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On Thu, 17 Apr 2014 14:20:01 +0100, Robert
wrote: On 2014-04-14 15:15:43 +0000, said: On Sunday, April 13, 2014 9:24:47 PM UTC+1, 77002 wrote: Thameslink to Milton Keynes by way of Luton Airport would be a winner. The nationalized railway with the butcher at the helm ensured that this is unlikely ever to happen. To be fair, I doubt it would have made any difference had the Big 4 railway companies been left running the network after WW2 - when the losses set in during the 1950s, they would all have gone bankrupt and the same kind of wholesale axing of the network, and possibly something much worse, would have been the result. Beeching was indeed a butcher (and the Labour government who implemented his plan after winning power by promising not to was worse), but nationalisation was not, of itself, to blame. Predicting alternative history is always difficult, especially the further in the past the decision point occurs so the number of possible variables increase. It is impossible to determine what would have happened if one variable changed. The effect would have rippled thru subsequent events. We can only speculate. For example, if the railways had not been nationalised then did that happen because the then Government decided not to do so, This is most likely. We would have to assume the big four were not on the Labour party's nationalization shopping list. or because a Government of another political persuasion had been elected? This is unlikely. Winston Spencer Churchill had the nation's gratitude for his wartime leadership. With peace the national mood had changed. It was time for a new government. Did all other aspects of the social and political framework remain as we know they did, or were there changes? If the railways had /not/ been nationalised would they have been able to continue to function as independent companies as they had done pre-war or would they have been under central government control through the Railway Executive of the Ministry of Transport in the same manner as they had been during the war? This is possible but unlikely. The possible outcomes depend strongly on which set of choices were made at the time. If the Labour Party had not won the 1945 General Election what would the economic and political landscape have looked like? In any event there would certainly have been a difficult economic period as the country tried to recover from the war with, at the same time, its European export markets having effectively ceased to exist. The USA was no longer a supporter but a competitor, so other markets around the world would become more competitive. My own take on the situation is that the biggest constraint on the railways was the lingering 'Common Carrier' obligation which made it impossible for the railways to compete with road goods transport effectively. The 'Big 4' had campaigned for this to be dropped before the war in the 'Square Deal' campaign and abolishing it immediately after the war would probably have had made a bigger difference to the attitude and organisation of the railways, by making it necessary to have proper management accounts, than being nationalised per se. You are correct in your analysis. But would dropping the common carrier obligation gel with Labour's statist style of management? By having to have proper accounts and sales teams, rather than just 'Goods Agents', would have meant that the railways would have been converted into a modern industry 15 years earlier than was in fact the case. These 15 years would have given the railways a fighting chance to have adapted to cope with the changes in the structure of British industry and the moves towards a more mobile society. Although many of the branches and some of the duplicate lines may have still closed, the manner of operation of the rest of the railways is likely to have changed greatly and the costs of operation reduced. Don't forget that pre-war the railways were experimenting with diesel traction and planning electrifications - there is no reason to suppose that operating procedures would not also have changed to improve the service and reduce costs. As it was the closures were inevitable as the railways in 1962 were stuck in a timewarp which started in 1939 - a period of over 20 years with no changes in attitudes, revenue or cost attribution, products or production methods. In the meantime the world had moved on. London had had a transport plan for some time. Rail was seen as critical to moving London's workers. It is hard to see the lack of momentum that gave us the Victoria Line. So, perhaps that would be the birth of the idea of the socially necessary railway in other conurbations. However this assumes that the Government would not have tried to get involved in the railways' affairs in the name of 'social cohesion' or 'the railway as a lifeline' or 'bringing jobs to depressed areas' or some such by the back door. If such aims were politically desirable then the concept of the 'social railway', funded by explicit subsidies to the private companies, would have pre-dated the 1968 Transport Act by fifteen to twenty years. By the 80s Britain may have been re-opening main line and creating a system for the future. It is so hard to tell. But, one has to think that by that point the need would be obvious. By then London may have becoming a British Los Angeles with giant clogged motorways and severe smog. So, like LA the return of rail would be welcomed. Even more. If there had been a series of individually small changes in the UK during the Forties, Fifties and Sixties matching the political landscape to the evolving world economic landscape, would Mrs. Thatcher have been elected in 1979? Would there indeed have been the perceived need for Mrs. Thatcher - or somebody much like her? The Baroness? a woman of destiny. -- http://www.991fmtalk.com/ The DMZ in Reno |
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