Privatization
In: Nomos 60
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In: Nomos 60
In: The military engineer: TME, Band 95, Heft 626, S. 43
ISSN: 0026-3982, 0462-4890
In: FP, Band 118, S. 14-27
ISSN: 0015-7228
SINCE THE 1980S, THE PRIVATIZATION OF STATE ENTERPRISES HAS GONE FROM NOVELTY ACT TO GLOBAL ORTHODOXY. MORE THAN 100 GOVERNMENTS HAVE SOLD STAKES IN STATE COMPANIES TO PRIVATE INVESTORS, RAISING $1 TRILLION AND TRANSFORMING THE STATE'S ECONOMIC ROLE. THOUGH PRIVATIZATION'S PROMISE MAY HAVE BEEN OVERSOLD, ITS ILLS HAVE ALSO BEEN EXAGGERATED. THE REAL QUESTION IS HOW - NOT WHETHER - TO TRANSFER STATE FIRMS TO PRIVATE HANDS. THE AUTHOR EXPLAINS HOW PRIVATIZATION IS MORE THAN AN ECONOMIC ISSUE, HOW IT HAS SHRUNK THE ECONOMIC ROLE OF THE STATE, AND HOW IT BREEDS CORRUPTION.
In: Problems of economic transition, Band 39, S. 5-92
ISSN: 1061-1991
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Band 17, S. 597-767
ISSN: 0305-750X
In: Critical social work: an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to social justice, Band 7, Heft 2
ISSN: 1543-9372
Privatization of social welfare services in Canada is promoted by national, provincial, regional and municipal governments through initiatives that emphasize public-private partnerships. Together with encouraging these partnerships as a privatization strategy, government also reduces public funding and replaces it with private sector contracting for social provision. An exploratory study of the Healthy Babies/ Healthy Children (HBHC) program found an increasing acceptance of privatization by service providers in Ontario. These findings illustrate the argument that government creates the context for market-based solutions. But can market-based solutions really solve social problems, and is this the intention of government social policy?
World Affairs Online
In: The military engineer: TME, Band 94, Heft 616, S. 39-40
ISSN: 0026-3982, 0462-4890
In: Endogenous Public Policy and Contests, S. 145-156