September 05, 2018

Privatizations of public services, which could have been very good, just ended up as cozy crony statism deals.

Sir, Hannah Roberts discussing privatizations in the Italy of 1990’s writes, “The state turned to private entrepreneurs, offering favourable terms to extract the maximum possible capital from the sale”, “Inquest on Italian privatisation” September 5.

I do not know much about Italy, but that describes perfectly the problem from which we in Latin America suffered a lot when many of our public services were privatized. The concessions, instead of being awarded to those who offered the best and cheapest services to the users, were awarded to those who offered the most immediate income to the redistribution profiteers of turn.

The government got the money, and we consumers were set up to have to repay all that money, at high expected return on equity rates, with higher tariffs or prices. It was, as I so often publicly denounced it, a hidden taxation through privatization.

Andrea Cioffi, undersecretary at the ministry for economic development and a Five Star senator is quoted with, “There has always been a tendency to favour big companies, backed by pressure groups. Italy in the 1990s was like Yeltsin’s Russia when public companies were given to the oligarchs. Everyone was looking out for their friends, rather than the public interest.” 

Sir, twice is “crony capitalism” mentioned in this piece. When are we going to use the correct term of crony statism?

@PerKurowski