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#21 (permalink) | ||
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Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Berkshire
Posts: 4,762
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#22 (permalink) | |
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Uber Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: London
Posts: 23,176
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#23 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Faversham
Posts: 47
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Rail privatisation and 'Save The X Line' are not contradictory ideas or a 180 degree U-turn as it seems is suggested here. Railway privatisation has allowed many micro-franchises as they're called; local branch lines run independently, such as the Wenslydale Railway. This is impossible under a nationalised system, but are the very basis of a private one. Those lines saved independently in the past, such as the Bluebell Railway, faced constant awkwardness and blocks from BR and the Ministry, with many schemes sadly failing. This is now a thing of the past. A private system fosters this enterprise.
A privatised network simply means unprofitable companies would close due to bankrupcy, but many small lines are only unprofitable due to bad central management. A bit like the EU really. Centralised bureaucrats meddling, making costs higher, service poorer, then cutting and running. Furthermore, many unprofitable lines would be kept on if tied to mainline companies due to competition from rivals. For example, in the late 1800s there was frantic branch line building - most losing money or being poor returns for capital - to stop rival neighbouring mainlines entering what one deemed their 'territory'. If they didn't build and run it, the other would and steal passengers and goods. Under a state monopoly, there's no point as there is no competition, so they are simply closed. If you look at the big waves of closures, they follow this; the forced grouping into 'the Big Four' regional companies in 1923, nationalisation in 1948, and then the central government's 'Beeching Modernisation Plan' in the 1960s. Rail privatisation wasn't done entirely correctly however. I feel franchises should have been smaller, so there's true competition. For example, here in Kent, in 1896 we had two companies running trains; SER and LCDR, with lines overlapping in places [they still do]. Canterbury, Ashford, Dover, Folkestone, Ashford, Maidstone and several other towns had both companies serving them, most rural farmers had access to both. The result was competition on cost, quality, service and speed. It's all one now, so no choice, no competition. As many drive to the station today the competition had they been split back would have been even more intense. So there you have it...off topic but felt I had to. |
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