and here's the plain black-and-white truth ...
I recently saw this graph posted by a pal who suggested it was proof that the railways ought not to be re-nationalised. Well, it very much seems to make a strong statistical case that, historically, the railways have attracted much greater passenger numbers under private than public ownership.
Or does it?
Take that first big climbing curve (private ownership). Well that can't be counted as evidence of a popularity of private ownership as such. All that graph shows is the arrival of the railways and their great popularity as the only available way to travel long distances in comfort. Previous to that it had been only the horse-drawn coaches, pony and trap, or walking. As the infrastructure expands more journeys are possible hence the rise in numbers.
Next we see the stage at which the railway system is effectively rationalised into four monopolies and we can see that between 1923 and 1947 it all looks a bit higgledy piggleday. The railways, harnessed by a pre-privatisation programme of sorts, are seeing serious dips in journey. A case of passengers losing faith with the railways? Well, hardly, when you consider that that period covers the depression era and the catastrophic effect of the Second World War. The two spikes in this period by the way are owed, firstly, to the country emerging from depression and there being a bit more money about and, secondly c.1941, to the huge number of troops being transported on the train network.
So, then we get to the period of full nationalisation and we can see that until privatisation in 1995 the whole picture is horrid. 'Yah boo hiss! Nationalisation has killed the railways!!' the graph seems to tell us. Not quite. More a case of the state having had to step in when the entire system was on the verge of collapse. You can see in that era also the arrival of the motorways, the growth of car ownership and the decline in subsidy as funds are diverted into road building*. The dips there can also be evidenced in the Oil Crisis and the recessionary 70s , but notice the lusty rise out of that period at the start of the 80s as Peter Parker comes on board and introduces a new era of rail travel with the highly popular and well marketed Intercity 125 network. It's a new era for rail travel and the numbers are there to prove it, so what goes terribly wrong about '87.
Well, it's another crash again and we're headed into the doldrum of the 90s. Not to mention the fact that the politicians haven't invested in the railroads for decades. Moving on, the graph apparently suggests that as of full-scale privatisation in 1995 the nation so endorses the return of the rail network to private ownership that it simply can't get enough of choo choos and its use of the system just grows and grows. Or, any the other hand, people just don't stay at home any more.
And anyway, if a privatised railway system is so great, how is it so expensive and how is it that the taxpayer still subsidises it?
All this graph does in fact is remind us of the old adage ... there are lies, damn lies - and statistics.
* Honourable mention here for Ernest Marples, Minister for Transport, who commissioned all those thousands of miles of motorways and who, er, owned a huge road construction company (commissions included the Hammersmith and Chiswick flyovers) . Natch. But of course, he sold that company during his time as Minister to avoid ANY conflict of interest. Yes. Yes, to his wife who apparently was most insistent that he buy back the company from her as such time as he was no longer transport minister and at the very same share price despite the value of the stock having soared.
I recently saw this graph posted by a pal who suggested it was proof that the railways ought not to be re-nationalised. Well, it very much seems to make a strong statistical case that, historically, the railways have attracted much greater passenger numbers under private than public ownership.
Or does it?
Take that first big climbing curve (private ownership). Well that can't be counted as evidence of a popularity of private ownership as such. All that graph shows is the arrival of the railways and their great popularity as the only available way to travel long distances in comfort. Previous to that it had been only the horse-drawn coaches, pony and trap, or walking. As the infrastructure expands more journeys are possible hence the rise in numbers.
Next we see the stage at which the railway system is effectively rationalised into four monopolies and we can see that between 1923 and 1947 it all looks a bit higgledy piggleday. The railways, harnessed by a pre-privatisation programme of sorts, are seeing serious dips in journey. A case of passengers losing faith with the railways? Well, hardly, when you consider that that period covers the depression era and the catastrophic effect of the Second World War. The two spikes in this period by the way are owed, firstly, to the country emerging from depression and there being a bit more money about and, secondly c.1941, to the huge number of troops being transported on the train network.
So, then we get to the period of full nationalisation and we can see that until privatisation in 1995 the whole picture is horrid. 'Yah boo hiss! Nationalisation has killed the railways!!' the graph seems to tell us. Not quite. More a case of the state having had to step in when the entire system was on the verge of collapse. You can see in that era also the arrival of the motorways, the growth of car ownership and the decline in subsidy as funds are diverted into road building*. The dips there can also be evidenced in the Oil Crisis and the recessionary 70s , but notice the lusty rise out of that period at the start of the 80s as Peter Parker comes on board and introduces a new era of rail travel with the highly popular and well marketed Intercity 125 network. It's a new era for rail travel and the numbers are there to prove it, so what goes terribly wrong about '87.
Well, it's another crash again and we're headed into the doldrum of the 90s. Not to mention the fact that the politicians haven't invested in the railroads for decades. Moving on, the graph apparently suggests that as of full-scale privatisation in 1995 the nation so endorses the return of the rail network to private ownership that it simply can't get enough of choo choos and its use of the system just grows and grows. Or, any the other hand, people just don't stay at home any more.
And anyway, if a privatised railway system is so great, how is it so expensive and how is it that the taxpayer still subsidises it?
All this graph does in fact is remind us of the old adage ... there are lies, damn lies - and statistics.
* Honourable mention here for Ernest Marples, Minister for Transport, who commissioned all those thousands of miles of motorways and who, er, owned a huge road construction company (commissions included the Hammersmith and Chiswick flyovers) . Natch. But of course, he sold that company during his time as Minister to avoid ANY conflict of interest. Yes. Yes, to his wife who apparently was most insistent that he buy back the company from her as such time as he was no longer transport minister and at the very same share price despite the value of the stock having soared.
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