Competition - Ha! Ha!
I am a member of a
very small, very exclusive club – I like Gt Yarmouth, always have.
It has always seemed to me to be more a large village, rather than a
small town. (It is, actually, the third largest town in Norfolk)
When I lived near Yarmouth in the 1970’s the shopping trips were
always to Yarmouth and no shopping trip was ever complete without the
purchase of some chips from Yarmouth market. It’s good to know
that the market is still alive and well and the chip stalls remain
open (https://www.great-yarmouth.co.uk/shopping/market.aspx)
However, after only
a few months of shopping in Yarmouth I noticed a really odd thing
about the chip stalls on the market. They all sold their chips at
the same price. I expect they still do so today. It just seemed odd
that not one of the 10 or so chip stalls would cut their price to try
and get more custom.
Then again, Yarmouth
folk are funny, they will swear that the chips from their particular
favourite stall are the best. I was never hung up on this, I’d
just go for the one with the smallest queue.
But, where was the
competition? It was explained to me (dummy foreigner) that the
Yarmouth chips stalls, or more precisely the permits to run the chip
stalls, were like the Yarmouth version of Standard Oil, the
American Tobacco Company, the International Mercantile Marine
Company, and the match companies controlled by Ivar Kreuger, the
Match King. De Beers had a dominant role in the supply of diamonds.
Other trusts were
formed by several companies, such as the Motion Picture Patents
Company or Edison Trust which controlled the movie patents. Patents
were also important to the Bell Telephone Company, as indicated by
the massive litigation that came to be known as The Telephone Cases.
- Wikipedia
The Yarmouth chip
stalls were handed down within the family. No-one else could start a
chip stall or buy a chip stall and therefore provide some healthy
competition. Is it any wonder that all chips were the same price?
And now the news is
filled with the demise of Carillion:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jan/22/carillion-privatisation-myth-councils-pfi-contracts
What’s the
connection?
Back to Yarmouth.
In the 80’s the Gt Yarmouth Borough Council built the Marina
Centre. In a prime location on the sea front it was supposed to
breathe new life into the town and provide somewhere for the
beleaguered holiday-makers to go when it rained. It had a swimming
pool (with a wave machine), an indoor sports area and eateries all
under one roof. It cost some millions to build and the council
provided the money, or they borrowed it I can’t remember which. In
any event, instead of using the council’s own personnel to manage
the Marina Centre (they have a perfectly good Tourism and Leisure
section to this day), in their wisdom the GYBC (Gt Yarmouth Borough
Council) employed a management company (like Carillion?) to manage
the Marina Centre. The local paper, the Yarmouth Mercury, then ran
stories every week for years about how the Marina Centre lost money –
and lots of money – every year.
Strangely, it never
occurred to them to find out why the fee paid to the management
company almost exactly equalled the Marina Centre deficit.
It was easy really.
When the GYBC or any government body actually manages something
there is nowhere to pass the buck.
Yarmouth rate-payers
who had a poor Marina Centre experience would ring their borough
councillor and complain. The councillor would pick up the phone and
speak to the management company, The councillor would then be able
to tell his constituent that he had made the appropriate inquiries.
Nothing got done but the council could pass the buck. That’s what
they paid the management company for.
Sound familiar? It
ought to for that’s what has been happening since the 80’s –
not just in Yarmouth but everywhere. Companies like Carillion have
been paid to take the flak. The government talks and talks about
competition being a good thing, but works like hell to make sure it
doesn’t happen.
Only the NHS escapes the management company malaise. But, for how long? I'm sure the government would love to unload the NHS on to Carillion, and they would if they thought they could get away with it!
The government talks
and talks about how small businesses are the life-blood of the
economy, yet they dish out multi-million pound contracts to very
large companies which are no better than the robber-barons of old.
For Carillion read Standard Oil.
Take the ill-fated
and doomed NDR (the road to nowhere). When the Norfolk County
Council were looking for someone to build this white elephant, their
choice was limited at best. The contract was worth over 200 million
pounds. Now me, you and Paddy with a few shovels and spades cannot
build the NDR. Only a few companies have the resources which enable
them to bid for the contract. Where’s the competition? There is
no practical competition.
Eventually Balfour
Beatty got the contract – though they were a lot smarter than
Carillion (or maybe the NCC were a lot more stupid than the national
government?)
The point is
competition for these type of contracts is just a myth designed to
reassure the public and assuage the mega-morons in the Tory shires
(and line a fair amount of Tory pockets at the same time through
dividends and pension companies).
Only large companies
have the resources to take on large building projects. Only the
government has the resources to finance large building projects.
Only the government itself can provide competition for Carilllion or
Serco or uncle Tom Cobley and all.
This is now in
vogue. “Let’s bring it back in house! Is the cry.”
From the same folks
who sent it out in the first place.
Flying elephants are
more likely to be spotted.
Laugh? I thought
I’d cry!
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