This is a Conversation Starter, one in a series of invited opinions on topical issues. In this essay, independent adviser and law professor Simon Wong lays out five reasons why recent government investments in private companies might avoid the hazards experienced by state-owned enterprises in the past. Read the essay, and then share your thoughts by commenting below.
Taxpayers are anxious. In Germany, Ireland, the United Kingdom, the United States, and elsewhere, governments have acquired substantial stakes in—and in some cases full ownership of—a number of private firms in efforts to revive economies that were teetering on the edge of collapse. Yet historically, government ownership of private companies has been notorious for lowering productivity, wasting resources, and distorting competition—often as a result of unclear objectives, political interference, lack of discipline, and poor transparency.1
In Italy, for example, persistent political interference in state-owned companies—including railways, postal service, and public transport, among others—has significantly hampered their productivity, efficiency, and profitability. One government-owned US rail operator relies on government support in excess of $1 billion a year to cover its costs, in part because of government-mandated obligations to serve unprofitable routes. Similarly, the World Bank has concluded that, in emerging markets, a...