Privatization of public goods leads to higher consumer costs and lower quality.
When public goods get privatized, prices go up and quality goes down — profit motives and public welfare aren't the same thing.
When you hand public necessities over to private profit, the people pay more and get less.
When you privatize something people can't live without, they get charged more and served worse.
When essential things get handed to corporations, prices go up and the people with least get what's left over.
When essential services get privatized, costs go up and quality goes down — because profit, not people, drives the decisions.
When you turn essential services over to private companies, regular people end up paying more and getting less.