privatization
(noun)
The transfer of a company or organization from government to private ownership and control.
(noun)
the government outsourcing of services or functions to private firms
Examples of privatization in the following topics:
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Facilitating Private-Voluntary Associations
- A second function of government is to facilitate private-voluntary associations.
- A contract is a legally enforceable agreement, and government encourages private-voluntary associations chiefly through laws regarding contracts.
- Of course, not all private agreements are enforceable.
- Without government, terms of voluntary associations would only be enforceable by the parties and their private associates, a messy and inefficient process at best.
- It is no exaggeration to say that private enterprise rests on public foundations.
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The Impact of Court Decisions
- Privatization is government outsourcing of services or functions to private firms.
- In competitive industries with well-informed consumers, privatization consistently improves efficiency.
- Studies show that private market factors can more efficiently deliver many goods or service than governments due to free market competition.
- Many proponents do not argue that everything should be privatized.
- Likewise, private goods and services should remain in the hands of the private sector.
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Introduction to the Four Functions of Governmen
- For most people the general undesirability of private-involuntary associations (robber-victim, air polluter-victim) and of compound-involuntary ones (the Nazi extermination campaign against Jews, military conscription, arbitrary economic regulations) is implicit in the examples we have adduced.
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The Third Amendment
- The Third Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits, in peacetime or wartime, the quartering of soldiers in private homes without the owner's consent.
- The Third Amendment protects citizens against the quartering of soldiers in private homes.
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Privatization
- Privatization is the process of transferring ownership of a business from the public sector to the private sector.
- Privatization can have several meanings.
- Privatization has also been used to describe two unrelated transactions.
- The first is the buying of all outstanding shares of a publicly traded company by a single entity, making the company private.
- This is often described as private equity.
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Private, Public, and Compound Associations
- A private association is one which is not a government and is made up of parties none of which is itself a government.
- Governments, clearly, are not private as defined here, and this is obviously as it must be given the usual connotation of the word "private".
- Nor are associations between another one government and another private.
- The association between husband and wife is private, since (a) neither of them is a government, and (b) their marriage does not constitute a government.
- Thus the US government may hire an individual to work for the Department of Justice or it may buy jet fighters from a private corporation.
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Minimizing Private Sanctions
- First, government protects us from private-involuntary associations.
- Through law, it attaches artificial side effects to private actions constituting such associations, thus making them less attractive options.
- Law can also be regarded as a price system calculated to run private-involuntary associations off the "market" by making them too "expensive".
- Thus government's function is not to eliminate private-involuntary associations but to minimize them.
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Public and Private Bureaucracies
- Public and private bureaucracies both influence each other in terms of laws and regulations because they are mutually dependent.
- Means, The Modern Corporation and Private Property (1932), he detailed the evolution in the contemporary economy of big business.
- Today, the formation of private bureaucracies within the private corporate entities has created their own regulations and practices.
- However, private bureaucracies still have to comply with public regulations imposed by the government.
- In addition, private enterprises continue to influence governmental structures.
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The Right to Privacy
- The Right to Privacy was an article that advocated for the protection of a citizen's private matters.
- It is a tort based in common law allowing an aggrieved party to bring a lawsuit against an individual who unlawfully intrudes into his or her private affairs, discloses his or her private information, publicizes him or her in a false light, or appropriates his or her name for personal gain.
- Then the authors point out the conflicts between technology and private life.
- Intrusion of solitude: physical or electronic intrusion into one's private quarters
- Public disclosure of private facts: the dissemination of truthful private information which a reasonable person would find objectionable
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The Rule of Law
- Government is a system for keeping the lid on problems posed by private-involuntary associations.
- Government-as-bandit imposes sanctions on people in an unprincipled way, and all of the arguments against private-involuntary associations apply even more strongly when the bandit is government itself.