Jul 28 2007
We need better infrastructure
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Jul 28 2007
Published by John Redwood at 3:48 pm under Blog
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I’ll be very interested to hear your ideas on this. I’ve worked on the ground level of our new competitive telecoms, gas and electricity industries in about half a dozen large firms, including for three ex-public sector outfits.
Telecoms has improved dramatically, without any shadow of a doubt, there is still a lot of inefficency and waste, but it is this that creates a lot of employment. Privatisation of gas and electricity I would argue has not actually improved anything for the end user in terms of what they get, but has helped the economy, created employment and helped keep taxes down but left the consumer vulnerable to price fluxuations and being ripped off by dodgy sales practices. I’ve never worked in water, so can’t really comment.
I’d be very interested to know what else you think should be handed over to private competition, because there are no more direct consumer interests at stake except who you pay your water bill to surely? Then again maybe I’m wrong.
Steven L: “I’d be very interested to know what else you think should be handed over to private competition,”
Looking at it from the other perspective, what shouldn’t be handed over to private competition? Or, why do you think that Government is better at buisness than buisness folk?
Cast an eye over the organs of government, and we see DEFRA, and the Rural Payments authority. Run on corrupt and incompetant lines, wholly unable to perform the task they were assigned. Supporting the farming industry. Apart from the fact that DEFRA is now a sort of fifth column instrument of the European Union.
Then look at the Home office, a monument to monumental incompetance. Even its own Minister admitted it was unfit for purpose. Just about everything the Home office is charged with - Police, Prisons, Immigration, is in utter Chaos.
I simply do not understand why people still stubbonly think the Government does things better?
I never said anything about government being better at spending our money. I just said I would be interested in JR’s ideas, that’s all.
There is inefficiency and waste in the private sector too. Many companies I’ve worked at have bloated structures of junior and middle-management. ‘Productivity’ measurements can just be bizarre instruments used by management accountants to justify why they deserve to keep their jobs. I work in sales, yet although my bonus is paid solely on sales figures, there is a team of people where I work that monitor me like a battery-hen, in order to keep them happy and let their bosses count their beans the wat they want to I have to operate in a manner by which I sell less, losing income for my employer and myself.
Reply: Yes there are inefficient companies in the private sector. Where they operate in a competitive market, their customers can go elsewhere if the price becomes too high or the quality too low. The public sector is usually supplying a monopoloy service, so the inefficiencies become much greater. You can also change companies if it is that bad!