And that's not even to mention the media - saturated propaganda about how much more efficient the private sector is, how the profit motive means it gets more things done better for less
money than the public sector.
Not exact matches
A colleague of mine, Stephen Zarlenga, has just published a historical study, The Lost Science of
Money (2002), showing that public - sector fiat money has a much better record than privately created fiat m
Money (2002), showing that
public -
sector fiat
money has a much better record than privately created fiat m
money has a much better record
than privately created fiat
moneymoney.
While the
public sector is spending
money faster
than ever, the consumer class is just as indebted.
In essence, this involves two things: growing the private
sector, and reforming the
public sector so that what the Government does — and the
money it spends — boosts, rather
than undermines, Britain's competitiveness.
«No
Money in the Bank» does more
than layout the many dimensions of the
public sector pension crisis in crisp, highly readable prose, though it does that very well indeed.
But when more
money is spent on the recall elections
than on the entire state legislative campaign last year, most of it coming from
public -
sector unions opposed to Gov. Scott Walker's successful effort to abolish collective bargaining, the politics are clearly national.
They may be aging, but they are living well and well - positioned players are going to make more
money from the aging demographic
than from any other
sector of the buying or selling
public during the next two or three decades.