Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sun Jan 23, 2022 8:29 am
TBF thats where properly state run enterprises are a good idea. Not done for profit, but for necessity.
As I've asked before though; where you gonna find one of them?
It's probably fair to say that the nationalised utilities weren't the most 'efficient' organisations if free market economics are the yardstick. Take gas (or electric) - 12 or 13 regions (based on civil defence boundaries originally for resilience) all with HQs with finance, personnel, IT etc. Out in the field, loads of direct employees (and varying levels of contract people as current fashions and demands dictated). It all looked rather lardy. On the plus side huge numbers of people got their training and experience with them and moved on out into the private sector - saving the private sector a fortune. Loads of fitters and engineers are now self-employed. Lots of people just saw inefficient, over-manned organisations but if you look closer they did rather more than just pipe gas/supply electricity - they trained '000s. They also poured cash directly into government coffers and responded to government initiatives/directives directly.
Privatisation was going to introduce competition and drive down prices. It has improved some services but hard to see some of the price cuts.
Water is a farce. No competition and most of it is now foreign owned. It's a rather strategic asset too.
National Grid (again a pretty strategic asset) at one point move ownership to Luxembourg and Hong Kong - to prevent a UK government from being able to take it back into national control. Good job they didn't move it to Moscow. Wonder if it's still in China controlled Hong Kong? I'll have to check.
Royal Mail? That's going well eh?
Not all rosy in the public sector though. The Post Office scandal shows that you can run things dreadfully in any model if you do a crap job of squeezing more money out of something. That's being privatised piecemeal, handing over Post Offices to WH Smith etc, but much of what it did is becoming irrelevant. (Ditto large parts of BT).
Governments are probably not the best thing to run businesses but, personally, privatisation doesn't appear to have been the rip-roaring, price cutting success that was promised. Nor has it improved national resilience and security in any way. Actual services may or may not have improved. Some made a few bob in cheap shares but not all the shares have done well in the long term. Some other countries seem to have found a better balance.
Kerrching. 2d.