Limits to Privatization
How to Avoid Too Much of a Good Thing: A Report to the Club of Rome
Cloth: 978 1 84407 177 7
Price: $136.00  

Paper: 978 1 84407 339 9
Price: $48.95  

Publisher: Earthscan Publications Ltd.
July 2006 , 256 pp., 6" x 9 1/4"
* What should be privatized and what should be left in the public sector? Who decides and on what basis?
* Presents worldwide examples from all sectors to show what’s worked, what hasn’t, and why--what the limits to privatization are
* Major analysis of and challenge to the market shibboleth of our age: private sector good, public sector bad
* A Report to the Club of Rome--like the hugely influential Limits to Growth and Factor Four

Driven by ideology, the IMF, the World Bank, and powerful business interests, governments all over the world have been privatizing services in a growing number of sectors. Not just industrial utilities like energy, water, and transport, but health, education, media, communications, pensions, even prisons, and defense. But what have been the results? Have private funds and management produced greater efficiency, better economic performance and higher levels of service everywhere?
This book is the first thorough audit of privatizations around the world. It shows how and where they have worked well, and where they have defeated their own aims--with serious impacts on public health, environmental sustainability, democratic accountability, and the level of public service. It analyzes the factors behind success or failure to establish criteria for future sell-offs, and argues for the fundamental importance of democratic governance of the privatization of publicly owned goods. The result is a book of major importance, challenging one of the orthodoxies of our day--a benchmark for future debate.

Table of Contents:
Introduction: Limits to Privatization; Privatizations by Sector; The Contexts of Privatization; The Governance of Privatization; The Lessons of Privatization; Bibliography; Index.


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Reviews & Endorsements:
"The subtitle of this volume, which contains more than 50 brief case studies of privatization around the globe, states well its objective. The editors, one German legislator and two academics, do not constrain their concern with privatization to its efficiency consequences. They broaden the debate by considering the impact of privatization on other concerns, e.g., income distribution, globalization, democratic government, the environment, and women. So the many articles recognize the advantages of privatization but also ask the reader to consider its adverse consequences. The editors' concluding remarks summarize the work: 'beware of extremes.' At the very end, they contribute a succinct set of guiding questions and examples that suggest caution in privatizing."
- Choice
"In the golden days of the Washington consensus, privatization was viewed as one of the central pillars of successful development. Ideology and interests triumphed over economic theory and experience, both of which noted the difficulties posed by privatization and its limitations. Through a series of case studies, Weizäcker and his colleagues illustrate the limits to privatization."
- Joseph E. Stiglitz, winner of the Nobel Prize in economics and former chief economist and senior vice-president of the World Bank
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