SEP 20, 1993 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): Making New York Work Through Privatization and Competition
The Privatization Task Force proposes "competition with winners selected purely on the basis of quality and price, regardless of private or public sector status."
MAY 7, 1993 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): Why America Needs Privatized Infrastructure Industry
"We need to create a new industry of firms that finance, design, build, own, and operate major infrastructure . . . a new paradigm for infrastructure in this ...
MAR 9, 1993 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): Privatization: The Canadian Story
Crown corporations were created not out of ideological fervor, but pragmatically, to serve social, cultural, and economic priorities the private sector could not be expected ...
FEB 19, 1993 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): An Update on Privatization in the Czech Republic: The Economic Transformation After the Split
"Two years ago there were no private shops in the Czech lands. Now, about 60-70 percent of retail, trade, and services are back in the ...
JAN 29, 1993 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): Mass Privatization in Poland: Differences and Similarities with Other Privatization Programs
Mass privatization in Poland may be the solution for sound companies with growth potential that cannot yet attract investors, domestic or foreign.
DEC 10, 1992 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): The Politics of Russia's Privatization Program
The Russian privatization program is overtly political. To make privatization work, managers, local governments, and workers' collectives need incentives to push for it.
NOV 20, 1992 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): Moving Municipal Services Into the Marketplace
"The antithesis of populism is when government taxes its citizens, takes money out of their pockets, and says it knows how to spend their money ...
OCT 20, 1992 • Article
Privatization Project (1991–1994): The Case for Structural Reform Through Private Innovation
"America's future will tend inevitably and inexorably to reflect the quality or the absence of quality of our schools."