Public services can be constructed, coordinated and operated in many ways or forms. They include government agencies, independent state-funded institutes, government-coordinated organizations, civil society, military agencies and volunteers.
Government employees Government agencies are not profit-oriented and their employees are often motivated differently. and fewer hours of work. A survey in the UK found that private-sector hiring managers do not credit government experience as much as private-sector experience. Public workers tend to have lower wages when adjusting for education, although that difference is reduced when benefits and hours are included. Public servants have other intangible benefits such as increased job security and high wages.
Choice Open Public Services, a white paper published by the
Cameron–Clegg coalition in the United Kingdom in 2011, aimed to create a comprehensive policy framework for "good public services". It set out the coalition's programme for reform of public services, described as one of "wide ambitions" expected to be implemented over a period of time, not all at once. Five principles were to underlie open public services: • Choice, wherever possible • Decentralisation to the lowest appropriate level • Diversity • Fairness • Accountablity The principle of choice where possible was embodied in the Choice Charter, published on 16 May 2013, where four choice principles were outlined: • Allowing people a say in how public services are provided for them • Allowing people the opportunity to exercise choice where it is available • Making clear, accessible and high-quality information available to support choice • Facilitating complaints over the degree of choice offered as well as over the quality of services Between December 2012 and May 2013, "Choice Frameworks" were scheduled for publication covering NHS care,
social housing, school education,
early years education and
adult social care.
Nationalization an Damas de Rojo, volunteers at their local hospital Nationalization took off following the
world wars of the first half of the 20th century. In parts of
Europe,
central planning was implemented in the belief that it would make production more efficient. Many public services, especially electricity, fossil fuels and public transport are products of this era. After
World War II, many countries also began to implement
universal health care and expanded
education under the funding and guidance of the state.
Privatization There are several ways to privatize public services. A free-market corporation may be established and sold to private investors, relinquishing government control altogether. Thus it becomes a private, not public, service. Another option, used in the
Nordic countries, is to establish a corporation but keep ownership or voting power essentially in the hands of the government. For example, the
Finnish state owned 49% of
Kemira until 2007, with the rest owned by private investors. A 49% share did not make it a "government enterprise", but it meant that all other investors together would have to oppose the state's opinion to overturn the state's decisions. A regulated corporation can also acquire permits on the agreement that they fulfill certain public service duties. When a private corporation runs a
natural monopoly, the corporation is typically heavily regulated, to prevent abuse of monopoly power. Lastly, the government can buy a service on the free market. In many countries,
medication is provided in this manner: the government reimburses part of the medication's price. Bus traffic, electricity, healthcare and waste management are also privatized in this way. One recent innovation, used in the UK increasingly as well as in Australia and Canada, is
public-private partnerships, which involve giving a long lease to private consortia in return for partly or fully funding infrastructure costs. ==See also==