The dream of every entrepreneur is to have a monopoly, a place where they can set prices without any of those nasty competitive forces impacting on profits.

Monopolies are the poison of public policy, it is why we have the many agencies that seek to ensure transparency, competition and good behaviour by corporations with some level of pricing power.

The management of these two extremes by public institutions has created some really ugly children.

Public assets that have been developed by public money to provide a service and the infrastructure upon which to build businesses has been sold off to the highest bidder. Surprise, surprise, the price goes up.

Natural monopolies and public assets flogged off for the same reason, with the same result. Power, communications, education, roads, rail, land, the list just goes on, and on.

The seeming disconnect in the current election campaigns, both state and federal is instructive. People are sick and tired of the political narrative that all will be well. Just trust us, we  will be better than the other lot who are the devil in a shiny suit!!

At our core, we all seem to know that the problems are being swept under the carpet, where they are mouldering and compounding, and at some time will bite us on the arse. This post on the Guardian website looking at the changes in Australia’s tax base over time is instructive. It is now quite old, but the trends shown are not just still evident, but thriving. We all are demanding more, and the pollies are dishing it out to get elected, but increasingly we will not have it. The disinterest and dissatisfaction with our institutions is just magnified by this sort of misinformation, but in the absence of any genuine leadership, we vote for self-interest, with our wallets.

On Saturday, I have no idea who will get my vote in the state election. Neither of the major parties appear capable of anticipating and responding to the tsunami of change coming at us. Both ‘leaders’ are spraying Monopoly money around, making hollow promises to fix current problems that cannot possibly be met, without any reference to the challenges of the future.

I have emailed both the major parties seeking to understand the capabilities and experience the candidates in my electorate brings to the table. The incumbent Labour candidates office sent me an automated generic response that told me nothing beyond the fact that he is a good bloke, with some academic and work credibility, and loves his family. The Libs excelled, by not even sending an auto response. This is probably because they did not have a candidate, a now remedied situation by the nomination of an unknown young party hack last week. If they cannot organise something as simple as that, how can they run the state?

Are the current opposition any more capable? I suspect not.

We will just end up with more ugly children that need to be understood and funded. Somehow. .

Header cartoon credit: Tom Gauld, whose acerbic take on life is refreshing after writing a post on politics.