GimmlyThe3rd
Banned
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2008
- Messages
- 744
Dunno what you're talking about?ahh you used as in pass tense, that makes more sense now
:england:
Dunno what you're talking about?ahh you used as in pass tense, that makes more sense now
It's about time a harder line was taken on uninsured drivers too, a handful of points and a tiny fine just isn't enough. I was half watching some cop show last night before Torchwood and they were just driving about picking up chavs without insurance, licences, cars not fit for the road. It was mostly a slap on the wrist and a giggle. Absolute joke.
free market etc.
Cartel more likely.....
A truely free market would have no anti-cartel regulation, as that would be "teh evul gov'nment" meddling in the market... So yeah, Helme's right
I think the Oz system would be better: slightly higher road tax which includes basic insurance and If you want named drivers and lower excess you pay a third party a bit too. That way no one is uninsured, roads get repaired and the choice to pay more is yours.
Problem with letting the govt run it would be they'd have no incentive to drive down costs as there's no big profit takers to appease. They'd sit there with their slide rules and 80 year old actuarial tables and not invest in cunning modelling to give good value insurance.
I've never really understood privatisation...the government already have a duty to provide value to the taxpayers in the same way companies have a duty to provide value to the shareholders. Government pays no dividends and presumably ploughs any profits back into the country. They also have massive bulk-buying power (potentially).
As far as I can tell privatisation involves;
1) Turning a not-for-profit service into a for-profit service
2) Regulating the provision of that service at vast expense with no return on the investment
3) Allowing (if not encouraging) companies to provide the level of service and support that is the best for their (certainly rich, probably foreign) shareholders and not the recipient of the service
4) Encouraging the formation of price-fixing cartels by having ineffective, powerless bodies overseeing monitoring of the newly-privatised market
5) Supporting/bailing-out failed companies at great expense because they (care homes for example) provide a service that is guaranteed by...the government.
Now I know the whole "benevolent government/bulk purchasing/best interests of the country" thing is a little utopian and probably not accurate, but I don't see how price competition can improve the cost/efficiency of a service compared to being able to sustainably run it at with zero profits or even losses (ie subsidies).
I just don't get it