by Michael Roberts
A few weeks ago, Martin Wolf, Keynesian economics journalist for the UK’s Financial Times, wrote a piece arguing that the renationalisation of privatised state companies was a ‘dead end’ and would not solve the failures of privately owned and run public services in the UK and elsewhere.
And yet within a week or so, it was announced that one of the leading
construction and service companies in the UK that has got much of the
‘outsourced’ previously publicly owned projects had gone bust.
Carillion, as it likes to call itself, employs about 20,000 people in
the UK and has more staff abroad. It specialised in the construction of
public roads, rail and bridges and ‘facilities management’ and ongoing
maintenance for state schools, the armed forces, the rail network and
the UK’s national health service.
But it seems that it had taken on too many projects from the UK
public sector at prices that delivered very narrow margins. So, as debt
issuance rose and profitability disappeared, cash began to
haemorrhage. Carillion ran up a huge debt pile of £900m. But this did
not stop the Carillion board lying about their financial state,
continuing to pay themselves large salaries and bonuses and fat
dividends to their shareholders. In contrast, the company did little to
reduce a mounting deficit on the pensions fund of their 40,000 global
staff, putting their pensions in jeopardy. Indeed, Carillion raised its
dividends every year for 16 years while running up a pensions deficit of
£587m. It paid out nearly £200m in dividends in the last two years
alone. The recently sacked CEO took home £660,000 a year plus bonuses.
But eventually, the bank creditors had enough and pulled the plug on
further loans and Carillion has closed. With the liquidation of the
company, thousands of jobs are likely to go, while pension benefits
could be cut and the British taxpayer will have to pick up the bill of
maintaining necessary services previously provided by Carillion.
Amazingly, as I write, the Official Receiver for the bankrupt company says that all the top executives are “still on the payroll” and
receiving their salaries, including the recently sacked chief
executive. The government has announced it will guarantee the salaries
of employees in 450 public sector contracts run by Carillion. So the
taxpayer will be covering these. But over 60,000 employees working on
private sector jobs are likely to receive no more wages from now, while
up to 30,000 sub-contractors have invoices of £1bn that are unlikely
ever to be met.
Carillion is a very graphic confirmation that outsourcing public
services and sectors to private companies to ‘save money’ on
‘inefficient’ public sector operations is a nonsense. The reason for
privatisation and outsourcing has really been to cut the costs of
labour, reduce conditions and pension rights for employees and to make a
quick buck for companies and hedge funds. But such is competition for
these contracts that, increasingly, private companies cannot sustain
services or projects even when they have cut costs to the bone. So they
just pull out or go bust, leaving the taxpayer with the mess. It’s a
microcosm of capitalist economic collapse.
Carillion is not the first example in the UK. The 2007 failure of
Metronet, which had been contracted to maintain and upgrade the London
Underground cost the taxpayer at least £170m. In the UK, outsourcing of
public sector operations has reached 15% of public spending or about
£100bn. So more may be under threat. Indeed, half a million UK
businesses have started 2018 in significant financial distress,
according to insolvency specialist Begbies Traynor, as the UK economy
felt the effects of higher inflation, rising interest rates, growing business uncertainty and weaker consumer spending.
A total of 493,296 businesses were experiencing significant financial
distress in the final quarter of 2017 according to Begbies’ latest “red
flag alert”, which monitors the health of UK companies. That was 36%
higher than at the same point in 2016 and 10% higher than in the third
quarter of 2017. And the worst situation was to be found in the
services sector. A total of 121,095 businesses in the sector were
showing signs of financial difficulty, up 43% on a year earlier.
Martin Wolf’s claim that privatisation has been a success because it
is more efficient is just nonsense. For the last 25 years, the UK
government, starting with Thatcher and continued by right-wing Blair and
Brown Labour governments, has resorted to ‘private finance initiatives’
to fund public sector building of schools, hospitals, rail and roads.
Under the PFI, banks and hedge funds fund the projects in return for
interest and income paid by the operators of the projects, with payments
spread over 25 years. The idea was to keep down ‘public debt’ levels.
But of course, this was at the expense of future generations of
taxpayers.
According to the UK’s National Audit Office in a new report,
taxpayers will be forced to hand over nearly £200bn to contractors
under PFI deals for at least the next 25 years. And there was little
evidence that there were any financial savings in doing PFI – indeed the
cost of privately financing public projects can be 40% higher than
relying solely upon government bonds, auditors found. Annual charges
for these deals amounted to £10.3bn in 2016-17. Even if no new deals are
entered into, future charges that continue until the 2040s amount to
£199bn, it. “After 25 years of PFI, there is still little evidence
that it delivers enough benefit to offset the additional costs of
borrowing money privately,” … many local bodies are now shackled to
inflexible PFI contracts that are exorbitantly expensive to change.”
And yet Martin Wolf reckons that it does not make sense to
renationalise privatised state operations. He makes the usual claim
that state companies were huge inefficient behemoths that were not
accountable to the public, “chronically overmanned and heavily politicised. They either underinvested or made poor investment decisions”. Oh, unlike the private profit monopolies that now run Britain’s utilities, rail and energy and broadband.
Wolf digs up some research from the 1980s and 1990s
by William Megginson of the University of Oklahoma who argues that
public companies were more inefficient than the private counterparts.
Wolf also cites research from 2002 that British railways have been more
efficient under the nightmarish private franchise experiment that rail
travellers have experienced since 1997 along with the disastrous
collapse of RailTrack, the private company that took over the
maintenance of the track. Tell this to rail travellers and staff.
There is, however, a pile of research that reaches opposite conclusions from Wolf’s sources. I quote from the recent PSIRU report: “there
is now extensive experience of all forms of privatisation and
researchers have published many studies of the empirical evidence on
comparative technical efficiency. The results are remarkably consistent
across all sectors and all forms of privatisation and outsourcing: there
is no empirical evidence that the private sector is intrinsically more
efficient. The same results emerge consistently from sectors and
services which are subject to outsourcing, such as waste management, and
in sectors privatised by sale, such as telecoms.”
Detailed studies of the UK privatisations of electricity, gas,
telecoms, water and rail have also found no evidence that privatisation
has caused a significant improvement in productivity. A comprehensive
analysis in 2004 of all the UK privatisations concluded: “These
results confirm the overall conclusion of previous studies that
…privatisation per se has no visible impact …. I have been unable to
find sufficient statistical macro or micro evidence that output, labour,
capital and TFP productivity in the UK increased substantially as a
consequence of ownership change at privatisation compared to the
long-term trend.”
Evidence from developing countries points to the same conclusion. A
global review of water, electricity, rail and telecoms by the World Bank
in 2005 concluded: “the econometric evidence on the relevance of
ownership suggests that in general, there is no statistically
significant difference between the efficiency performance of public and
private operators” (Estache et al 2005).
The largest study of the efficiency of privatized companies looked at
all European companies privatized during 1980-2009. It compared their
performance with companies that remained public and with their own past
performance as public companies. The result? The privatized companies
performed worse than those that remained public and continued to do so
for up to 10 years after privatization.
Wolf’s answer to the failures of privatisation and outsourcing is to “reform the structure and purposes of regulation”.
As if regulation ever worked; indeed, current thought among government
elites and big business is that economies need to loosen up regulation
again in order to get things going. To quote Wolf himself from his book on the lessons of the banking crash: “notwithstanding all the regulatory reforms, the system is bound to fail again,”
Public ownership is not of “totemic significance” to the left, as Wolf harps. It is based on clear evidence
that delivering services that people need is best done within a plan
and not based on the level of profitability for the likes of Carillion.
Yes, public ownership and state companies that become just milk cows for
the profits of the private sector without any democratic control are
not what we require. But democratically run public companies as part of a plan for production for need are not “a dead end”, but the future.
If you have opinions about the subject matter of posts on this blog please share them. Do you have a story about how the system affects you at work school or home, or just in general? This is a place to share it.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment