Comment by deaux

Comment by deaux 4 days ago

2 replies

> If there's any, even the slightest, chance that buying from a business might one day reflect badly on the civil servant in the procurement office, then they won't buy from that business.

This is an absurd statement that might as well come straight out of Yes Minister. Buying from PWC reflects badly on them already, let alone when their next scandal happens. Which is of course never far away [0].

I'm sure Fujitsu met similar "criteria" when selected for Horizon. How well that selection reflected on the procurement office..

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PwC#Litigation

marcus_holmes 4 days ago

You know Yes Minister was a documentary, right? ;)

Buying from PWC reflects badly on them with us, because we know tech. It does not reflect badly with other civil servants, because PWC is a highly-respected organisation.

It's very similar to "No-one got fired for buying from IBM", which was a cliche because it was true.

  • bigfatkitten a day ago

    > because PWC is a highly-respected organisation.

    PwC are a well known band of crooks who always put their own enrichment well ahead of the public interest.

    They were banned entirely from bidding for Australian federal government contracts, because they misused privileged information on tax policy they received from one client (the government) to advise other clients on tax avoidance strategies. It was a symptom of systemic corruption that permeates their entire business.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PwC_tax_scandal