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No, but they are asked to do different work to different standards depending on the project. A government project is likely to spend more money on non-essential items, for example. Governments usually have wage and work requirements that are more limiting, with restrictions on who can do what work, and at what wages. Private contracts today might prefer efficiency over, say, workforce diversity. An entirely private bridge would not have any [[US) prevailing wage rules, and might pay the worksite cleanup crew less than a publicly funded bridge. Not arguing that one is better than the other, but they are quite different. Of course at this scale there's a near zero chance for private projects. [[Maroun is exceedingly rare. He has the motivation of monopoly protection as well as proven cash flow.)
I agree with all of this, and I'd agree with 3WC if this is what he had said.