Commie!.


On another note, a sterling Latex Dog thread that delivers.

Commie!.
On another note, a sterling Latex Dog thread that delivers.![]()
Role reversal.
I contract into the public sector at the moment, their systems are an absolute mess and the work ethic is lower than I've experienced in private.
Saying that, there is nothing to stop a public sector company being ran efficiently, I just haven't seen any evidence that it happens yet.
The extent to which large organisations are inefficient varies but they're still all inefficient by nature.
Communication costs, duplication of effort, inertia. It's basic economics.
Privatised services are the worst of both worlds - the lack of oversight that tends to come with public sector management because nobody can be bothered to say "No, we aren't paying for this awful job. Do it again", and the for-profit nature of private companies.
It seems to me that all this government is really doing is stimulating/subsidising private industry with tax payer money.
Standard Tory tactic, prepare their private sector mates for a good old feast on the taxpayers money and then cherry pick statistics to tell the taxpayer "it's the best way"
If anything goes wrong tell them it was Labours fault and talk some ******** about austerity.
Rinse and repeat.
![]()
On another note, a sterling Latex Dog thread that delivers.![]()
No, it's been dogma for about a century. Before that it was assumed that government was better.
The problem is, there's very little reliable research into this. What little research which has been done was funded by either:
a) a government which was privatising stuff, and/or
b) a company which was picking up stuff which had been privatised.
Surprise - both cherry-pick data like crazy to make sure that any report gives the result that they want. Another part of the problem is: define "efficient". For most governments (and the right-wingers here) is means "cheaper". By and large, governments want to spend the minimum amount of money which will win them the next election. The commonest ways companies become more efficient are:
1) Stop doing as much. Government organisation A is privatised and sold to Serco. Sorry, sold to the company which can make the best job of work. Obviously there's no corrupt relationship between the government and Serco. Or G4S. Anyway, when it was public, organisation provided 100 services for £200 million a year. Serco, sorry, the highest bidder, abandons 20% of the services, and provides the remaining 80% for £180 million. Is this more efficient? Answer: nobody cares because it's cheaper. Except the people who relied on the 20% which got dumped, but they don't vote for the current government so **** 'em.
2) Reduce the wages of the staff. Sure, they come across on TUPE, but that's worth nothing because it only applies at the point of transfer. The new company is perfectly entitled to wait a day then make the whole lot redundant. It then hires them back at minimum wage. Except now the government is having to pay tax credits and benefits to those staff who used to pay taxes in, because the wages are so low. Serco, sorry, the highest bidder, saves £25 million in wages, which is now effectively paid by the tax payer. Is this more efficient? Answer: nobody cares because the data only shows the direct costs, not the indirect ones.
Thoughts?
Work that is cheap is not necessarily work that is effective. This myth that the private sector is more efficient has motivated the increase in competitive tendering of public services to private contractors, and has been used to justify lower unit costs (and lower wages). However, lower prices are sometimes secured at the cost of service quality, suggesting that paying higher wages could in fact be more efficient
Please it's all been going to **** since that piece of scum Thatcher decided no one except a few toffs deserved a fair living.Yeah, it was terrible when the Tories did this between 1997 and 2008.
Please it's all been going to **** since that piece of scum Thatcher decided no one except a few toffs deserved a fair living.
Please it's all been going to **** since that piece of scum Thatcher decided no one except a few toffs deserved a fair living.
I do have to chuckle at the myth that privatisation increases choice and competition - tell that to commuters.
It depends on the contracting arrangement. It can be absolutely infuriating on the other side of the fence, when what you'd really like to do is get the job done, but your customer has no idea what they want or what they think that it should cost, but expend several man months of middle management effort figuring that out before starting the loop again