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The Bumper Book of Government Waste: The scandal of the squandered billions from Lord Irvine's wallpaper to EU saunas | 
enlarge | Authors: Matthew Elliott, Lee Rotherham Publisher: Harriman House Publishing Category: Book
List Price: £9.99 Buy New: £3.40 You Save: £6.59 (66%)
New (5) Used (8) from £2.65
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 113782
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 223 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 6.6 x 5 x 0.9
ISBN: 1897597797 Dewey Decimal Number: 320 EAN: 9781897597798 ASIN: 1897597797
Publication Date: February 7, 2006 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: brand new sent from cheshire england
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
The Large State Indicted December 17, 2006 12 out of 25 found this review helpful
The other reviewers have done justice to the very disturbing contents of this comprehensive survey, and this is a book that everyone interested in politics - and the process of government - needs to read.
However, there is a huge item of government waste which seems to have been missed: the Private Finance Initiative.
The Conservative Party has recently claimed that hospital projects which would have cost the public sector 8 billion, will in fact cost 53 billion over the 30-year lifetime of the PFIs concerned.
Worse, the private sector gets paid in full even if the hospital closes, or is merged with another one. This, of course, is not the fault of the private sector but it IS an example of government waste.
Then there is waste caused by the injection of bogus competition into the NHS.
The example of the impact of the new Horton Capio ISTC (Independent Sector Treatment Centre) on the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre in Oxfordshire illustrates the problem.
The Nuffield Centre is locked into a 30-year PFI contract, but is losing income to the ISTC which only undertakes "easier" procedures. So the Nuffield's debts will mount, and it faces merger into another hospital trust.
Even if it closed, the PFI debt will remain.
Having missed one spectacular example of "waste" - a deliberate ruse by Gordon Brown to massage the PSBR - the book goes on to attack the spending of 400 million on anti-depressants.
This is an excellent example of "tabloid" journalism: an attack on a soft target, probably made without detailed evidence, since some people who need anti-depressants are thereby enabled to continue working. Depression is an illness, not a crime.
More than 400 people have been killed by `mentally ill' patients released into the community in the past eight years, largely due to the fact that - thanks to this kind of prejudice - spending on "mental health" services have been cut, and cut again since 1979.
The policy of "Care in the community" - in plain English "dumped on the street" - might usefully be investigated on the basis of "penny wise and pound foolish".
A few months ago a Lancashire man set fire to a shop in St Anne's-on-Sea, and was subsequently imprisoned for three years for arson.
A few hours before he caused the fire he had been turned out of his local psychiatric unit and left to fend for himself. He was abandoned by both the unit, and by social services, both of whom will almost certainly have had larger caseloads than they could be expected to deal with relative to the massive needs of their clients.
The shop suffered 75k of damage, and then there is the cost of three years in gaol. He will probably be released early into the care of the same inadequate services, and the whole sorry saga may well be repeated.
The waste is not only financial, which leads to the bigger issue.
This government tries to do everything, and does all of it badly.
Bureaucracies are inherently wasteful. All this is agreed.
However, there are some jobs the private sector is unlikely to want to take on, and the more problematic procedures undertaken by the Nuffield Centre - such as Lady Tebbitt benefited from - are but one example.
The proper care for the mentally ill is another.
There is an even bigger issue: do we as a society any longer believe that those of us who are fit and well - and not in need of state support - should contribute to the welfare of those less fortunate?
Or are the less fortunate simply "scroungers" to be punished?
Essential Reading!!! October 13, 2006 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
This book is definitely essential reading. You get the impression that our government wastes money anyway, but this handy little classic of a book puts it all in perspective. I agree with what some other reviewers have already written, all tax payers should be made to read this book, most certainly before any election. All in all finely written, sharp, witty and to the point, Genius. It directs a firm two fingers in the direction of our tax wasting "betters", and I say well done!!!
Outstanding July 19, 2006 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Superb book. Touch of Robin Cooper's Timewaster Letters, which makes it informative and entertaining.
Did they ever get a reply from the President of North Korea?
Government at its 'out of control' best. March 22, 2006 21 out of 22 found this review helpful
Having just watched series one and two of Yes, Prime Minister, a review of the book, The Bumper Book of Government Waste, in the weekend papers caught my attention. On reading the review I immediately went out and bought a copy and read it cover to cover over a couple of evenings. As well as bringing a smile to my face on numerous occasions it also made my blood boil to think that the Government and its ministers can call upon money which isn't theirs and waste it, on seemingly, whatever takes their fancy.Every tax payer in the land should read this book; how the Government gets away with what it does beggars belief. As a business owner I find the whole thing infuriating as there is now no incentive at all to run a business and employ people. It makes me want to throw in the towel and go and get a job as a civil servant, knowing fully well that I will be looked after, have a great pension and never have to worry about getting the sack from my job, no matter how badly I screw up! The sooner the whole system of Government comes crashing to its knees the better.
A fantastic book – if only it wasn't necessary though! March 15, 2006 18 out of 19 found this review helpful
The TaxPayers' Alliance has been getting some fantastic coverage in the media for its low tax campaign, not least due to the publication of the Bumper Book of Government Waste. The book is a comprehensive review of Government spending and how big government leads to high taxes which lead to huge waste and inefficiency. As a taxpayer, it is sometimes painful to read the examples of waste highlighted by Matthew Elliott and Lee Rotherham. It would be nice to think that there won't be a need for further editions of this book -- I somehow doubt it though!
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