Im sorry but forensic science is supposed to run a profit?
Whut?
Well obviously
forensic scientists are supposed to run a profit, else they would soon die of starvation and be of no use to anybody.
And the really good forensic scientists are supposed to be rewarded in proportion to their skill and their experience and the value they return to their customers.
Forensic science being such a valuable good to the government and the citizenry, it is to be assumed that the government would only hire the very best forensic scientists, and pay them nothing less than top wages for their work.
But as this story clearly demonstrates, this is not the case. Instead, the government finds that quality forensic science costs more than it is willing to spend. So it finds it convenient to spend less, and presumably get less.
I'm not saying that the free market will give you Chicken Cordon Bleu for the price of a Chicken McNugget. I
am saying that if you're only willing to pay the price of a Chicken McNugget, it's not the free market's fault that you don't get Chicken Cordon Bleu.
I also think that Ivor underestimates the quality of work delivered by skilled professionals when their pay is commensurate with the value they deliver. If the government wants to create a business environment where forensic scientists are concerned about profit margins and contract renewals, then that's hardly the free market's fault.
On the other hand, if the government wants to create a business environment where forensic scientists are eager to deliver quality work for quality recompense, I'm sure the free market can easily accommodate that.
I'm sure the government kitchens could prepare Chicken Cordon Bleu just as easily as any private for-profit chef. The government's problem is always that it wants to do so on a Chicken McNugget budget. And this is why government programs have the same problems as private enterprise: because ultimately, they have the same constraints (give or take a monopoly on force).