Belperpete
Established Member
- Joined
- 17 Aug 2018
- Messages
- 2,395
Agreed that the political situation would have been very different - we became a much more left wing country as a result of WW2. The war led to an overwhelming feeling that things had to change, that we couldn't just go back to the way things were before. Perhaps exemplified by the South Bank exhibition with the skylon. Anything old fashioned was inherently seen as bad, ripe to be replaced by the new - and that included the old and worn out railways which were seen as inherently inferior to the new and modern motor car. Without the war would there have been the same push for out with the old? Would the Labour party have ever come to power?Too many butterflies to really tell how it would have affected the railways, plus a lot would depend on why there was no world war 2 as that would have big changes to the economic and political situation in the late 1930s. No war also means the empire survives for longer of course which also has big effects on the country (and railways including manufacturers). It would be a very different world for sure.
The war had demonstrated the benefits of centralised state control of health, education, infrastructure, communications, etc etc. Without the war there would have been a very different mindset. I suspect that without the war, the UK would be much more like the US with much more local control, and less state control. If county councils were still in charge of road policy, would they ever have agreed with one another to build motorways? And without the German autobahns (built to allow rapid troop movements) as an example?
Would the railways ever have been nationalised without the view of centralised state control engendered by the war? How many industries were nationalised prior to WW2? The nationalisation of the railways meant that there were no longer major shareholders in positions of power pulling strings for the railways behind the scenes, like there were for the road lobby.
Also before the war, the railways had significant control of the road haulage industry, and also controlled many of the bus companies, shipping lines, air lines, etc. Following nationalisation, the railways were forced to sell off these profit making subsidiaries. Without the war and nationalisation, I think the railways would have invested ever more heavily in these subsidiaries, becoming ever more dominant in those areas. A bit like happened on the Isle of Man, these subsidiaries taking over their independent rivals and eventually becoming more profitable than the railway, with the road subsidiaries ending up supporting the railway. And without motorways, and with the railways being the dominant players in the haulage and bus industries, would road transport have taken off as it did?