Cornwall DOES need more indigenous industry. Tax breaks, relocation/start up grants etc could all be used to persuade companies to invest in Cornwall. That way, more money would stay in the local economy
All of those things are available for far more useful positions in the North East, North West or even the more deprived parts of East Anglia.
Relocation grants almost never actually achieve anything in the long run.
People 'relocate' facilities, collect the grant and then quietly close the facility a few years later and move back to somewhere more useful, using the site they had before and probably most of the original equipment.
'Tax breaks' are rather difficult to arrange since businesses will use it to make it appear more business is in Cornwall than there actually is - it just turns into a general tax dodge.
Let's look at it this way:
Family A exists in your planned future. 2.4 kids, nice coastal property, well paid jobs in the smoke. Where do they spend their money?
- House: payments go to a lender. Money doesn't stay in Cornwall
- Electricity/Gas/Water: Money goes to energy firms, some owned by other countries. Doesn't stay in Cornwall.
- Education: Chances are, children would be in paid-for education, rather than state. Some very good public schools in Cornwall, but by no means certain the kids would be sent there. Money could go either way.
- Consumables: food, petrol, etc - all goes to places like Sainsburys, Tescos etc. Supports a few local jobs, but money ultimately leaves Cornwall.
- Disposable Income: May get spent in beachside cafés, but may just as easily be spent in other attractions anywhere along or near the route of the cheap, quick rail link. Money probably wouldn't stay in Cornwall.
Welcome to the globalised economy.
Your High Speed link will therefore do almost nothing to change where people spend their money, and do so at great cost. Enticing businesses to move closer to Cornwall would be far cheaper and a better method for stimulating the local economy.
But it is essentially impossible to do this
Governments have been attempting to entice businesses to move to these places for decades
and it has never worked.
Why do people keep attempting somethign that has proven to be entirely ineffective in the past?
Is it just people being unwilling to accept a reality they find unpalatable.
Also, travel costs will not be 'essentially zero'. Look at every major infrastructure project of the last 40-50 years and there has been a premium paid by users (Tamar Road Bridge, Severn Crossing, M6 Toll, etc). What are HS1 & the Channel Tunnel if not a high-speed transit system similar to what you propose? I don't hear of any cheap commuter tickets for sale from Paris to London.
The entire motorway network?
I wasn't aware it had a large scale toll system on it.
All the planning assumptions for high speed rail indicate zero price premium over conventional rail - HS rail is cheaper per passenger kilometre than conventional rail.
If anything the premium would be on conventional rail to attempt to stem the haemorrhaging of money from the network.
As for the 'simplistic' argument about living in the Home Counties, there aren't 'tens of thousands of perfectly serviceable housing units' here either. Cornwall has a chronic housing shortage.
And yet it has tens of thousands of housing units lying empty for almst the entire year.
Housing units that would have people living in them otherwise.
In short, Cornwall is Cornwall. It is not the Home Counties. There is no local will to change things (which, believe me, as a non-local beggars belief at times), and your plan would cause huge amounts of grief within the indigenous population. There is already a minority of lunatics who would prefer Cornwall to have full Independence, with all the issues that would cause.
So essentially the locals demand subsidies to maintain their economy in some sort of touristic aspic?
Unless something major changes Cornwall will be a basket case
forever.
We cannot go on like this.
Get the Cornish economy supported by industry again, and things will improve. A HS rail link to use Cornwall as a commuter belt suburb is daft.
In other words - turn the clock back to the 19th Century?
I am afraid
that is never going to happen.