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#1
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One of the Mail's more intelligent (limited competition admittedly)
writers, Tom Utley, has a column re the wastefulness of giving people like him free travel. I thought it was only available after 9.30 but so as to exclude those in most regular jobs but on checking the 9.30 rule now only applies to overground rail, not buses or the underground. Since when? It does seem unduly generous also unfair to those whose main PT is rail (remember LB Bromley's challenge to Fares Fair because they had no underground in their borough) http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/ar...s-let-one.html -- TonyB |
#2
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One of the Mail's more intelligent (limited competition admittedly)
writers, Tom Utley, has a column re the wastefulness of giving people like him free travel. I thought it was only available after 9.30 but so as to exclude those in most regular jobs but on checking the 9.30 rule now only applies to overground rail, not buses or the underground. Since when? I think it was 09:00 in London until Ken Livingstone promised to scrap the limit in an attempt to win the 2008 mayoral election. It does seem unduly generous also unfair to those whose main PT is rail (remember LB Bromley's challenge to Fares Fair because they had no underground in their borough) In the interests of terminological exactitude (which of course guarantees I won't get it right) the 09:30 rule applies to National Rail other than the London Overground - a cruel trap for an ageing traveller who mostly starts with the latter but very occasionally marches into Hackney Downs too early ![]() ageing_policy_wonk_stuff I also regret Boris's election promise (spot the pattern!) to give free travel at age 60 rather than letting the threshold continue to rise with pension age. That handed a big stick to those who want to introduce a means test. But Tom Utley (like so many) is a wee bit one-sided on a means test for universal benefits generally: a. he slides over who will and won't be entitled. It's easy to talk of "wealthy pensioners", much harder to define them. (And I wonder how Mr Utley would defend eg instant Freedom Passes along with other benefits for elderly immigrants but not for pensioners retiring on a modest pension after 45 years working in a London old folks home?) b. many old people *still* don't claim means-tested benefit: check the DWP's figures; so the benefits don't reach many of their (alleged) target population. Does he know/care? c. the admin costs are high unless free travel is "passported" off another means-tested benefit such pension credit. That creates an (even bigger) trap where those who work, contribute to a pension and save end up worse off than those who do bugger-all: hardly "incentives to save for our old age"; d. any trade-offs like "greater tax incentives to save for our old age" are too bloody late for those already there; e. there's an exisiting system for dealing with "who's wealthy?" called the tax system, and taxing the benefit of Freedom Passes etc would be more rational - but still complicated. That said, I'm resigned to a means test being introduced after the election as the media (led by the BBC) have spread the meme that universal benefits for pensioners are unfair to the young and unaffordable. /ageing_policy_wonk_stuff -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
#3
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In message , at 17:30:49 on
Fri, 7 Feb 2014, Tony Bryer remarked: One of the Mail's more intelligent (limited competition admittedly) writers, Tom Utley, has a column re the wastefulness of giving people like him free travel. It's "wasteful" giving the affluent older any sort of concession: (theatre/movie/museum tickets, Over-60 railcard, Winter Fuel allowance, State Pension, Free Prescriptions etc). But although there are signs of weakening at the edges, these are all entitlements that people have paid for over their working lives, and are not means tested at the point of delivery. -- Roland Perry |
#4
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In message , at 09:23:06 on
Fri, 7 Feb 2014, Paul Corfield remarked: I thought it was only available after 9.30 but so as to exclude those in most regular jobs but on checking the 9.30 rule now only applies to overground rail, not buses or the underground. Since when? Since the 2008 Mayoral Election campaign when both Ken and Boris promised to extend the hours it could be used on TfL services. Years of negotiation have failed to secure an earlier start on National Rail services - presumably because the TOCs want an astronomic amount of "compensation" for lost revenue. Why should the TOCs allow free travel? At the very least what Boris should do is pick up the tab for all TOC trips made by the over-60's, *paying the regular price* whatever that is according to the time of day. Surely the numbers for that will drop out of the Oyster computer 'at the press of a button'. If it's unaffordable, then don't do it; but at least everyone would know where they stand [or where they sit, offpeak perhaps]. -- Roland Perry |
#5
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 09:23:06 on Fri, 7 Feb 2014, Paul Corfield remarked: I thought it was only available after 9.30 but so as to exclude those in most regular jobs but on checking the 9.30 rule now only applies to overground rail, not buses or the underground. Since when? Since the 2008 Mayoral Election campaign when both Ken and Boris promised to extend the hours it could be used on TfL services. Years of negotiation have failed to secure an earlier start on National Rail services - presumably because the TOCs want an astronomic amount of "compensation" for lost revenue. Why should the TOCs allow free travel? At the very least what Boris should do is pick up the tab for all TOC trips made by the over-60's, *paying the regular price* whatever that is according to the time of day. Surely the numbers for that will drop out of the Oyster computer 'at the press of a button'. If it's unaffordable, then don't do it; but at least everyone would know where they stand [or where they sit, offpeak perhaps]. The TOCs don't fund the free travel for the over 60s. As I understand it, the London boroughs pay for those entitled to a full Freedom pass, and TfL pays for those over 60 but not yet entitled to the Freedom pass. But the cost can't be calculated easily on a journey by journey basis, so gross estimates have to be used, and are subject to negotiation. |
#6
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Why should the TOCs allow free travel? At the very least what Boris
should do is pick up the tab for all TOC trips made by the over-60's, *paying the regular price* whatever that is according to the time of day. Surely the numbers for that will drop out of the Oyster computer 'at the press of a button'. Why should the charge be based on "the regular price"? That seems a remarkably crude approach (c/f your own arguments about airline pricing in December). Any normal person buying in such bulk would expect - and get - a substantial discount as the TOCs get in return a secure source of revenue with few overheads. What's wrong with starting from the long-run marginal cost (LRMC) to the TOC (including of course loss of revenue from other customers displaced) plus a profit margin? Of course if the LRMC is too high then something has to give. Eg I'd be inclined to keep the pre-09:30 exclusion if that is where there would be significant displacement and so additional cost. But let's not pretend the TOCs are losing significant revenues from, say, me getting a train mid-afternoon which is c10% loaded for a journey I'd rarely make if I had to pay the full fare. -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
#7
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On Fri, 7 Feb 2014 10:56:26 -0000 Robin wrote :
Why should the charge be based on "the regular price"? That seems a remarkably crude approach (c/f your own arguments about airline pricing in December). Any normal person buying in such bulk would expect - and get - a substantial discount as the TOCs get in return a secure source of revenue with few overheads. What's wrong with starting from the long-run marginal cost (LRMC) to the TOC (including of course loss of revenue from other customers displaced) plus a profit margin? Of course if the LRMC is too high then something has to give. Eg I'd be inclined to keep the pre-09:30 exclusion if that is where there would be significant displacement and so additional cost. But let's not pretend the TOCs are losing significant revenues from, say, me getting a train mid-afternoon which is c10% loaded for a journey I'd rarely make if I had to pay the full fare. Agreed. The LMRC (unless services were increased to cope with demand) is near nil, so the key number is how much this group would be spending on fares in the absence of free travel. With an 0900/0930 restriction, the answer is probably not a lot; remove this and you add in large (and increasing) numbers of those in work who have to travel and will pay the standard fare. I now live in Melbourne where at 60 if you sign that you are no longer in full time work (I don't know whether they check) you are eligible for concession fares, half the adult fare, free travel at weekend. London is more than a little generous by comparison. -- Tony B |
#8
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In message , at 10:56:26 on Fri, 7 Feb 2014,
Robin remarked: Why should the TOCs allow free travel? At the very least what Boris should do is pick up the tab for all TOC trips made by the over-60's, *paying the regular price* whatever that is according to the time of day. Surely the numbers for that will drop out of the Oyster computer 'at the press of a button'. Why should the charge be based on "the regular price"? Because that's what each over-60 would have paid, absent the discount card. That seems a remarkably crude approach (c/f your own arguments about airline pricing in December). Any normal person buying in such bulk would expect - and get - a substantial discount as the TOCs get in return a secure source of revenue with few overheads. What's wrong with starting from the long-run marginal cost (LRMC) to the TOC (including of course loss of revenue from other customers displaced) plus a profit margin? Because many of the trains are already over-subscribed, and flooding them with pass-holders may well put off regular travellers. -- Roland Perry |
#9
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 10:56:26 on Fri, 7 Feb 2014, Robin remarked: Why should the TOCs allow free travel? At the very least what Boris should do is pick up the tab for all TOC trips made by the over-60's, *paying the regular price* whatever that is according to the time of day. Surely the numbers for that will drop out of the Oyster computer 'at the press of a button'. Why should the charge be based on "the regular price"? Because that's what each over-60 would have paid, absent the discount card. Sure, but most wouldn't have travelled at all. That seems a remarkably crude approach (c/f your own arguments about airline pricing in December). Any normal person buying in such bulk would expect - and get - a substantial discount as the TOCs get in return a secure source of revenue with few overheads. What's wrong with starting from the long-run marginal cost (LRMC) to the TOC (including of course loss of revenue from other customers displaced) plus a profit margin? Because many of the trains are already over-subscribed, and flooding them with pass-holders may well put off regular travellers. Not after 9:30. Plus Freedom pass holders on discretionary trips probably avoid travelling on packed trains. |
#10
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I now live in Melbourne where at 60 if you sign that you are no
longer in full time work (I don't know whether they check) you are eligible for concession fares, half the adult fare, free travel at weekend. London is more than a little generous by comparison. Very, very true. green-eyed-monster-mode But then you *do* get to live in Melbourne ![]() /green-eyed-monster-mode -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
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