By Guest Column —— Bio and Archives November 9, 2010
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Investors would like to increase their returns at the expense of a poorer deal for either the customers or the employees. Customers would like the employees to work harder for less or the investors to provide more capital for lower returns (or both), so that they might get better services at lower prices. Employees, for their part, would like to improve their remuneration and conditions at the expense of the other two.The paper goes on to argue:
If it is true that the roles are inevitably in conflict, Saskatchewan politicians have been able to juggle pressure from all three in recent years without acknowledging that a conflict exists. "Five years ago the provincial government championed the Crowns as providing the ‘lowest cost bundle,’ an apparent victory for the customer role,” says the paper’s author. “This year we saw a policy of taking one hundred per cent of profits as a dividend to cover government expenditure. It is wrong to implement such policies without acknowledging that benefiting in one role means costs for another, but politicians from both parties have been able to get away with it too often.”The paper concludes that the Crowns are subject to a “three way compromise” between investors, customers and employees, and that future discussions should automatically ask whether and to what extent any proclaimed benefits from the Crowns have come at the expense of the other two roles more than they have in the past. seymourd@fcpp.org Marco Navarro-Genie, Ph.D. Research Director, Frontier Centre for Public Policy navarrom@fcpp.org About the Author: David Seymour directs the Centre’s Saskatchewan office. He holds degrees in Electrical Engineering and Philosophy from the University of Auckland, where he also tutored Economics. After working as an engineer in New Zealand, he is applying his passion for sound policy analysis to policy issues on the Prairies. In his first three years working for the Frontier Centre, David has carried out extensive media work, presenting policy analysis through local and national television, newspapers, and radio. His policy columns have been published in newspapers in every province as well as the Globe and Mail and the National Post. David has produced policy research papers on telecommunications privatization, education, environmental policy, fiscal policy, poverty, and taxi deregulation. However, his major project with the Frontier Centre is the annual Local Government Perfor mance Index (LGPI). The inaugural LGPI was released in November 2007 and comes at a time when municipal accounting standards in Canada must improve if the municipal government sector is to reach its potential as an economic growth engine for Canada.
Items of notes and interest from the web.