Private is better ... but only at making money
The Abbott Government is encouraging the states to sell
off public assets in the interests of efficiency. This is a huge risk,
writes Judy Crozier.
SOME YEARS AGO, a public hospital nurse needed an operation.
Not wanting to be fussed over by her friends at work, she opted for
once to go private. Then, she told me, she drove everyone bats by timing
how often she was checked by staff because, of course, this was many
times less than would have occurred in the public sector.
My father spent a lot of time in various of those small
down-the-coast private hospitals, where patients wait in their rows of
beds for the doctor to make his/her occasional visits. My father was
ageing, prone to episode after episode of pneumonia. He was released
from one of these hospitals much too early, was so ill he was nearly
comatose as he supposedly ‘recuperated’ at home. An ambulance was called
and he eventually recovered with some intensive rescue-work in a public
teaching hospital.
*****
It’s an article of faith among many that private is better than public.
It’s more efficient, they claim. It just works.
It must do, because money works. The profit motive makes you strive for better.
They say this despite the evidence. The mantra remains even after the
near-collapse of world finance, of those massive international and very
privately-owned institutions who lost the life savings and homes of
countless world citizens. Those institutions who themselves sometimes
foundered and sank leaving their investors ashen with shock.
The U.S. Senate's Levin–Coburn Report found the Global Financial Crisis arose out of
'... high risk, complex financial products; undisclosed conflicts
of interest; the failure of regulators, the credit rating agencies, and
the market itself to rein in the excesses of Wall Street.'
And yet the popular cliché remains, as far as I can discern it, that
privately-run business or industry must be more effective, more
efficient and so on, because the need to make money ensures it.
The GFC was, of course, the latest worldwide failure of private
corporates. Locally, we’ve had some spectacular, sometimes deadly
examples as well.
Esso’s Victorian Longford gas plant blew up in September 1998,
killing two men and creating chaos throughout Victoria for two weeks.
Unsurprisingly, Esso tried to blame operators, but the investigating
Royal Commission found instead that no-one on site really understood the
dangers, and that that training was inadequate.
Further, according to the ANU’s Andrew Hopkins, PhD, who wrote the paper ‘Lessons from Esso’s Gas Plant Explosion at Longford’:
'A major contributing factor was the fact that Esso had
not carried out a critical hazard identification process, standard in
the industry, know as a HAZOP.'
(HAZOP stands for hazard and operability study.)
Recently, we’ve also had the fire at the Hazelwood open cut mine that
left the town of Morwell shrouded in choking smoke for a month,
followed by the fire at the Hazelwood terminal station that left tens of
thousands of people without power.
Preliminary enquiries have found that successive State Governments
'... have turned a blind eye to the need for Victorian coal power
stations to make adequate provisions to clean up their mines when they
are finished.'
In other words, these money-spinners do not regulate themselves. Money doesn’t make them do it — regulation and oversight does.
And one could also ask the question: When the argument is made that private enterprises are more efficient, what exactly are they more efficient at?
Clearly, corners were cut at Hazelwood, where longterm safety was
concerned; corners were cut in analyzing the dangers specific to these
particular industries. I would hazard a guess that there was a
reluctance to spend money that did not go towards immediate
profitability.
I would also guess that operations of this size put pressure on
governments not to pursue safety issue that they might otherwise have
done had these industries remained in public hands. Shame on those
governments, it’s true, but it is a fact that big business does have
great influence and power, and they use this to evade oversight.
Governments: beware of the loose rein.
And we need not trust the influence of shareholders, either, whose
desire for the greatest profit at the least cost is in obvious conflict
with the public’s desire for both service and safety.
Australian Water Holdings is another recent example
of private business perhaps not being as efficient and effective, or
indeed as ethical, as their faithful would lead us to believe.
Public examination of Arthur Sinodinos,
until recently Assistant Treasurer in the Federal Coalition Government,
has found a corporation apparently very comfortable with its
overabundance of overpaid chiefs. One of these was Arthur himself, of
course, now famous for being paid $200,000 for somewhere between 25 and
40 hours of work in a year, mostly at meetings. At none of these
meetings, we are led to believe, was there ever discussed the $75,000
gifted to the Liberal Party by the company, during the time when
Sinodinos was both a director at AWH and the treasurer of the NSW
Liberal Party.
It is well to keep in mind that the term ‘good corporate citizen’ implies that there are bad ones.
This article is not going to detail every corporation or business
found to be less than pristine. I am sure that readers will have many
examples, large and small, that will pop to mind. But it must be
mentioned, in this time of a government-led anti-union campaign, via
Murdoch mouthpiece or via Commission, that workplace injuries are a very
real issue and the basis of Union demands to be allowed to enter
worksites and examine conditions.
It is simple — less oversight, more injury. Because the profit motive is a much more immediate one than safety.
At a time when the Right is resurgent, along with its many empty
clichés, this conversation is important. The Abbott government crows
about cutting regulation, though this is surely where governments come
into their own — helping to private entities act in ethical and safe
ways. Yet, famously now, one regulation sought to be cut covers the obligation of financial advisors to act in the interests of their own clients.
Could disaster to families, individuals and groups be foretold here?
Yes, surely it can.
We must all remember how poor regulation meant that then-PM John Howard’s brother's company collapsed with
no provision for its workers, until pubic outcry and the unions forced
both action and regulation on Howard’s Coalition government.
Only transparency ensures rights, ethical behavior and safety. Only
transparency will help guard against disaster. Transparency is only
achieved through oversight, regulation and fearless follow-up.
And, it must be said, transparency is best achieved, surely, through
public ownership, where accountability is the name of the game.
Have we benefitted, really, from the privatization of our energy producers?
The profit motive, very evidently, gives no guarantee. ‘Private’ is
only better at making money. If this is ‘efficiency’, then it is not
enough.
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