tbtc
Veteran Member
There were a couple of comments in the "Labour could be planning to allow public sector to bid for franchises" thread, but they've got drowned out in the nationalisation/ Beeching/ party politics arguments...
...so, to keep this separate, does anyone know how the subsidy position for railways in Northern Ireland have changed since railways were privatised in Great Britain in the 1990s?
There's certainly been some investment (redoubling of the line to Derry/Londonderry, new trains...), but have passenger numbers risen sufficiently for the subsidy per passenger mile to fall? Or has the subsidy per passenger mile increased, but at a different rate to the equivalent figure in England/ Scotland/ Wales?
(I'm intending this as a separate thread to avoid the usual arguments about people's utopian solutions for things)
...so, to keep this separate, does anyone know how the subsidy position for railways in Northern Ireland have changed since railways were privatised in Great Britain in the 1990s?
There's certainly been some investment (redoubling of the line to Derry/Londonderry, new trains...), but have passenger numbers risen sufficiently for the subsidy per passenger mile to fall? Or has the subsidy per passenger mile increased, but at a different rate to the equivalent figure in England/ Scotland/ Wales?
(I'm intending this as a separate thread to avoid the usual arguments about people's utopian solutions for things)
Passenger numbers are also rising in Northern Ireland, where the railways remain in public ownership. It's funny how you always cite the rise in passenger numbers as "proof" of privatisation's success but fail to mention the massive increase in subsidies that taxpayers are contributing to the privatised railway (contrary to Tory promises that subsidies would fall).
Genuine question - has subsidy increased in Norn Iron in the same time period?
A lot of the reasons why railways have become more expensive in Great Britain seem (to me) to be costs that'd have increased regardless of privatisation/ nationalisation (fuel has gone up in price by much more than inflation, the costs of final salary pensions for staff has gone up significantly since the mid'90s when companies were taking "contribution holidays", insurance costs have skyrocketed...).
Whilst I appreciate that privatisation means some money leaving "the industry" and has made some things more complicated (and therefore more expensive), I think that a lot of the costs that have gone up are costs that would have gone up anyway - which is why I'd be interested in whether Northern Ireland's railways have managed to keep subsidies down or not
And what are the subsidies like in Northern Ireland? They added 20 new trains to 26 existing - you would hope for some increase in passenger journeys...