Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Sun Jan 12, 2014 1:56 pm
Mintball wrote:
Isn't that why Adrian Beecroft paid a few thousand to the Conservative Party to let him make up some bonkers suggestions for how to make more people depend on legalised loan sharks?
Yes, the politicising of policy making is a dangerous route to go down and I'm always suspicious of anyone that throws out the blanket statement "government doesn't understand business". Essentially government is trying to regulate the markets fairly and in an impartial manner and you always find that representatives of a particular sector are particularly keen to get involved in drawing up the regulations to suit them.
I suppose the more apt rugby analogy would be the one of coaches that constantly criticise the referees for not knowing what they are doing, and suggesting that they themselves referee the next match involving their team.
It is amusing to see the type of stuff businesses come out with when they engage with government. I remember once being in a meeting with some representatives of businesses in a sector that was receiving very large government funds and the purpose of the meeting I was in was to establish the right auditing and monitoring information in order to track how these government funds were being used and to be able to measure afterwards the outcomes of the firms that had been helped so that the government could commission an independent report to check whether the investment had been value for money. The whole attitude of the business representatives was aggressive and hostile - continually hectoring the government officials that government "simply didn't get it"....the businesses were "not interested in gathering information for a government box ticking exercise"...this was "about getting the money out of the door to the businesses to stimulate the economy". What this was effectively code for was, they did not want to have to audit and account for the government money they were receiving and they certainly didn't want anybody later evaluating on what it had been used for. Their whole agenda was getting the money signed over from government as soon as possible and then "government getting out of the way so they could get on with it". In the end they didn't get away with it because a fairly senior government official brought up the fact that they were going to be in receipt of a very large sum of funding and if they weren't prepared to properly report and monitor on it to allow value for money to be evaluated on behalf of the taxpayer, then the money wouldn't be forthcoming: at this point they reluctantly came on side.
But I did think it was illustrative of the hectoring attitude some parts of the business community have to government - they are happy to take huge sums of money from the taxpayer but then at the same time lecture government that they don't know what they are doing so the best thing is just hand over the money and leave it to them and it will magically be used best!