DDHv wrote:Or the politically connected. Too often, this is just repeating the statement in different words
Too often yes, one way or another.
DDHv wrote:IMO, the primary advantage in the private sector is with small innovative companies.
Yes and no. Small innovative companies have a hideously poor survival rate, more than 4 out of 5 tend to crash and burn within just a few years.
In fact, the best chance such companies has is if they are created in countries where there is government support for them, the problem with that being that while you DO raise the amount of such companies that are successful drastically, you still tend to have at least as many companies that fail as succeeds, meaning that governments running those kind of schemes are IN THEORY wasting a crapload of money.
As opposed to "in theory", such schemes tend to generate a lot of extra small to mediumsized businesses, making it extremely difficult to figure out if the money spent by the government ends up as a win or loss.
Most cases, it can be argued as a win, but there have been some very obvious losses as well, and some are just impossible to say.
DDHv wrote:Creative solutions often don't work. It seems better for people to try them with their own money, and then reward the ones who get good results.
Actually, the opposite is true. Because far too often, creative solutions are NOT profitable. At least not the first year, or maybe the first decade, or even the first CENTURY.
Meaning that most creative and "futuristic" solutions are simply unrealistic for anything but a government.
Could anyone but a government have gotten people walking on the moon in the 1960s?
Not a chance.
And you might enjoy the irony in how the US space program worked its way there by employing a strictly "planned economy", while the USSR ran its space program in a highly competitive "market economy" style(and it was ever only actually aiming to put people on the moon as a response to USA stating they would do that, and their manned moon program was never really coherent as a result).
DDHv wrote:the patent system are two ways to do that.
Do you have ANY idea how difficult it is to get an ironclad patent issued?
Or how expensive?
Or how often big companies rip off the actual inventors?
Or pull off abusive stunts like Rambus did? They took part in the JEDEC cooperation to set up standards for computer RAM, then took the knowledge from there and against the rules of JEDEC made patents, vital to the specs decided on, which resulted in them getting paid royalties for over 15 years, because they managed, just barely, to claim that they had not actually done ANYTHING illegal at all, oh no...
DDHv wrote:The major problem on the business side is if there isn't a strong company culture of innovation, then too often un-creative people who are only interested in the income take over as the companies get bigger. OTOH, some bureaucracies reward the bosses according to the number of people under them instead of for effectiveness
And that, is sadly just the beginning. I´ve seen and heard far too many horror stories about companies that isn´t just having a culture of non-innovation, but instead outright have a culture of absolute non-change, anything even resembling innovation getting people sacked.
There was a German ex military guy on another forum who had some especially nasty experiences with the military industry in several countries...
It´s often been said that the military industry in USSR was a creature of its own, with an economy separate from everything else, leeching from the rest of society.
Sadly, that description fits a whole bundle of companies in the supposedly so much better off market economy nations of today.
There is also nowadays sadly a drive towards increased detail control over workers, made possible through computerisation, like how a worker at an assembly line commented that he had 9 seconds to do his job, not 10, NOT 8, but exactly 9 every time, or how a worker at a warehouse now always has a calculated time he must make, or he gets a call from the boss wondering what he´s doing, too little time to walk normally, so very fast walk or jog to get to the right place and then expedite the order exactly on time...
This is a stupid development, it may provide predictability and all, but it also completely kills individuals as well as increasing unhealth and removing any chance for further improvements.
At the same time as we on average work more hours per year than a medieval peasant.
While reintroducing the worst parts of the assembly line production to the world, the things that were killed off decades ago because of their many bad effects.