by Dave Johnson
Who gains – and who
loses – when public assets and jobs are turned over to the private sector?
The corporate right
endlessly promotes “privatization” of public assets and public jobs as a
cash-raising or cost-saving measure. Privatization is when the public turns
over assets like airports, roads or buildings, or contracts out a public
function like trash collection to a private company. Many cities contract
out their trash collection. To raise cash Arizona even sold its state capital
building and leased it back.
The justification for
privatization is the old argument that private companies do everything better
and more “efficiently” than government, and will find ways to cut costs.
Over and over we hear that companies do everything for less cost than government.
But it never seems to sink in that private companies don’t do things unless the
people at the top can make a bundle of cash; if the CEO isn’t making millions,
that CEO will move the company on to something else. When government does
something they don’t have to pay millions to someone at the top.
So how do private companies
save money? What costs do companies cut that government
doesn’t? When you hear about “cost-cutting” here is something to
consider: what if by “costs” the privatizers are talking about … us?
The Human Cost
A recent NY Times piece brought
the human cost of privatization to people’s attention. In the
article, A Hidden Toll as States Shift to Contract Workers, the
Times’ Motoko Rich reports,
With state budgets under
pressure, Michigan says
it can no longer afford the relatively high wages of the public workers, which
range from $15 to $20 an hour, along with health and retirement benefits.
According to Salary.com,
certified nursing assistants in private long-term care facilities in the area
earn a median salary of just over $25,000 a year, or about $12.25 a hour.
Summary: when a public
function is privatized the employees get paid less and lose benefits, but other
state agencies pick up the costs that occur when people get paid less.
Private managers and executives get a big chunk of the “savings” and then there
are the costs to the larger economy from ever more people making less and
less. From the Times article,
Economists and other
academics who study outsourcing are divided about whether it usually saves a
government money. Recent data from Arizona shows
that privately
operated prisons often cost more to operate than state-run facilities. A study by
the Project on Government Oversight, a nonprofit Washington group, found that in 33 of
35 occupations, using contractors cost the federal government billions of
dollars more than using government employees.
Laura Clawson at Daily
Kos added to the NY Times story, in, Low-wage contract workers in Michigan veterans home come
with hidden costs,
What do you want to bet that
guy gets health care, and retirement benefits, and earns more than $10 an hour?
And that he's probably not the only person at J2S of whom those things are
true. So while the hourly wage a nursing assistant working for J2S gets is $10,
the state is paying J2S more. How much more, the New York Times does
not report. But Eclectablog points out that the state pays J2S
Healthcare Group $15 an hour for those $10 an hour nursing
assistants.
When a public job is
contracted out, usually public employees are replaced by people who are paid
much, much less and receive fewer, if any benefits. Corporate
propagandists complain that public employees are overpaid, receive “lavish”
benefits, and are difficult to fire. But the question we all should ask
is: is it in the public interest for Americans to be paid less or more,
and to receive or not receive benefits? If we believe it is better to
be paid more and receive benefits then We, the People should do that.
Corruption Incentive
Along with people getting
their pay cut, privatization creates an incentive for corruption on the part of
public officials. When a company (or, really, the people at the top of a
company) can make a bundle form privatization, then they have a really good
reason to bring various forms of … uh … influence to bear on the public
officials that make the decisions about whether or not to privatize.
Five Privatization
Nightmares
Here are five nightmares
resulting from privatization:
1. Privatized
Prisons
Think through the
implications of a privatized prison system: if people go to prison it means
more profit for the big for-profit prison corporations. This puts
corporations, with all of their influence over the government, in the position
of wanting more of us sentenced to long terms in jail so they can make more money!
Even worse, there is an added corporate benefit: cheap prison
labor.
Of course, the result you
would expect from these incentives is exactly what has been happening.
For example, you may have
heard about the "Kids for Cash" scandal in
which Pennsylvania judges
pleaded guilty to sentencing kids to privatized detention centers in exchange
for payoffs from the profit-making companies that ran the centers. First
the judges arranged for public detention centers to be defunded. Then
they started sentencing a disproportionate number of kids to private detention
centers in exchange for bribes.
The profit incentive to put
more and more of us in prison is not just an isolated local problem. This
year The
Nation looked into prison privatization, in The Hidden
History of ALEC and Prison Labor. They found that the notorious,
Koch-funded American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), in an effort that is
sponsored by the big for-profit prison corporations and companies that benefit
from the cheap labor this provides, is helping to pass laws to put more and
more of us in jail. According to The Nation,
… prison labor for the
private sector was legally barred for years, to avoid unfair competition with
private companies. But this has changed thanks to the American Legislative
Exchange Council (ALEC) .... [and their] instrumental role in the explosion of
the US prison
population in the past few decades. ALEC helped pioneer some of the
toughest sentencing laws on the books today, like mandatory minimums for
non-violent drug offenders, “three strikes” laws, and “truth in sentencing”
laws.
… ALEC has also worked
to pass state laws to create private for-profit prisons, a boon to two of its
major corporate sponsors: Corrections Corporation of America and Geo Group
(formerly Wackenhut Corrections), the largest private prison firms in the
country. An In These Times investigation last summer
revealed that ALEC arranged secret meetings between Arizona ’s
state legislators and CCA to draft what became SB 1070, Arizona ’s notorious immigration law, to keep
CCA prisons flush with immigrant detainees. ALEC has proven expertly capable of
devising endless ways to help private corporations benefit from the country’s
massive prison population.
[. . .] Much of ALEC’s
proposed labor legislation, implemented state by state is allowing replacement
of public workers with prisoners.
2. Parking
Meters?
Parking meters don’t sound
like a big issue, but look what happened to Chicago.
In a 2008 deal with Morgan Stanley, Chicago privatized
its parking meters. In return for $1.15 billion Chicago gave up $11.6 billion of future
revenue. Worse, the city gave up public control of its roads: If any road
with parking meters is closed by the city for repairs, street fairs, parades,
etc., the city has to come up with cash to cover loss of revenue. The lease
eventually ended up under the control of Abu-Dhabi.
Matt Tiabbi wrote in
Rolling Stone about the effects of this deal,
To start with something
simple, it changed some basic traditions of local Chicago politics. Aldermen who used to
have the power to close streets for fairs and festivals or change meter
schedules now cannot — or if they do, they have to compensate Chicago Parking
Meters LLC for its loss of revenue.
So, for example, when the
new ownership told Alderman Scott Waguespack that it wanted to change the meter
schedule from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday to 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
seven days a week, the alderman balked and said he'd rather keep the old
schedule, at least for 270 of his meters. Chicago Parking Meters then informed
him that if he wanted to do that, he would have to pay the company $608,000
over three years.
… Written into the original deal were drastic price increases. In Hairston's andColon 's
neighborhoods, meter rates went from 25¢ an hour to $1.00 an hour the first
year, and to $1.20 an hour the year after that.
… Written into the original deal were drastic price increases. In Hairston's and
… "There are so many
problems — I've had so many problems with them," says Hairston. "It
tells you you've got eight minutes left, you get back in seven, and it charges
you for the extra hour. Or you don't get a receipt. It's crazy."
But to me, the absolute best
detail in this whole deal is the end of holidays. No more free parking on
Sunday. No more free parking on Christmas or Easter.
3. Wisconsin
Since the election of
Governor Scott Walker, Wisconsin is a statewide
privatization nightmare. In Privatization At The Heart Of
Divisive Battles In Wisconsin, Huffington Post’s Amanda Terkel reports
on the state’s privatization battles and the Governor’s efforts to privatize
many public functions:
During his tenure as county
executive, Walker proposed
privatizing park maintenance, the county zoo,
psychiatric staff and other sectors. Most of the time, his ideas
never went anywhere, but in March 2010, he was finally able to privatize
courthouse security guards. The plan ended up backfiring and costing the county
extra money when a
judge ordered to reinstate the guards and give them back pay, meaning
the government had to pay both the public workers and private guards for a
period of time.
… The project that he
embarked on as a freshman governor in 2011 is little more than an extension of
the philosophy he displayed as county executive: Walker is trying to undo the social
contract and replace it with a private one.
… A state audit released
this month found Wisconsin 's
privatization occurred with insufficient oversight from the legislative branch
and may have violated federal rules. State officials paid
two contractors $27.6 million over two years to handle enrollment in
food assistance and health care programs for low-income individuals.
"[The state Department
of Health Services] appears to have established and rapidly expanded the
Enrollment Services Center with little organized planning, limited legislative
oversight, and no formal efforts to determine the appropriate mix of contract
and state staff," read the report's conclusion.
[… one] measure,
which recently passed
the Republican-controlled Joint Finance Committee on a party-line vote,
would require local governments to contract with private road builders for
projects costing $100,000 or more in certain situations, rather than using
their own public employees.
"The only ones who seem
to benefit are the road builders," said state Senate President Mike Ellis
(R-Neenah) in a statement.
[. . .] Tucked away in the
state's budget repair bill was a provision that would allow the state to sell or contract out any
state-owned energy asset in no-bid deals with private corporations.
"The department may
sell any state−owned heating, cooling, and power plant or may contract with a
private entity for the operation of any such plant, with or without
solicitation of bids, for any amount that the department determines to be in
the best interest of the state," read the legislation.
Questions were immediately
raised about whether the arrangement would end up disproportionately benefiting
GOP campaign donors, such
as the Koch brothers -- speculation that Walker quickly denied.
4. Louisiana Privatizing
Public-Employee Health Plans
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal
is trying to privatize state employees’ health insurance. Supposedly this
will save the state money. But In the article, LEAKED: Secret
Report On Jindal’s Privatization Plan,TPMuckraker
reports on a secret report describing what will really occur.
A confidential report at the
center of the debate over Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal’s push to privatize state
employees’ health insurance has been leaked. The so-called “Chaffe report,”
published Tuesday by the Baton
Rouge Advocate, seeks to “establish the fair market value
of the operations” of the state’s Office of Group Benefits (OGB), which
provides health care insurance for around 250,000 state workers, retirees and
their dependents.
The Advocate reported that the Chaffe report “concluded that
premiums would increase under privatization.”
According to a story
at Colorlines, Bobby
Jindal’s Plan to Privatize Health Insurance for 250,000 Workers, Jindal’s
privatization plan is very good for Goldman Sachs but not Louisiana ,
Jindal’s plans to privatize
the OGB would affect about 250,000 state public employees, retirees, and their
dependents. His administration says hiring an outside contractor to run the
program would save taxpayers money by eliminating about 150 jobs and generating
a recurring savings of over $10 million, in addition to $150 million in up
front cash. However, opponents say the OGB does not need fixing, especially
since it already has a surplus of a half billion dollars, and that long-term,
it would cost more taxpayers money in the form of reduced benefits and
increased premiums. Critics, including Louisiana democrats, also accuse Jindal of attempting
to raid the $500 million surplus money, to help plug the state’s $1.6 billion
budget hole.
“Bobby Jindal’s plan to sell
the Office of Group Benefits could jeopardize the quality of health care
received by more than 250,000 active and retired Louisiana workers and their dependents…
OGB does not cost taxpayers a dime to run and selling it will not save the
state of Louisiana any
money.”
Louisiana Democratic Party
Chairman Claude “Buddy” Leach, Jr. said in a statement. “The only folks likely
to benefit from the sale of OGB are the big Wall Street corporations like
Goldman Sachs who want to turn it into a profit making venture and Bobby
Jindal, who would love to get his hands on the office’s half billion dollar
reserve fund.”
Indeed, an employee of the
state’s Office of Risk Management reported that Goldman Sachs helped write the OGB’s
Request for Proposals, and offered the only bid for the advisory role. The
employee also said that the surplus would be reportedly split between the state
and the purchaser. A new state bill also seems to override Louisiana law that
would prohibit the OGB’s surplus from being used by another department in the
administration.
5. Traffic-law
enforcement (including red-light cameras – decisions are made on profit
motive, not good judgement)
Many cities are installing
privatized speed and traffic cameras. But while public law enforcement is
interested in justice and fairness, private systems are only interested in
profit. So judgment and compassion are thrown out the window. For
example, some municipalities have contracts requiring them to approve a certain
percentage of all tickets, regardless of whether there is a violation that a
judge would. The result is that the public, not understanding or caring that
the enforcement has been privatized, comes to see local government as little
more than one more scammer after their money and loses trust and faith in
government in general.
Profit incentives also
threaten public safety, when companies set yellow-light duration times too
low. Some localities even allow these companies to write low
yellow-light duration into the contracts, trading public safety for private
profit!
In the report, Caution:
Red Light Cameras Ahead: The Risks of Privatizing Traffic Law
Enforcement and How to Protect the Public, US PIRG found that,
Privatized traffic law
enforcement systems are spreading rapidly across the United States .
As many as 700 local jurisdictions have entered into deals with for-profit
companies to install camera systems at intersections and along roadways to
encourage drivers to obey traffic signals and follow speed limits.
Local contracting for
automated traffic enforcement systems may sometimes be a useful tool for
keeping drivers and pedestrians safe. But when private firms and municipalities
consider revenues first, and safety second, the public interest is threatened.
[. . .] Contracts
between private camera vendors and cities can include payment incentives that
put profit above traffic safety.
[. . .] some
contracts, including those in the California cities
of Bell Gardens , Citrus Heights, Corona and Hawthorne ,
potentially impose financial penalties on the city if traffic engineers extend
the length of the yellow light at intersections with red-light cameras, which
would reduce the number of tickets the systems can issue.
Many Other Nightmares
There are many other
nightmares, as state and local governments, defunded by right-wing
anti-government tax-cut schemes turn to privatization, sell off public assets
and firing public employees to try to stay afloat. Ares being privatized
include highways, airports, water systems, trash collection, bridges, parking
garages, nursing homes, traffic schools, and, of course, schools.
The Biggest Nightmare:
Privatization Just Shifts Costs To Other Parts Of Government Or To The Economy
Does government really
“save” if one government agency saves some money by contracting out, but
other government agencies have to pick up the same costs. For example, if
the contracting results in pay cuts for working people, then another part of
the government might then spend more on poverty, nutrition or health programs
for the people who now make so little.
So does privatization really
cut costs, or does it just shift them? And if it does just shift them (it
does) see if you can guess who privatization shifts these costs to?
But even worse than this
shifting of costs to other parts of the government is the bigger picture of
what this does to our economy. The result of this “cost-cutting” is that
people in the economy that were making $25/hour now only make perhaps $10/hour
and most likely no longer get benefits. Same larger economy, $15 an hour
less. After a while this adds up, and everyone has less, except for a few
at the top. Kind of like … now.
The Equation Of
Privatization
The equation of
privatization works like this: tax cuts leave governments desperate to raise
cash, so they sell off public assets (the things We, the People own together)
or cut jobs. Then they rent them back or the public pays for their use.
Defunded, Chicago has to sell its
parking meters to raise cash; Arizona state
capital, same thing. Privatization is the 1% taking public wealth so they
can make money off of it for themselves. Instead of democracy
collecting taxes from the 1% privatization leaves everyone
poorer and paying rent to the 1%.
Private Not Public
Interest
There is a fundamental
conflict of interest between public and private. When things are privatized of
course profit comes first, not public interest. Public functions are
supposed to serve the public, us, We, the People. The
‘private’ in ‘privatization’ means that it is done for the private gain
of a few. When a public function is privatized it means that instead of
operating for the benefit of We, the People – the 99% – it is operated for the
benefit of a few – the 1%.
thanks for sharing
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