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by logfromblammo
4446 days ago
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Different people define failure in different ways. In business, if you fail, your assets are liquidated and recycled or transferred to your former competitors, your customers go elsewhere, and you lose the ability to command economic resources. In government, if your contract fails, your company/team/department/bureau/whatever still exists, and is still eligible to fail again the next year. There might be a reshuffling of personnel, if anyone is watching, but there is no real penalty for failing to deliver. The important thing about business failure is that resources are reallocated away from the people who created the failure towards those less likely to fail (in the same way). This mechanism is not usually present with government. |
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May be incentives as a whole are different enough - say, lesser, if we can compare - with government-baked projects rather than with privately backed ones.
Could it be so that government is less efficient, but only on some projects where it can have good competition from private resources? May be government is better - or actually the only option - with some other areas, where you just can't find private backing?