PyramidHead
Contributor
Thanks for taking the time to write these out.
He who knows only one side of the argument knows neither.
OK, a few quickies:
1) The end customer, prisoners, are not free to contract on their own
2) The end customer, prisoners, are not free to pursue other food sources if they find their current food unsatisfactory
3) The people who enter the contract, government officials, are not going to be the ones eating the food
4) The people who enter the contract, government officials, do not necessarily have the correct incentives to get the highest quality food service
5) The people who enter the contract, government officials, maybe quite happy with food running out or generally sucking so long as the consequences do not stick to them
6) The people who enter the contract, government officials, may just care about hitting some budget number or not care much at all. We don't really know what they care about.
7) The people who oversee the contract, government officials, may not have much incentive or ability to see that the service is being provided at the levels they contracted for.
8) The people who enter and oversee the contract, government officials, are spending other people's money. No takes as much care with another's money as he does with his own.
9) The people who enter and oversee the contract, government officials, are not likely to be held responsible for how they manage this money. Or did you forget to add the link where the government officials people responsible for hiring and managing Aramark were losing their jobs over this?
10) The end customers, prisoners, have little or no recourse if they are unhappy.
I think the biggest flaw above is that the prisoners are not Aramark's customers, at all. The contracting facility, a prison in this case, is Aramark's customer.
The ones about the government officials not being the ones to eat Aramark's food don't really make any sense. That's like saying since the CEO of Ford isn't going to be using those 10-key adding machines then Ford's purchase of them from Staples isn't a free market transaction.
Additionally, all of dismal's points would still hold if Aramark were entering into a contract with a privately run prison, if one existed. He would then be committed to the strange view that prisons per se, by their very nature, are unable to participate in the free market.