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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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"nzuri" wrote in message
I only visit London occasionally, but seems to me from the odd glimpse of the Underground I get every couple of months that it's going downhill fast. Am I just seeing the bad bits, or is this generally true? Took a Circle train a couple of weeks ago and it was a complete pig-sty - covered in graffiti, knee-deep in fast food wrappers (not to mention the actual fast food) etc., and this was at 12.30pm. I'm deeply cynical about the whole privatisation thing, so this obviously colours my views. It no doubt looks like a wonderful idea on paper to the Treasury economists with their theoretical models of how the world works. Doesn't work in practice because people are greedy, inefficient and generally behave in ways that no model can, er, model. (Just like that other brilliant piece of economist's thinking: Marxism). I'd be fascinated to know, for example, how many people are now involved in running the tube, including all the private sector companies, lawyers, accountants, public relations types etc.. I'd be prepared to bet that the number of those on 6 figure 'packages' (including directors, non-execs (pro-rated), etc etc.) has gone through the roof compared with the previous arrangements. Summary: it wasn't broke before, it was lunacy to try to 'fix' it like this. Quote: for every economist, there's an equal and opposite economist. It's too early to say how it will work out long-term, but as an occasional user, it seems to me that the Tube has become slightly less reliable day-to-day since the PFI scheme came in. However, as it had been running in shadow form for some time before then, the current poor performance is probably the result of problems that pre-date the actual switchover. Overall, I think it's almost inevitable that fracturing the organisation in this way will increase costs, just as it did with BR (if only to pay for the extra legal agreements that manage the inter-company interfaces). It certainly isn't likely to help safety, though I suspect the two recent derailments are almost certainly due to standards that have been falling for some time and not as a result of PFI. But, of course, every cloud has a silver lining -- the previously loss-making WS Atkins is now doing rather well, thanks to the PFI deal: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/s...098527,00.html Good news for Atkins shareholders, bad news for Londoners and British taxpayers, I guess. I wonder, are Atkins Labour party donors? Was it "broken" before and did it need fixing? Probably yes, because the Tube had been suffering from low investment and bad management for a long, long time. But was this the right solution? I don't think so, and I imagine that most people outside the Treasury and the PFI contractors doubt it as well. |
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