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"Robin9" wrote in message
[color=blue][i] Railsigns.co.uk;122015 Wrote: It's very easy to spout on about recent improvements (real or imaginary) while pretending that if BR had never been broken up and privatised, the railway today would be exactly the same as it was in the mid 1990s, except that the trains and infrastructure would all have aged by another fifteen years or so. British taxpayers like me are giving five times as much money to the privatised rail industry as we did to BR. Are today's passengers experiencing corresponding benefits to justify this? I don't think so. Rail privatisation was a victory for capitalist ideology; in all other respects it has been a spectacular failure of scandalous proportions. The Tories won't admit it has failed; certainly not as long as there are other public assets left that they want to see flogged off for short-term gain. Does anyone have any real idea of what the railway system would be like today if it had not been privatised? You are quite right to point out that we taxpayers are paying far more in subsidies than ever we did when the railways were nationalised but you are slightly off target about the privatisation. First, it was not a victory only for capitalist ideology (or Tory dogma). It was also a victory for spivery on a huge scale. John Major's government knowingly undervalued the railway assets massively and stipulated that a large percentage of the shares were to be reserved for big financial institutions. In other words the Tory's friends in the City were given a vast profit for doing nothing and the British people were defauded of part of the value of their assets. Could you be more specific on this? After all, the Roscos and Tocs were not owned by the City institutions at privatisation, and nor was Railtrack. So, which financial institutions exactly benefited from these reserved shares? On the other hand, a lot of lawyers and accountants did very well out of the complex restructuring. They didn't buy any part of the system, but were well paid for helping carve it up. Major's government probably did sell it all off too cheaply, not so much as to benefit their pals, but to make sure it all got sold off before they lost power. They also made it as complex as possible for an incoming Labour government to re-nationalise it. So it was ideology (and incompetence by a tired, failing government), not spivery, at work. |
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