(from the letter)
Your correspondent, Mick Stanley (Letters, February 1), has hit the nail on the head in saying that the recent December timetable instigated by First Great Western is based on shareholder satisfaction rather than that of its customers.
It is inaccurate to suggest that the December timetable was instigated by First. It wasn^t. The Department for Transport instigated the changes.
I also take issue with the, albeit thinly veiled and indirect, suggestion that it isn^t possible for a private company with shareholders to run a good railway service. This is an oft repeated statement and one that is a total fallacy.
Over the longer term, a private company has got to deliver a steady and continuous growth in profits to satisfy both shareholders and the City. It is only possible to delivery such growth by satisfying customers. Cutting costs to the detriment of customer service certainly delivers a short term profits boost, but it doesn^t deliver sustainable growth ^ if only because existing customers eventually desert the service and it becomes increasingly difficulty to attract new ones because of a poor reputation. The ultimate consequence of such a position is that it becomes very hard to grow the top line (or revenues) and having already undertaken a cost cutting exercise the company has nowhere to turn to grow the bottom line or profits. And that is precisely why no sensible private company looks after shareholders to the detriment of customers.
When properly managed, cost cutting does, of course, have a part to play. And so it should: it makes things cheaper for customers and provides more money for future investment as well as allowing a better return for shareholders who, incidentally, are one of the sources for future capital investment. But it isn't the engine of growth of most private organisations.
I accept that today^s railway is run on a short term basis and this is, indeed, one of the central causes of many of the current problems. But the short term nature is not a problem caused by private businesses it is a political problem brought about by an unsound franchising structure and a government that refuses to provide any long term strategic direction.