
Originally Posted by
rainman
Oh dear, I am going to have to find the really small words. My point is that the average kiwi business owner is a two-bit small fry unable even to understand most problems addressed by government, let alone derive good long-term goals for these, and strategies to achieve them. Given our business failure rate, even if they were given these missing pieces, a large chunk would fail to deliver them. The job is best done by government, with the business owners sticking to what they do best - moving some more widgets this quarter. (A noble, if humble, goal, one might add).
You have an ideology because you are unwilling to debate (or, I suspect, consider) the truth of this view, because you have been indoctrinated to believe in small government and the atlas-like virtues of our captains of industry. (That's the positive interpretation).
And all politicians who stand a chance of getting elected "purchase" votes. So what?
Given that small businessmen are responsible for generating some 80% of the country's revenue I'd hesitate to describe them collectively as "two-bit small fry". But then I've got no reason to denigrate them or their respective abilities.
The fact is those "problems addressed by government" are almost exclusively not amenible to the application of good business practices. They don't, by and large constitute a viable commercial process. In short; they're a collection of ideologically driven spend-ups purporting to be institutionalised charity. They invariably fail utterly to return good value for money.
Why, for example is not the ministry of trade and industry not held at least partially responsible for the early business failure rate? Is it possible the answers aren’t wanted? Has it, I wonder anything to do with the cost of the purchase of those votes?
There. And hardly a nasturtium cast.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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