Yes, that is true but the private companies' false profit - which comes out of the subsidies - is an additional unnecessary expense borne by the taxpayer.
But a nationalised system is not expected to make profit -that's why it's public. The whole point is you chuck as much public money at it as you need to, to keep in the condition you deem acceptable. Hospitals, schools and libraries don't make money, and I don't hear you arguing their costs need to be somehow offset by mythical ones that do, no?If we go down the re-nationalisation route, the cost of keeping the unprofitable lines/routes running will need to be offset by the profits coming in from the profitable routes.
True. But presumably all lines are currently making a profit for their private owners, so if we nationalised and kept the ticket prices the same and matched the subsidies, then the treasury would suddenly be making a huge profit. So you could in fact lower ticket prices across the board and still break even, with no need to 'offset' certain lines.I am not talking about making a profit per se. What I am saying is that IF one of the premises of re-nationalisation is to retain all lines and routes which currently operate then it follows that some of these lines/routes will run at a loss. To balance the books, monies to maintain the operation of those loss-making routes has to come from those lines which are profitable. Hospitals, schools and libraries close all the time due to rising operational costs. There gets to a point where no further public money is going to be thrown at them so they close. If the same route is gone down with the railways, loss-making routes would eventually close which defeats one of the arguments for re-nationalisation.
Yes, but it would be the same amount of money that the taxpayer currently pays anyway. Only the 'ownership' would switch, from private the public.Maintaining those lines would require money
Public service? National assets?However, the Tories do not believe in such things.
Yes, but it would be the same amount of money that the taxpayer currently pays anyway. Only the 'ownership' would switch, from private the public.