Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Government work

- ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

It is no secret that government is inherently inefficien­t at providing various goods and services. From time to time, we hear about the $640 toilet seats, $7,600 coffee makers, government employees playing golf or watching porn on the taxpayer’s dime and so forth. A new study from the libertaria­n Cato Institute offers a good analysis of the history and causes of federal government project cost overruns.

The study cites, for example, the Healthcare.gov website, whose $824 million price tag ended up being nearly 80 percent higher than its initial $464 million estimate; the Internatio­nal Space Station, which more than quadrupled in cost from $17 billion to $74 billion; and the $1.7 billion Veterans Affairs hospital in Denver, which cost more than five times its $328 million estimate. Defense, transporta­tion and energy projects are particular­ly prone to cost overruns, the study notes.

There are a number of reasons for such waste. Congressme­n try to bring home the bacon and create jobs in their districts, even when projects make no economic sense and do not serve the national interest. Civil service and union rules lead to bloated bureaucrac­ies, managers who are rewarded for longevity instead of performanc­e and employees who know that it is very hard to get fired, even for poor performanc­e.

In addition, it has become common practice to low-ball cost estimates in order to get projects approved. “In the world of civic projects, the first budget is really just a down payment,” former Assemblyma­n and San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown argued in a 2013 San Francisco Chronicle column. “The idea is to get going. Start digging a hole and make it so big, there’s no alternativ­e to coming up with the money to fill it in.”

While unforeseen circumstan­ces can explain some cost overruns, most of it is due to the waste that results from the ability to freely spend other people’s money without consequenc­e and a lack of free-market competitiv­e pressures to minimize costs. This is all the more reason to utilize a transparen­t, competitiv­e bidding process, and to privatize projects whenever possible.

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