crispybits wrote:Privatisation would work if you could have a truly open free market with perfect competition. The problem is that by the very nature of most "public services" this kind of perfect competition free market is impossible, and human imperfections such as greed mean the flaws in the system will be abused.
It's a bit like communism would work if you had a perfect system to implement it which removed the corruption which creeps in because of human imperfection.
Personally, I would favour government owned corporations running effectively as private businesses, with temporary shareholdings for staff at all levels of the business while they work for the organisation, and a bonus scheme based on not just coming in under budget, but also on service level reviews and similar more qualitative measurements, leading to a profit share between all shareholders in that corporation and the government. That way staff at all levels are committed to both give excellent service and deliver cost-effectiveness, and the government retains control of the service at a higher level. If, say, 3 were created in each state (I'm british but I know most here are Americans so I'll phrase it in US terms), and a further 10 were created at federal level, these corporations could engage in a competitive marketplace so that the ones that are best run and most cost efficient would be the ones that would thrive.
it wouldn't be a perfect system either, I'm well aware of several flaws, not least is the continual balancing processes needed to keep all of the corporations competitive, but we'll never have a perfect system.
That's a great alternative, but Public Choice reminds us that politicians and bureaucrats don't give a shit unless your plan offers something of interest to them (e.g. votes and a bigger budget, usually). That profit-share might compound the principal-agent problem, and the bureaucratic competitive model forces them to actually do their jobs--effectively, which would require them to act efficiently. With bureaucratic incentives, efficiency leads to a reduction in their budget, thus reducing their perceived value of this competitive bureaucratic model. Besides, no bureaucracy is willing to relinquish its hold (or monopoly) on some scope of public policy with other bureaucracies.
A free market does not require perfect competition--only the neoclassical economists require that absurd, impractical notion. A free market rests on Free Entry into any enterprise (e.g. "Free" as in "legally free to compete") and a legal system which respects property rights and negative rights (e.g. the right not to be killed, the right not to have anyone initiate violence against you, the right not be deceived through fraud, etc.). A free market requires a limited government, for a powerful government is the only means through which crony capitalists thrive.