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Comment by rayiner

11 hours ago

You cannot reach a conclusion. A conclusion is a rational thing based on comparing realistic alternatives.

As the user of the water system you do have to care about the return on investment. Because the alternative is to have the government take out bonds to pay for that work, and you’d have to pay the interest on those bonds with your tax dollars.

The conclusion in this case is very simple: 86 billion has been taken in profits, with very limited capital investment.

Now .. what to do about that? That's a bit more complicated, but we could at least start from the premise that had the water systems been public, that 86 billion could have been spent on capital investment without a single bond being issued.

  • > The conclusion in this case is very simple: 86 billion has been taken in profits, with very limited capital investment.

    What is the number for the capital investment? You’re comparing a number to words. That’s a type error.

    > That's a bit more complicated, but we could at least start from the premise that had the water systems been public, that 86 billion could have been spent on capital investment without a single bond being issued

    Not without knowing how much capital has actually been invested to date. Because you’d be have paid out interest and principal on that over 30 years out of that 86 billion.

    • I'm the board of my local (rather small) water system. Most of our capital investment is done by spending what we raise from our members/customers, and we try hard not to require loans unless absolutely necessary.

      A larger water system has bigger capital projects, but also a larger customer base (and they also likely charge more per liter of water than we do). So it is absolutely not a given that capital investment in water infrastructure requires bonds or loans (though I acknowledge that these likely cannot be avoided).

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