I think you're mistaking criticism for irony. Personally, I'm glad that those railways look like they'll be nationalised. It's just a bit of a joke that it turns out to be the privatisation Tories that end up doing it. Privatisation of the railways tends to be recipe for disaster. You only have to look at the fares and compare them to Europe to realise that: https://www.vouchercloud.com/resources/train-prices-across-europeAll this talk regarding the Tories nationalising some parts of the railway is confusing. When the Labour Party said they were going to nationalise it you were all for it. Now the Tories have started to nationalise the failing franchises you are criticising them. What on earth would you expect them to do? Surely you would criticise them if they took no action? I know they poo poohed the Labour Party for wanting to nationalise the whole system. To my knowledge they don’t intend going back on what they said. I just don’t see what they could do other than what they have! I think if they nationalise the southern it would be for the best. No one else has tried to do away with the guards that to me doesn’t make sense not having guards! But hey what do I know.
Train Prices Across Europe - The Results
The UK has reclaimed its rightful spot at the top of the 'ridiculously expensive train prices' pile, charging 55p per mile for railway passengers.
The only country that previously had more expensive trains than the UK is Norway - but after a price drop this year, they are now a slightly more modest 46p per mile.
... these two countries are a world ahead, however.
The UK charges twice as much as the next closest country, as Austria and Sweden have prices set at 27p per mile.
Compare this to Eastern Europe - a whopping 18 countries in Europe have prices set below 10p per mile, including Poland, Slovakia and Serbia. Remarkably, prices in Belarus sit at a ridiculous 1p per mile.
In fact, the average across the whole of Europe sits at a lowly 14p per mile, less than one third of the UK figure - despite it being equivalent in size to many countries included in the analysis.
Looking at the numbers in each country's respective native currency, more prices actually dropped year on year than increased - 16 countries saw a price reduction, 13 countries saw a price increase, and 9 remained the same.
The average price shift across Europe? Down. Despite the UK having the most expensive train prices across the whole of Europe, they still increased by 3.1% on average (2.9% on the specific London > Oxford route included in the study). Across Europe, prices were down 1.74% on average.