failed to understand the delegated activity,<br>separate duties, establish controls, and act on warnings.
Organizations also outsource activities,<br>again for reasons similar to those that lead managers to delegate.<br>An external supplier may possess specialized knowledge, infrastructure,<br>economies of scale, or access to talent that would be costly to develop<br>internally.<br>Outsourcing can turn fixed costs into variable ones, increase flexibility,<br>and allow an organization to focus its management attention and resources<br>on activities that differentiate it.<br>However, “non-core” shouldn’t be confused with tedious, expensive,<br>or poorly understood.<br>An activity may be strategically important because it preserves<br>domain knowledge, controls a critical interface, or provides the<br>ability to evaluate suppliers.<br>Sensible outsourcing therefore retains sufficient internal expertise to<br>specify the work, integrate the result, assess its quality, and replace<br>the supplier when necessary.
Outsourcing isn’t without risks.<br>It introduces coordination costs,<br>contractual rigidity, supplier dependence, security exposure,<br>and the gradual erosion of internal capability.<br>Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner<br>illustrates what can happen<br>when an organization<br>outsources too much of the knowledge required to coordinate production.<br>Boeing distributed major aircraft sections across a large global supplier<br>network, expecting partners to deliver completed assemblies.<br>The program ended up nearly three years behind schedule and billions of<br>dollars over budget.<br>Boeing itself acknowledged that it had attempted<br>too much outsourcing alongside too many other innovations.<br>Outsourcing complicated integration work,<br>while weakening Boeing’s ability to see and fix problems at their source.
Technology-induced moral panics follow a familiar pattern.<br>A new medium or technology appears, becomes popular<br>— especially among younger people —<br>and is blamed for intellectual decline, moral corruption,<br>social isolation, unemployment, or violence.<br>Novels, radio, television, comic books, video games, and smartphones<br>have all occupied this role.<br>Sometimes entrenched interests amplify these fears.<br>Research on these recurring technology panics warns that emotionally<br>charged claims often run ahead of the available evidence and<br>lead to poorly targeted research and policy.<br>Past alarms...