Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 12:56 pm
Banquo wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 9:33 am
Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2024 9:50 pm
I think the choice of p makes quite a bit of difference
not necessarily in a good way, unless the public sector can somehow start to deliver large projects well. I guess servicing the debt might not be as high, but the commissioners will likely be similar.
If the p stands for public then what we're talking about is the normal way public infrastructure etc funded, ie with public money. To call that PFI mk2 is insanely misleading.
PFI brings huge problems. If the deal is too favourable to the private sector this means the state (schools, the NHS, whatever) being forced to overpay for services for decades. If it is too unfavourable (more unlikely) as we have seen, it leads to private companies failing at great cost and the state being forced to step in anyway. And it's all just dodgy accounting, a way to hide government debt.
We don't even know if this is for large projects yet (presumably it will be for a number of things) and, if it is, where's the evidence the private sector can deliver large projects any better than the state?
Its possibly mark 2 in the sense that its extra borrowing for infrastructure build as was PFI, with a change of rules (not quite hiding debt, but increasing it through rule bending). 'insanely misleading'....ok, it was a mild jab, but you didn't see the question mark, obviously.
You seem convinced that public sector delivery is better than private. My argument on PFI is that it wasn't a terrible idea, but appallingly implemented. By the public sector

. So I'd hope the projects and their implementation are better handled either way, which was my original point. The commissioning and commissoners are key, and as you say, where and what.
BTW what would you point to as a state delivered project?