UndercoverElephant wrote:Two perfect examples from the UK are the rail industry and the energy industry, both of which were the subject of idealism-driven privatisations in the 1980s.
Oh no they weren't!!
They were driven by the fact that the country was broke after a spell of Old Labour (Socialist fro our friends across the pond) government. Where have I heard that before? Oh! after every spell of Labour government. We had just been to the IMF for a bail out (sounds like Greece, doesn't it) and the coffers were bare. So, just like Greece now, we had to sell off the family silver. Only this silver was very tarnished.
UndercoverElephant wrote:This has not delivered good value or efficient companies. Instead, money is being diverted from the companies to shareholders and the public is being systematically ripped off. In reality, introducing competition and shareholders into those environments produced no benefits for the end customers, but plenty for the shareholders.
If you care to do any research you would find that those nationalised companies cost the British taxpayer millions of pounds every year in subsidies. I'm a shareholder in those companies as are most people with insurance or a pension and I get more benefit from them than I did when a good proportion of my taxes went on subsidising them.
UndercoverElephant wrote:In both cases we would have been better off with the nationalised industries that existed beforehand.
Oh no we wouldn't!! For the reasons above. Some people have very short memories about what life was like in the Socialist Almost-Republic of Not So Great Britain in the sixties and seventies. It didn't work, neither did the employees of nationalised industries, which is why they required huge subsidies from those who did work. So no more observations of recent history from behind red tinted specs please.
And Labour haven't even learned from their last spell in power only a few months ago. let alone from the previous Wilson and Callaghan governments. They are still trying to borrow and spend their way out of trouble, or they would if they were in power. A Balls up takes on a new meaning.