>> |
11/11/10(Thu)09:11 No.12758230>>12758151
They get a little more technical, state-owned companies in Europe tend to be somewhat monolithic, with budget rules so complicated that no one, from either side of the political spectrum or any private contractor or shareholder will ever take a look. Any one knowing his way in this maze is now either mad or long dead, and many rules exist only because they "always have". At least, it is like this in my company, which is probably the biggest state owned in Europe, and arguably the most succesful. No one, form the inside or outside, ever question our spendings. Sure, there are safeguards, but with enough people in the know, you can easily bypass them. For example, the only person who will ever know any detail about how I spent the tens-of-million euros budget allocated to my activity is my (direct) boss. The guy's office is next to mine, and we both know he can't be bothered to control what I do. Too much work, not enough time. And for everybody else, my budget is just a line on a spread sheet, or a list of contractors at most. Nobody could know if I told the truth when I wrote that we paid for renovating this dam secondary landslide protection system (which never worked anyway), or if I diverted the funds for an all new (and working) system for an underground warehouse. And I am not even high-ranking.
So, this example may be really appropriate, but take a few dozen guys like me, and you suddenly ave a billion-euros funding. You don't even need to tell them : most of the time, I don't know what I work on. So really, it wouldn't be that hard. Complicated and elaborate, but not hard or difficult. |