From a much longer article in
The Oxford Student on
HS2▸ The origin of the decimation of Britain’s railways is the failed experiment of privatisation. In 1994, an embattled Conservative Government took it upon themselves to crown Thatcher’s wishes by selling British Rail into private hands. Unlike British Airways, however, the sale of British Rail could never seek to generate proper competition – it would never work, not even in theory.
Railways can only facilitate a single train at any one time. Railways consist of popular profitable routes and unprofitable routes serving smaller communities. Railways require large upfront investment to make progress. Air travel never had these issues. British Railways should’ve never been put into private hands.
If I were a businessman in 1994 and wanted to take advantage of the new rail liberalisation policy, my rail start-up could surely try and bring in a new competitive route from Leeds to London? Sadly, it couldn’t. The line would already be in use for another service. Even if I could secure a spot on the line, I’d have to win a contract from the government. The companies that win government contracts are granted exclusive rights to some of the most profitable routes for an extended duration of time.
Private rail companies are therefore (and by design) ...
The full situation is a complex one; the above (take the full article) written by an author who clearly has no love for our current government. He fails to mention the massive growth in passenger numbers on rail, for example. He is scathing on HS2 and makes points well.
The "private" ownership of the infrastructure ie Railtrack with the contracted out maintenance failed fairly early on with the formation of Network rail and bring in house key day to day maintenance. The franchise model for
TOC▸ 's had to be reshaped into bigger groupings eg the the merging of
FGW▸ and Thames Trains (there are other examples), today most of the TOCs are either run under contract, concession or operator of last resort.
Could
BR▸ have had the same growth as the privatised railway, yes if it had been allowed to, BR was a very innovative organisation, it could respond to market forces; BR had made many changes in operating practices. But it was hampered by the
DfT» and the Treasury.