Private sector works…again
Warning to any socialist or otherwise Big Government advocates: the following information may disrupt your worldview. Unless, of course, you’re impervious to facts, in which case you may feel little to no discomfort at all. From Hot Air:
In the aftermath of the Northridge earthquake, California needed to take quick action to repair damaged freeways to restore order to traffic in the Los Angeles area — or at least as much order as one can get in the region. Instead of using Caltrans to repair the destroyed overpasses and roads, the state government waived volumes of regulation to allow outsourcing to the private sector. The result? The contractor restored the roads and bridges in months instead of years, and at a fraction of the cost that Caltrans would have incurred.
Minnesotans learned a lesson from that when the St. Anthony Bridge collapsed last August into the Mississippi river. The rebuilding project may finish as much as three months ahead of schedule, thanks to a series of financial incentives and the hands-off management by MnDOT:
…
The project has had its share of detractors ever since Flatiron won the contract. It was the most expensive of the bids, but the state chose it for its overall package. If they can deliver a high-quality bridge three months earlier than expected, no one will spend much of that extra time criticizing the contract award.Like California, this proves a lesson in free-market power to solve problems efficiently, and in the long run, less expensively. Instead of running the project themselves, the decision by MnDOT and the legislature to outsource the project applied the skill and experience of the private sector to a critical part of the traffic infrastructure. The early completion of the project will save millions of dollars in traffic inefficiencies and relieve stress on parts of the local traffic system that weren’t designed for the loads that the bridge’s failure created for them.
Perhaps at some point, people will learn to harness the power of the private sector more completely for future public efforts as well. If we started to apply this lesson to non-emergencies as well as emergencies, perhaps we would have fewer of the latter. When we incentivize succes, we succeed. When we incentivize bureaucracy, we get red tape, delays, and frustration.
Imagine that…the private sector doing better than a Big Government bureaucracy at solving problems! But hey, let’s go ahead and have the government manage our health care, right?
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“But hey, let’s go ahead and have the government manage our health care, right?”
Not ‘no’, but ‘HELL NO!’
I get my care at the VA, which is run by the government, and I could complain all day with the problems I’ve seen. I’ve posted a few of them on my blog if you’re that bored and really care.
I’m in Alaska, which has a high number of vets, and we went for several months without a dental hygienist at the main clinic in Anchorage. Can you imagine a private clinic without the most basic of services? Last month when I went there to get my teeth cleaned, they had a student from the local college working on me. Not to dis the students, but it’d be nice to have experienced people too.
Government Healthcare is the beginning, not the end, of your problems.
Comment by frznagn | May 5, 2008