Honest Graft

by digby


Matt Yglesias, guest hosting TPM for the day, makes an important observation:


Abuse of the government contracting process is bad, and perpetrators of wrongdoing should in no way get off the hook. Nevertheless, the entire concept of farming government out work to private firms is a more-or-less open invitation to corruption. There are instances when contracting is the only reasonable solution. But for some years now -- predating Bush, predating the DeLay era -- all the pressure has always been to privatize more and more government functions. The theory is that the private sector is more efficient than the public sector, so contracting functions out to private firms should save money. The reality has had a lot more to do with union-busting, machine-building, and "honest graft" than money saved or improved efficiency.


I know it's ridiculous to even ponder the idea that we might look to some of the endemic graft that's grown into our new "free market" guvmint, but it's there, nonetheless. The chances of reforming it are almost nil, of course. It's the union buster, machine builders gift that just keeps on giving.



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