That’s
something we can all subscribe to – providing the benefits of trade are distributed
fairly among populations by their respective governments.
A
secondary point, urging smaller government and increased outsourcing of State
functions to the private sector, seemed almost as non-controversial. After all
it has been the mantra of the right-of-centre and centre-left since the days of
Reagan and Thatcher.
The
concept that Abbott and many before him are supporting is that anything run by
a government is inherently clunky, its employees too numerous, indifferent and
uninspired, while in the real word of the private sector the profit motive
results in sleek, lean service-orientated operations where motivated staff work
hard to provide, in the words of biz-speak ‘world’s best practice outcomes’.
And
yet.
Leaving
aside the outpouring of papers from right-wing think tanks whose ideologically
hand-picked experts fulfil the demands of their paymasters, I am still in search
of one reputable, independent, rigorous piece of research that supports this
proposition.
Of
course there are many examples, most commonly from Stalinist and former
Stalinist States, of impossible five-year plans, fudged figures, and rampant
corruption, but there are also many thousands of private business failures each
year, and at least a proportion of these result from just the inefficiencies
and poor planning that are regularly blamed on the public sector.
The
move towards privatisation is unrelenting, no matter which side of politics is
in power; the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank demand slashing
cut in the public sector of governments that have suffered greatly in the Global
Financial Crisis – somewhat ironic considering the crisis resulted in the first
place from gross mismanagement by private sector banks and other lending
institutions.
I was interested to read that in the United
Kingdom there is a growing chorus calling ‘enough’. A cross-party group of
Westminster MPs is backing a Private Members Bill which would make public
ownership the default option, give the public a say over whether services are
privatised and make private companies running public services more accountable.
MP
Elfyn Llwyd, who is supporting the Bill, says public opinion is on its side.
“Outsourcing
companies need to be held to account and privatisation should not go ahead
unless the public supports it,” Llwyd says.
The
MPs are supported by a grassroots movement called We Own It, whose Director, Cat Hobbs, says people are “sick of the
endless stream of sell-offs and outsourcing deals”.
The
Bill has no hope of success in a Parliament where both major parties are
devotees of privatisation, but the subject could well be an issue when the next
election comes round in 2015.
Well argued and very tight canvas of the issues. Cannot deny the truth of that.
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