No one claims that free markets achieve any kind of perfection
You mean other than perfect competition, perfect equilibrium and perfect information.
No one claims that free markets achieve any kind of perfection
You need to drink some libertarian kool aid.Why they would suddenly become incompetent when they move into a government job, or suddenly become competent when hired by a multinational corporation, is beyond me.
No one claims that free markets achieve any kind of perfection
You mean other than perfect competition, perfect equilibrium and perfect information.
They are not requirements for a free market. They are necessary for free markets to reach economically efficient outcomes.You mean other than perfect competition, perfect equilibrium and perfect information.
Those are not requirements for a free market, although people (who do not support free markets) often say they are.
Whereas Donald Trump's golden toilet furniture is fine and dandy for ideological reasons.Here's just one example. Do we have anything similar in large private organizations?
The Project first gained wide attention in the mid-1980s uncovering Pentagon waste and fraud by publishing reports, provided by whistleblowers, exposing $640 toilet seats, $7,600 coffee makers, $436 hammers and other overpriced spare parts used by the military.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_On_Government_Oversight
And evolution is a teleological drive to superior organisms.The reason why it becomes different in a government job vs. multinational organization is often relating to the incentive structure - the multinational tends to have better incentives to hire people of better competence in key positions (it can pay them better, and thus attract better talent), and also tends to structure their compensation bonus based on performance, more closely aligned with reality. The large multinationals also tend to replace and get rid of incompetence more quickly than a government organization.
They are and they bring the world a lot of good stuff. It doesn't necessarily follow that we need more "free market"Love em or hate em, US corporations are extraordinarily efficient for such large organizations, which is the main reason why they make up such a significant factor of the US economy and US production.
Large corporations have customers, so if a large corporation isn't best meeting the needs of these customers the customers stop paying them money and go elsewhere.
This is much less so when the government is the customer, which is exactly the point.
And even when one large corporation is the customer and another large corporation is the vendor, the customer still has customers of its own it has to satisfy, so if it isn't getting value for the money spent on its vendor, it will be at a disadvantage in terms of its ability to best satisfy its own customers.
No one is talking about perfection in any of this but rather which is the better outcome among the options available?
You mean other than perfect competition, perfect equilibrium and perfect information.
Those are not requirements for a free market, although people (who do not support free markets) often say they are.
So, based on your experience the government officials in this case are probably doing a better job of managing their Aramark deal than private industry does with theirs?
If I ate in, say, the IBM's Aramark run cafeteria it would have less food, more rat's scurrying about the kitchen eating stuff, more stuff being fished out of trash cans to be served to IBM employees, etc?
And if IBM found out about it they'd promote the procurement team?
My experience does not include Aramark, so based on that alone, I couldn't say; However if they are providing the level of service reported in the OP case, I would certainly hesitate to contract them for food services at any location.
As far as I am aware, IBM don't provide food to their employees as a company 'perk'; And if you eat at an IBM canteen, you do so by choice, and at your personal expense. While working for IBM may have some similarities to incarceration in a state penitentiary, I believe that one critical difference is the absence of locks on the doors to prevent employees from going elsewhere for their lunches.
That said, perhaps an investigation of the suspicious similarity between 'Aramark' and 'Armonk' warrants investigation![]()
And if you eat at an IBM canteen, you do so by choice, and at your personal expense.
They are not requirements for a free market. They are necessary for free markets to reach economically efficient outcomes.Those are not requirements for a free market, although people (who do not support free markets) often say they are.
They are not requirements for a free market. They are necessary for free markets to reach economically efficient outcomes.
Axulus wasn't asking what was required for a free market to exist. He was saying that free markets, once established, are not claimed to achieve any sort of perfection. When in actuality neoclassical, and maybe even austrian, economics does claim that truly free markets will achieve these sorts of perfections.
Whoops, I forget perfect efficiency and perfect distribution resources.
My experience does not include Aramark, so based on that alone, I couldn't say; However if they are providing the level of service reported in the OP case, I would certainly hesitate to contract them for food services at any location.
As far as I am aware, IBM don't provide food to their employees as a company 'perk'; And if you eat at an IBM canteen, you do so by choice, and at your personal expense. While working for IBM may have some similarities to incarceration in a state penitentiary, I believe that one critical difference is the absence of locks on the doors to prevent employees from going elsewhere for their lunches.
That said, perhaps an investigation of the suspicious similarity between 'Aramark' and 'Armonk' warrants investigation![]()
The point was not to single out IBM it was to raise the question of why you are so confident that governments are better at managing procurement contracts than businesses.
If we were to break it down a level or two why do you think government procurement people are better?
The point was not to single out IBM it was to raise the question of why you are so confident that governments are better at managing procurement contracts than businesses.
If we were to break it down a level or two why do you think government procurement people are better?
Axulus already answered this - the government has oversight projects and whistleblower protections.
Axulus already answered this - the government has oversight projects and whistleblower protections.
And a corporation just lets people do whatever they want? No one in a corporation has any particular reason to seek a better contract or enforce an existing one?
Evil greedy corporations who sign contracts are just helpless victims because, um, evil greedy corporations like Aramark are incredibly motivated to squeeze the last dollar of profit from a contract?
Axulus wasn't asking what was required for a free market to exist. He was saying that free markets, once established, are not claimed to achieve any sort of perfection. When in actuality neoclassical, and maybe even austrian, economics does claim that truly free markets will achieve these sorts of perfections.
Whoops, I forget perfect efficiency and perfect distribution resources.
Cite?
Axulus wasn't asking what was required for a free market to exist. He was saying that free markets, once established, are not claimed to achieve any sort of perfection. When in actuality neoclassical, and maybe even austrian, economics does claim that truly free markets will achieve these sorts of perfections.
Whoops, I forget perfect efficiency and perfect distribution resources.
Cite?
And a corporation just lets people do whatever they want? No one in a corporation has any particular reason to seek a better contract or enforce an existing one?
Evil greedy corporations who sign contracts are just helpless victims because, um, evil greedy corporations like Aramark are incredibly motivated to squeeze the last dollar of profit from a contract?
Meh, I am not interested in playing the side you cast me in in the false dichotomy game.
Governments have flaws that are generally due to their size. Similarly sized businesses have the same flaws.
Insofar as a difference exists, it is very small; and it tends to be the opposite of what you appear to expect, largely because most people share that expectation, and so slightly more steps have been taken to rein in government than have been taken to rein in business.
Axulus already answered this - the government has oversight projects and whistleblower protections.
And a corporation just lets people do whatever they want? No one in a corporation has any particular reason to seek a better contract or enforce an existing one?
Evil greedy corporations who sign contracts are just helpless victims because, um, evil greedy corporations like Aramark are incredibly motivated to squeeze the last dollar of profit from a contract?
Cite?
http://www.economicsonline.co.uk/Business_economics/Perfect_competition.html
http://wiki.mises.org/wiki/Perfect_competition
Looks like I was wrong that Austrian economics shares the neoclassical view . . . but I did say "maybe" about that one.
Meh, I am not interested in playing the side you cast me in in the false dichotomy game.
Governments have flaws that are generally due to their size. Similarly sized businesses have the same flaws.
Insofar as a difference exists, it is very small; and it tends to be the opposite of what you appear to expect, largely because most people share that expectation, and so slightly more steps have been taken to rein in government than have been taken to rein in business.
But you do see the internal inconsistency in a discussion that starts with the premise that Aramark is an evil greedy corporation that ruthlessly seeks to maximize profits under a contract and ends with the conclusion that corporations are lax about attempting to maximize profits under a contract?