This is important information as the New Zealand government rams its asset sales/Public- Private Partnership through the parliament.
Public-Private
Partnership - Another Phrase for Fascism
20
June, 2012
Submitted
by James E. Miller of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute of Canada,
The
word “privatization” is a loaded term these days. Unions
and big government worshippers scoff at the idea of any public
services being in the hands of ruthless, greedy capitalists.
The left has the distorted view that people in the private sector are
driven primarily by their desire to cut costs and throw workers out
on the street. To them, government workers are angels sent from
heaven to do God’s work like picking up the neighborhood trash or
maintaining a public pool filled with the bodily discharges of kids
whose derelict parents decided to drop off and go shopping for a few
hours. On the right, conservatives who supposedly hold high
regard for market forces and Ronald Reagan’s classic declaration
“government is the problem,” typically have a favorable view of
privatization schemes.
Given
that government creates
no wealth and
only consumes capital, privatization of services would seem like an
obvious choice;
especially for cash strapped states and municipalities. The
rational behind privatizing public service is that the private sector
is almost always more efficient in operation than bureaucracies
unconcerned with earning a return on investment. Even leftists will
grudgingly acknowledge the super quality markets tend to produce to a
point.
So
if common sense dictates allowing businesses with a vested financial
interest in their own success to pick up the slack in delivering
public services, why
should free marketers be wary of such ventures?
There
just so happens to be two different forms of privatization.
The first type is genuine privatization; that is the political class
and bureaucrats completely removing their hands of any dealings with
the offering of a service. Supporters of the free market should
applaud this type of privatization as it means entrepreneurs and
investors can freely enter into the industries the government has
just vacated. As long as consumers demand the service in
question, the opportunity will exist for businessmen to devise new
and profitable ways in ensuring its delivering.
The
other type of privatization shouldn’t be so appealing. That’s
because it isn’t true privatization but a deceptive form of
political patronage. These rackets are commonly known as
“public-private partnerships” and tend to garner bipartisan
support due to the crooked dealings which are almost always their
sole impetus.
According
to the
National Council for Public-Private Partnerships, PPPs are
a
contractual agreement between a public agency (federal, state or
local) and a private sector entity. Through this agreement, the
skills and assets of each sector (public and private) are shared in
delivering a service or facility for the use of the general public.
In addition to the sharing of resources, each party shares in the
risks and rewards potential in the delivery of the service and/or
facility.
In
other words, PPPs
result in the government still maintaining the final say over the
delivering of the service.
Taxpayers now have the noose of being forced to guarantee an
“acceptable rate of return over the term of the partnership” to
the contracted company around their neck.
Even
though public-private partnerships are championed as cutting age
methods to modernize the state, underhanded bribes on the taxpayer
dime go back at least a century. Perhaps the biggest, most
powerful public-private partnership around is the Federal Reserve
System. The New York branch of the Fed, which has been given a
monopoly on the supply of what has become the world’s reserve
currency, is still technically a private
entity that
just so happens to have the guns of the state defending its open
market operations.
Today,
public-private partnerships are still offered as a way to mask
ever-intrusive government. Recently Senator Rand
Paul introduced
a measure in
the U.S. Congress to “privatize” the crotch fondlers in the TSA.
“Privatize” is put in quotations because the bill would “require
that the mostly federalized program be turned over to private
screeners and allow airports — with Department of Homeland Security
approval — to select companies to handle the work” according
to Politico.
Private screeners would still be under the guidelines of the
Department of Homeland Security and be paid with tax dollars even
though they would be employed by a non-government firm.
Ironically, Rand’s father, Texas Congressman Ron Paul, pointed out
the flaw in his son’s proposal last July when
he wrote:
What
we need is real privatization of security, but not phony
privatization with the same TSA screeners in private security firm
uniforms still operating under the “guidance” of the federal
government. Real security will be achieved when the airlines
are once again in charge of protecting their property and their
passengers.
President
Barack Obama has proposed public private partnerships numerous times
during his time in office; namely in childhood education and
infrastructure development.
Last year when Obama pushed for
an infrastructure bank to pool together capital already swindled from
taxpayers to form a quasi-banking institution which would take out
loans in order to pay for the rebuilding “roads, bridges, and ports
and broadband lines and smart grids,” both the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce and AFL-CIO were in favor of it. Along with the
banksters who
stood to make
a hefty profit by charging above-market fees to finance such deals,
the support of the CC and AFL-CIO should be a no-brainer considering
unions and construction companies would most likely be paid to do the
“shovel-ready” legwork. It was a PPP even the left could
get behind since a portion of the funds went to their supporters.
Public-private
partnership schemes haven’t been limited to just America lately.
In Canada, the province of Ontario has recently
considered granting
a private company, Teranet Inc., the rights to operate its online
service which delivers such things as birth certificates and driver
license renewals. According
to the World
Bank,
many European and Central Asian countries are opting for public
private partnerships after tax receipts plunged in the wake of the
financial crisis. PPPs are still popular among various
governments for precisely one reason.
There
is actually another, more accurate term for public-private
partnerships. It’s called fascism; plain and simple.
Private business may act as an administrator but the state still
pulls the reigns. From a political perspective, public-private
partnerships are quite ingenious. Politicians remain in control
while convincing voters they believe in the efficiency of a robust
private sector. And when issues arise over the performance of a
service, whatever private firm granted the monopolistic privilege of
delivery can be treated like a scapegoat despite having to operate
within government established guidelines. The state escapes
criticism as the public ignorantly clamors for more protection from
those evil hearted businessmen. To
the ruling establishment, public-private partnerships are “heads I
win, tails you lose.”
What
the non-exploitive supporters of public-private partnerships tend to
forget is that it isn’t just the administration of the service in
supposedly private hands that adds to its betterment. Why the
market function so well is that it is driven by competition from
businesses that don’t rely on assistance from the band of thieves
who occupy the offices of the state. Government assistance
gives some businesses an upper hand on competitors which can lead to
diminishing innovation. Why
compete when Uncle Sam has your back to ensure a decent rate of
profit? Then
there are government grants of monopoly which give the chosen company
absolutely zero incentive to cut costs. All of the advantages
of private ownership become effectively nullified in public-private
partnerships to the detriment of the taxpayer.
In
our world of unceasing centralization of power, lawmakers are finding
more deceptive ways to mask their lust for dominance. Public-private
partnerships are the embodiment of what Mussolini dubbed
“corporatism;” that is the “merger of state and corporate
power.” Under corporatism, the ruling class is able to expand
unbeknownst to the Boobus
Americanus and
its equivalent in other countries. The Average Joe still has
his wallet forcefully stripped of its contents but now the state’s
cronies get to partake in the plunder. Meanwhile the same big
businessmen who benefit from government privilege still maintain
their praise for free markets while working with politicians to
forcefully subdue their competition.
Murray
Rothbard was quick to recognize why such parasites of men are
dangerous for the blurring of the line between public and private
when he
wrote:
What’s
needed is a corporate spokesman who embraces the government-business
partnership with enthusiasm and joy – a kind of
Big-Businessman-as-Philosopher. When such a champion emerges, Mr. and
Ms. America, keep a sharp eye on your wallets – you are about to be
fleeced.
Distinguishing
between genuine privatization and outright fascism is the only way to
make sense of the state’s manipulation of words and their meaning.
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