1. I've noted the conversation on fare rises and their restriction this year to price index plus 1%. Some say "more subsidy" but others aren't so sure. And personally, there are so many government inputs and outputs, I simply don't know where the balance really lies.
2. I've been trying to get to the true cost of running the
UK▸ rail's services and see all sorts of costs and money flows in and out. And also to look at how very different services / service groups fit in.
So I'll be drawing up a diagram to try to help to see how all the major elements of the picture go together, and I would really appreciate soe help and inputs from readers here - via posts, p.m.s, emails - (I'm
graham@wellho.net)
QuestionsIncome
For every 100 pounds I spend with a train operating company (let's take
FGW▸ as our example) at one of their ticket offices, how much other income do they get and from where?
- Payments from central government to help run the services
- Payments from local government to help subsidise services
- Receipts from other activities such as catering and car parking (perhaps via intermediate agents such as
APCOA▸ )
-
VAT▸ refund? Rail tickets are non vatable, but much of the expenditure by a
TOC▸ must attract VAT.
- Any other major income streams?
Expenditure
Where does that "100 + x " pounds go? How much goes on each of the following major organisations?
- Payments to Network Rail
- Payments to Central Government /
DfT» Rail / Treasury for franchise, business rates of properties, VAT on any vatable sales, etc?
- Payments to RoSCos
- Any others -
ORR» ,
ACoRP▸ ,
RAIB▸ ,
ATOC» , National Rail,
BTP▸ , Passenger Focus (or do they go via and are thus included in the above?)
And how much goes on ...
- Cost of operational staff (how does that split in terms of net salary, tax and NI, and offices / training etc)
- Cost of management staff (again, net paybill and tax / NI split would be interesting, and offices / training etc)
- Ditto for other staff (call center teams, etc)
- Ditto for contracts / contractors to assist, such as Group 4.
- Cost of maintaining stations and other infrastructure and systems that are TOC's responsibility
- Cost of maintaining rolling stock that's not included in the RoSCo payments listed above
- Cost of fuel (and how much of that is tax that goes back to the government)
- Capital investment in new facilities / direct purchase of rolling stock, etc
- Payments to parent company (inc. Corporation tax?)
- Shareholder dividends (and how much of that is pulled back as tax?)
- Cost of preparing and maintaining current franchise contract and future franchise bids
- Profit / retained
- What else have I overlooked?
If income exceeds expenditure, where does the spare go? If expenditure exceeds income, how is the gap filled?The fare income from a 125, running at over 100 m.p.h. with 8 cars and loaded up to 140% with passengers paying up to 70p per mile for the journey is very different from
the fare income from a 150 or 153 running to Newquay, Looe, Gunnislake, Severn Beach at around 30 m.p.h., perhaps lightly loaded in winter and with fares around 25p per mile ... and the expenses differ too though not (I suspect) as dramatically. Help in splitting out the figures above as they relate to 100 pound spend on main line tickets, and 100 pounds spend on typical "West" journeys, would be appreciated too.