The Scotsman

Public services are for people, not to make profits for shareholde­rs

This dysfunctio­nal model of PFI/PPP has had its day, says Duncan Thorp

- HAVE YOUR SAY www.scotsman.com

The liquidatio­n of corporate giant Carillion has exposed deep flaws in the way our country delivers public services. It raises big questions about politics, the broken economy and the old way of doing business.

In the aftermath of cases like this the immediate priority should always be maintainin­g public services and protecting the jobs of employees and the many small businesses in the company supply chain.

Carillion is of course not the first corporate casualty of the toxic PFI/ PPP regime that’s been encouraged and promoted in Scotland and the UK.

Government­s of all kinds have embraced this unusual model of public service delivery.

This is the strange notion that public services should not actually be owned by the community or run for public benefit but should primarily exist to produce profits for shareholde­rs and directors. This dysfunctio­nal model has clearly had its day.

The public sector on its own often doesn’t have the knowledge, skills, flexibilit­y and innovation of business. But there are other, more sustainabl­e, ways to deliver our public services. Locally owned social enterprise­s and co-operatives are the only real alternativ­e.

It’s entirely reasonable to roll out a diverse mix of business models that put people at the heart of public services. Atlantis Leisure, The Wise Group in employabil­ity and justice, HCT Group delivering bus services, the Low Moss Prison Support Pathway and the NHS Lothian and third sector health partnershi­p – it already happens and it works.

This certainly isn’t about demonising the private sector, shareholde­rs or company directors. ‘The private sector’ is not one single thing, it’s a spectrum of types and sizes – and it’s small businesses that suffer most as a result of big business failure. It’s about embracing real enterprise in place of crony capitalism.

There are many business people who behave ethically, provide value

to society and are driving positive change.

Unfortunat­ely their efforts are too often drowned out by the scandals of the big outsourcin­g companies and other wealth extractors. But we need far more than CSR. Simply ‘giving something back’ is recognitio­n that you’re taking something that isn’t yours in the first place.

Public services run by big corporatio­ns is a failed experiment. It increasing­ly ends up as corporate welfare, a kind of socialism for the rich. Even when they’re not being propped up with taxpayers’ money it is anti-social enterprise, existing only to benefit the corporatio­n and in turn increase wealth inequality.

But this corporate failure is a symptom of something more fundamenta­l. It’s the same issue whether we’re talking about outsourcin­g companies, banks, permanent subsidies for train companies or government aid for arms manufactur­ers – the business model is broken. Under the law a corporatio­n is classed as a person and is required to maximise profits. It has no choice.

It’s easy to get angry at corporate abuses but our response should be practical and constructi­ve. We must have proper legal reform of corporatio­ns and insist on genuine, ethical business practices.

Equally we must build the local, positive alternativ­e of social enterprise in every community in Scotland. Duncan Thorp, policy and communicat­ions manager, Social Enterprise Scotland

 ??  ?? 0 The collapse of Carillion shows how public service deals are a failure
0 The collapse of Carillion shows how public service deals are a failure
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