When I think about all this talk in politics nowadays about spending cuts and this 'starve the beast' mentality, I ask myself, "HomerJ, do you really think spending cuts improve the performance of any particular organization?"
And my answer isn't a 100% no, but I find it to be another example of the very same quote
Ofos uses as his signature
Case in point: The history of developers I have become more familiar with in my region. There were the groups who:
-Thought they knew everything better than anyone else (often times these were the local developers), and
-Thought they can spend half the money to make a product twice as good
Aaaaaaaannnd their stuff today will very often look like crap.
Then there are groups that have brought new projects from the outside who:
-Listened to what the departments suggested
-Compromised
-Weren't cheap in every way possible, because they know spending extra money on ohhhh like a public improvement connected to the development will make
their buildings look better too. In the long term it will probably make them more money, and give them a better reputation with the nearby muni's
I guess I am posting this because I see this cut, cut, cut mentality as getting a little out of control. Yes we should do what we can to manage spending, and if that means cutting the budget
incrementally I would agree that it is a valid goal.
But for the most part, let's be honest, I don't think politicians actually believe that cutting a program will increase it's performance (or at least I hope not), they simply don't support that program.