The fact of the matter is that most regulated industries have become federal protectorates, living in the cozy world of cost-plus, safely protected from the ugly specters of competition, efficiency and innovation. Practitioners' Journal - 731 페이지1975전체보기 - 도서 정보
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations - 1974 - 1012 페이지
...are willing to fly for, something is seriously wrong. The fact of the matter is that most reguated industries have become federal protectorates, living...specters of competition, efficiency and innovation. There are those who hold the businessman to be so unprincipled and greedy that they regard any governmental... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations - 1976 - 570 페이지
...for more liberal rules. 5. As Engman aptly warns, we simply cannot afford to let regulated industries "become federal protectorates, living in the cozy...specters of competition, efficiency and innovation." Engman, supra note 4, at 14. See also Baker, The Great Regulatory Game: All Shall Have Prizes, Apr.... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations - 1976 - 468 페이지
...regulate. Chairman Louis Engman of the Federal Trade Commission has noted, ''tin? fact of the matter is that most regulated industries have become Federal protectorates, living in the cozy world of cost plus, safely protected from the ugly specters of competition, inefficiency, and innovation." Congress... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1978 - 1194 페이지
...costly inefficiency. The gargantuan insurance business has become a state "protectorate, living in a cozy world of cost-plus, safely protected from the...specters of competition, efficiency and innovation." Of course, there are exceptions among the thousands of companies and hundreds of thousands of agents,... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1988 - 220 페이지
...industries became legalized, government- protected carte Is- -what former FTC chairmen Lewis Engman called "federal protectorates, living in the cozy world of cost-plus, safely protected from the ugly spectres of competition, efficiency, and innovation. " Industry, labor, and government regulators all... | |
| |