Nibble
New member
- Jan 3, 2007
- 19,238
The latter is usually a necessity in order to deliver the former over a sustained period of time.
There is certainly an argument for that being the case. However, this depends on the character of the profiteers. I can't see many shareholders really caring that much what the service is like, people don't buy shares to improve the service for the end user, they buy shares as an investment.
If you have someone in charge of the private rail companies that may look beyond their tenure and not just concentrate on the money they can personally make during their leadership then that could help but the evidence suggests we don't have that,