http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/22/opinions/krugman-prisons-privatization-patronage.html?_r=1
by Paul Krugman
Over the past few days, The New York Times has
published several terrifying reports about New Jersey’s system of halfway
houses — privately run adjuncts to the regular system of prisons. The series is
a model of investigative reporting, which everyone should read. But it should
also be seen in context. The horrors described are part of a broader pattern in
which essential functions of government are being both privatized and degraded.
First of all, about those halfway houses: In 2010, Chris
Christie, the state’s governor — who has close personal ties to Community
Education Centers, the largest operator of these facilities, and who once
worked as a lobbyist for the firm — described the company’s operations as
“representing the very best of the human spirit.” But The Times’s reports
instead portray something closer to hell on earth — an understaffed, poorly run
system, with a demoralized work force, from which the most dangerous
individuals often escape to wreak havoc, while relatively mild offenders face
terror and abuse at the hands of other inmates.
[…] What’s behind this drive?
You might be tempted to say that it reflects conservative
belief in the magic of the marketplace, in the superiority of free-market
competition over government planning. And that’s certainly the way right-wing
politicians like to frame the issue.
But if you think about it even for a minute, you realize
that the one thing the companies that make up the prison-industrial complex —
companies like Community Education or the private-prison giant Corrections
Corporation of America — are definitely not doing is competing in a free
market. They are, instead, living off government contracts. There isn’t any
market here, and there is, therefore, no reason to expect any magical gains in
efficiency.
And, sure enough, despite many promises that prison
privatization will lead to big cost savings, such savings — as a
comprehensive study by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, part of the U.S.
Department of Justice, concluded — “have simply not materialized.” To the
extent that private prison operators do manage to save money, they do so
through “reductions in staffing patterns, fringe benefits, and other
labor-related costs.”
So let’s see: Privatized prisons save money by employing
fewer guards and other workers, and by paying them badly. And then we get
horror stories about how these prisons are run. What a surprise!
So what’s really behind the drive to privatize prisons, and
just about everything else?
One answer is that privatization can serve as a stealth form
of government borrowing, in which governments avoid recording upfront expenses
(or even raise money by selling existing facilities) while raising their
long-run costs in ways taxpayers can’t see. We hear a lot about the hidden
debts that states have incurred in the form of pension liabilities; we don’t
hear much about the hidden debts now being accumulated in the form of long-term
contracts with private companies hired to operate prisons, schools and more.
Another answer is that privatization is a way of getting rid
of public employees, who do have a habit of unionizing and tend to lean
Democratic in any case.
But the main answer, surely, is to follow the money. Never
mind what privatization does or doesn’t do to state budgets; think instead of
what it does for both the campaign coffers and the personal finances of
politicians and their friends. As more and more government functions get
privatized, states become pay-to-play paradises, in which both political
contributions and contracts for friends and relatives become a quid pro quo for
getting government business. Are the corporations capturing the politicians, or
the politicians capturing the corporations? Does it matter?
Now, someone will surely point out that nonprivatized
government has its own problems of undue influence, that prison guards and
teachers’ unions also have political clout, and this clout sometimes distorts
public policy. Fair enough. But such influence tends to be relatively
transparent. Everyone knows about those arguably excessive public pensions; it
took an investigation by The Times over several months to bring the account of
New Jersey’s halfway-house-hell to light.
The point, then, is that you shouldn’t imagine that what The
Times discovered about prison privatization in New Jersey is an isolated
instance of bad behavior. It is, instead, almost surely a glimpse of a
pervasive and growing reality, of a corrupt nexus of privatization and patronage
that is undermining government across much of our nation.
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