The upside of a very down time is that the grifters, clowns and neo-Nazis currently laying waste to American government and our international reputation are (accidentally, to be sure) illuminating longstanding structural weaknesses that have facilitated the damage they’re now doing.
One of those weaknesses is a result of the so-called “privatization” movement–especially as that movement co-opted organizations in the nonprofit sector. When I was still on the university faculty, that co-option was the subject of several of my academic publications.
The privatization movement overall was a response to the belief that government agencies don’t do anything well. (The people who criticise “bureaucratic waste” somehow never notice that similar problems with redundancies and “red tape” are present in any large organization, public or private…) The results of that anti-government bias have been profound–vouchers that send tax dollars to private, mostly religious schools that demonstrably don’t perform any better than the public schools, and the delivery of a wide variety of social services through not-for-profit organizations.
There are several problems with “contracting out,” the practice of paying businesses and nonprofits to provide government services.
With respect to nonprofits, one problem is “mission creep.” Mission creep occurs when a nonprofit organization has become dependent on government dollars, and the government program that they’ve been delivering ends. If the government is launching a different program–one that isn’t really consistent with the nonprofit’s mission–the organization will often contract to provide that service, despite the mismatch with its mission, in order to keep the dollars flowing.
When government benefits are delivered through nonprofit organizations, there is also a significant lack of transparency. Citizens are typically unaware that they are benefitting from a government program. (Remember the guy who shouted “keep your government hands off my Medicare at a Congressman? That was a rather extreme example…)
More troubling is the substantial research showing that the practice of contracting with for-profit and nonprofit organizations to deliver government services “hollows out”–erodes–important government capacities. In addition, managing and monitoring a contract with an outside provider requires skills that differ from those needed in most government work. Those skills are frequently lacking, increasing the potential for waste (and worse).
The practice of contracting out also masks the growth of government. Delivering services through private or nonprofit entities doesn’t shrink the public sector–it governmentalizes the private sector. Private contractors are a significant portion of the “true” federal workforce, with some studies suggesting that their number exceeds the number of direct federal employees.
Then there’s the state action problem.
In the American legal system, the difference between public and private action matters. Public or state action is action taken by a unit of government. The Bill of Rights restrains only government, so it is important to know whether a particular act was public (i.e. governmental) or private. Government cannot insist upon random drug testing of its employees, for example, although a private employer may legally do so. Public schools cannot insist that students pray, but private schools can. Government cannot ban books, discriminate against women or Wiccans, or deny citizens due process of law. Under certain circumstances, private organizations can do all of those things. The distinction between public and private is absolutely central to American constitutional law and the idea of limited government.
Contracting out can make it difficult to distinguish private from public activity. On the one hand, if a city buys computers or pencils from a private company, that vendor shouldn’t suddenly be considered part of the public sector. But what happens when the city or state engages a private company or nonprofit organization to deliver services that had previously been delivered by government employees? Can the private company engage in practices that would be unconstitutional if the government did them?
All of these issues preceded Trump. But his administration’s efforts to stamp out anything our mad would-be king considers “woke” or “DEI” or critical of him has uncovered a previously unrecognized threat. When nonprofits are dependent on government dollars, they either bend the knee or lose critical funding.
In addition to threats to revoke the tax exemptions of disfavored organizations, the administration has paused distribution of federal grants and loans. Though courts stepped in to block some actions, those initial freezes caused fear and planning uncertainty. Other administration actions have included halting previously-appropriated funding for environmental, health, and community programs, which indirectly hurt nonprofits dependent on those grants.
We need to put “rethinking government contracting” on our list of items to address once we eject the Keystone Kops who are running amok in Washington.
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