Bernie Gunther
Fundamentalist Druid
Thing is, these are systems, optimised for one thing or another. I don't know of any convincing arguments that private ownership optimises particularly effectively for anything except return on investment and then only on a good day.
If you're optimising around the goal of producing a public service, then at least you have a fighting change of successfully deliving one, wheras if you're optimising for something else, I don't see any compelling reason to suppose that it's going to be effective at delivering a public service except by accident.
Crispy's example of unprofitable routes vs profitable ones illustrates this very well I think. Public service goals would presumably include providing decent transport to rural areas and so on, private investor goals only include this if you regulate to make it so, because such routes aren't in general profitable.
In effect, the goal of delivering a public service is only met in that case where it is no longer being run strictly in accordance with business principles. In the process, you end up generating more public sector work, so why not just let the public sector run things that are supposed to serve the public without that extra layer of complexity and contradictory goals generated by pretending to let the private sector run things?
Privatisation seems like a failed experiment to me.
If you're optimising around the goal of producing a public service, then at least you have a fighting change of successfully deliving one, wheras if you're optimising for something else, I don't see any compelling reason to suppose that it's going to be effective at delivering a public service except by accident.
Crispy's example of unprofitable routes vs profitable ones illustrates this very well I think. Public service goals would presumably include providing decent transport to rural areas and so on, private investor goals only include this if you regulate to make it so, because such routes aren't in general profitable.
In effect, the goal of delivering a public service is only met in that case where it is no longer being run strictly in accordance with business principles. In the process, you end up generating more public sector work, so why not just let the public sector run things that are supposed to serve the public without that extra layer of complexity and contradictory goals generated by pretending to let the private sector run things?
Privatisation seems like a failed experiment to me.