sparklingway
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- May 12, 2009
- Messages
- 3,878
- Reaction score
- 0
The fact still remains that railways, Airlines and steel mills are grossly under performing and eating up the national reserves.Something will have to be done about it.One route may be to privatize them . It has happened elsewhere, why cant it happen in our country.
Being a staunch Marxist, I'm often in heated debate with my colleagues over privatization.
Even after their arguments, I still believe that we've got to let go off this crapload of state corporate power. PIA, Railways and Steel Mills should be privatized. But not like MCB, not like the Cement Mills of the '90s, not like HBL, not like UBL and certainly not the way PTCL was (since our money is still tied up in the procedure as Arabs won't give it to us).
Also, even before approval of privatization CCP should be asked to conduct study into the finances of the bidders so as to verify their "real" board members and to eliminate the monopolization of power.
Privatization of these would require a serious political resolution. No political party can do this viably without any serious challenge by its electorate. All of these have employees greater than 20,000. And easily 1/3rd of them would be laid off (with severance packages of course) and hence they would create a lot of hue and cry as well.
My point was not anti-privatization, but the glorification of known criminals and robber barons and the way they are portrayed as "hones, self made and hard working men" within the minds of the general populace who consider them angels.
But as one of my friends, put it, even the most "educated" of Pakistanis are confused about their political and economic ideological leanings. Remember, most Pakistanis want governments to strictly enforce price controls over not just food, but on cement, on bricks, on petrol, on electricity, people want price control on everything and these include people who have been taught and believe in the free market. Similarly, people want the state to store grain for them through PASSCO, they want state control over everything and at the same time they desire privatization. This is a visible sign of a confused ideological growth.
As she aptly summarized:-
We can’t decide if we are socialists, Islamists or neo-liberals. We want the government to be all those things simultaneously – pro-poor, libertarian with respect to taxation, an efficient runner of public sector enterprise without resorting to the bogeyman of privatization, a firm rejecter of all IMF/World Bank dictation and aid, and preferably, we’d like a way to achieve all this in an interest-free Sharia compliant way!