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Jan 042013
 
Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou

Privatization reduces public revenues, as well.

from Vox

George Papaconstantinou, Greece's minister of finance, announced on Monday a plan to create a sovereign wealth fund, a sort of Greek “Treuhandanstalt” that would implement the ambitious privatization programme agreed with the EU and the IMF. The plan should raise approximately €50 billion by 2015.

  • About €15 billion, within 2013, should come from the concession of the port of Piraeus and the privatization of a luxury resort on the Athenian coast;
  • The remaining €35 billion should come from airports, ports, the sale of the government share of the OTE telephone company (30 per cent), the privatization of public utilities, tourism, and a restructuring of the state-owned Greek Agricultural Bank (Hope 2011).

This is an ambitious agenda that would reduce Greece's outstanding debt €300 billion by approximately 17 per cent.

Doing the maths

The EU has already approved a loan extension of three years (until 2021) from the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), plus a one-point cut on the loan’s interest rate (Hope 2011). In return for privatizations, Greece would obtain the opportunity to sell bonds to the EFSF in the very likely event that it does not regain market access by 2012.

The Dutch and Germans seem adamant in calling for privatization. While worthwhile on its own merit, will privatization solve Greece's liquidity and solvency problems? I believe that for this to happen, the privatizations would have to make the privatized entities very much more profitable than they were when government-owned – an outcome that markets do not seem to share, at least for now.

Consider the following simple numerical example. Suppose that Greece’s debt is equal to €100, and the government‘s revenue comes from two sources. The first is tourism. Suppose it is certain and equals €74. The second, which we suppose is uncertain, is revenue from the public management of islands’ ports. In the “good state”, which happens, say, one third of the time, it equals €30; in the “bad state” which happens two thirds of the time, it equals €15. Thus the expected government revenues from ports is €20 (= 1/ 3 x 30 + 2/3 x 15), which added to the tourism revenues (74), totals €94, compared with a debt of €100. Supposing that the country is expected to be insolvent and creditors refuse to lend new money, Greek debt would be priced at 94 cents on the euro in my simple illustration.

Privatisation reduces public debts and public revenues

Now suppose that the government privatizes the ports. If private operators have the same efficiency as the public sector, the government can collect an extra €20 from the port sale. As the debt continues to trade at 94 cents, the government can now buy up €21.28 (=20/0.94) of debt, leaving €78.72 outstanding. But obviously, the government would be left with only tourism revenue, €74, so that privatization does not make it more solvent. Both its debts and its revenues have fallen.

Obviously, reducing debt and revenue does not help unless the market price of the privatized assets exceeds the present value of the current expected revenue of these assets.

This can happen – after all, there is no reason to suspect the Greek government is particularly good at managing ports. But how much higher would the value have to be in private hands to help substantially Greece’s debt situation?

In order to ensure that Greece can regain access to financial markets, the private sector should achieve very substantial profitability gain. In the simple, illustrative example, it is possible to come up with a very precise number. The increased value of the assets when in private hands would have to be at least 35 per cent. Assume that private management increases the probability of good outcome to four fifths (and reduces that of a bad one to one fifth), then the government could raise €27 (= 30 x 4/5 + 15 x 1/ 5) from the ports’ privatisation. Since the debt would now sell at par, this would leave only €73 of debt outstanding which the government could service just with tourism income (€74).

This example shows that even a large-scale privatization (about 20 per cent of outstanding debt) can solve a country’s solvency problem only if it achieves a substantial increase in the profitability of the privatized entities (equal here to 35 per cent = 27/24 -1). This is a high number compared with even the most favourable estimates of the positive effects of privatizations surveyed in Megginson and Netter (2001). Moreover, the announcement of such a programme should be immediately reflected in a rise of the secondary market price of the debt, a feature that, unfortunately, we have (yet) to observe for Greece.

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Jan 042013
 
Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTOR PAY ARE MODEST OVERALL.

from ipolitics.ca

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation was quick to jump on the report of the Parliamentary Budget Office on federal government pay and compensation, saying that it provided “shocking numbers on the overly generous compensation of federal government employees.” Echoing similarly-exaggerated claims by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business and other employer groups at its recent pre-budget hearings, the House of Commons Finance Committee has just called for a review of public sector compensation and benefits.

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Jan 042013
 
Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty.

The blowback will be felt at the ballot box.

from The Little Education Report

In both Ontario and BC the Liberal Party has launched an all out assault on organized teachers that will lead to serious political blowback on both parties. In Ontario, Liberal Premier David Peterson forced increases in teacher pension contributions and lost the next election to the NDP. Bob Rae attacked teachers and public servants with the Social Contract.

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Jan 042013
 
ColinBarnett

Workers who refuse employment with new private sector owners could be fired.

from Direct Action

The West Australian public sector is under attack. Under Liberal Premier Colin Barnett’s privatization plans, public sector agencies delivering services in industries such as forestry, health, education, and electricity and water supply are being asked to identify activities that may be sold off to private businesses. And public servants could be fired if they refuse “appropriate employment” in the private sector, or with “not-for-profit” organisations, on a wage that could be up to 20 per cent lower and with poorer working conditions.

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Jan 032013
 
An Ontario chief has appealed to the Queen for help against the federal government.

Chiefs of Ontario ask the Crown to uphold centuries-old treaties.

Your Majesty;

First Nations in Canada are under siege as a result of the draconian legislative and policy measures of the federal government under Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Chief Theresa Spence (of the embattled Attawapiskat First Nation in Treaty 9 territory) is currently engaged in a life-or-death hunger strike in Ottawa to protest the outrageous actions of the federal government. At this unprecedented moment of national peril, your direct intervention is urgently required.

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Jan 032013
 

Video implicates local football heroes in vicious gang bang (trigger warning).

by Alexander Abad-Santos

Things already sounded fishy in Steubenville, Ohio, where the alleged gang rape and kidnapping of an unconscious 16-year-old by two of the town's high-school football players has turned into a complex web of accusation, shock, and, well, Instagram photos. But conflicting reports over an already emotional case became that much more complex today when a WikiLeaks-style site dumped new information about team boosters, the town sheriff, and the alleged "Rape Crew" online — information rounded up, of course, by the anonymous hacking collective known as Anonymous.

Young man identified as former Steubenvill football player makes disgusting jokes about sexual assault.

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In case you haven't been following the scandal, it rose to national prominence last month when The New York Times ran a lengthy report from Steubenville, on the August incident and its intersection of football, the law, and social media. Perhaps one quote, from one of Steubenville High's 19 football coaches, best summed up the controversy: "The rape was just an excuse, I think …What else are you going to tell your parents when you come home drunk like that and after a night like that? She had to make up something. Now people are trying to blow up our football program because of it."

The idea that a rape victim made up her story is still floating around, despite photos of the girl being carried around while allegedly unconscious by her alleged attackers…

Source

 

 

Jan 022013
 

Philippines women win reproductive rights; mass protests in India over gender violence.

by Walden Bello

Women’s rights have been in the forefront of international of international concern over the last few weeks.

Making the biggest headlines were the massive demonstrations in New Delhi and other cities in India provoked by the brutal gang rape by six men of a 23-year-old physiotherapy student in the Indian capital. The crime, which occurred on a moving bus and saw the victim suffer ultimately fatal wounds to her genitals and intestines, proved to be the trigger for the release of popular anger that had built up over the years over the rise in violence against women.

The statistics are horrific. According to government estimates, a woman is raped in India every 20 minutes. In New Delhi, dubbed the “rape capital of India,” the incidence of rape rose from 572 in 2011 to 661 towards the end of 2012. Of the 256,000 incidents of violent crime reported in 2011, nearly 229,000 — close to 90 per cent — were committed against women….

…Yet the current protests may prove to be a turning point…the recent developments may well mark the emergence of a militant mass movement in India that will focus on confronting head-on the patriarchal norms that are at the root of much sexual violence….

…Even as India’s gender equation may be in the process of transformation, the women’s movement registered a historic victory in the Philippines with the passage of the Reproductive Health (RH) Bill. The law, which makes family planning an obligatory policy for the current administration and for future ones, was passed on December 17 in the teeth of ferocious opposition from the super-patriarchal Catholic Church hierarchy.

Key provisions of the new law include, among others, the provision of free or cheap contraceptives to poor couples, institutionalization of sex education for students from the sixth grade up, the establishment of maternal care facilities in state-run hospitals, and provision of reproductive health counseling and treatment for women in all hospitals, including those suffering from post-abortion complications. The law accomplishes all this while ensuring respect for the rights of health professionals who cannot offer these services owing to their religious beliefs….

Foreign Policy In Focus columnist Walden Bello is a member of the House of Representatives of the Philippines and a senior analyst at the Bangkok-based research and advocacy institute Focus on the Global South.

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Dec 302012
 

Language counts in persuading Americans to give up their addiction to weapons.

by Helio Fred Garcia

On the Wednesday after the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, CT, President Barack Obama called for changes in gun laws to prevent similar tragedies in the future. He said:

“We may never know all the reasons why this tragedy happened. We do know that every day since more Americans have died of gun violence. We know such violence has terrible consequences for our society. And if there is only one thing that we can do to prevent any of these events we have a deep obligation – all of us – to try. Over these past five days a discussion has re-emerged as to what we might do not only to deter mass shootings in the future, but to reduce the epidemic of gun violence that plagues this country every single day.”

Later that day, Rep. Robert Goodlatte (R-VA), the incoming chairman of the House Judiciary Committee — where any such legislation must originate –  responded:

“We’re going to take a look at what happened there and what can be done to help avoid it in the future, but gun control is not going to be something I support.”

Therein lies the challenge in American politics, policy, and governance: preventing gun violence is OK, but gun control is not.

And paradoxically, Congressman Goodlatte’s statement also holds the path to the solution. The key to changing gun laws is to keep the focus on controlling gun violence, not on gun control….

Source

Dec 202012
 
A judge has mostly plans to privatize health care in Florida state prisons.

Lawmakers can't delegate the job, says judge.

from the Miami Herald

For the second time in over a year, a state judge has ruled that the Florida Legislature violated the law when it tried to privatize the state’s role in operating prisons.

Leon County Circuit Court Judge John Cooper on Tuesday struck down an attempt by the Florida Legislature to privatize prison health care by using a budgetary process instead of making the change through a full vote of lawmakers.

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