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How Britain’s trains were derailed Foreigners can get us back on track

Railing against failure. Gerhard Joren/LightRocket via Getty Images.

Railing against failure. Gerhard Joren/LightRocket via Getty Images.


December 9, 2024   6 mins

An apocryphal British newspaper headline once read: “Fog in Channel; Continent Cut Off”. It’s a nice phrase — but, in theory anyway, its whiff of British exceptionalism has long-since evaporated. Many educated people, if you asked them, would these days be reluctant to concede that there’s anything distinctive about our culture, history or traditional institutions.

In truth though, I think the old aloofness has less vanished than mutated. If we’re now reluctant to wallow in the glories of our ancient Parliament, or lambast Papists on the Continent for their garlic and their tyranny, Britain today can feel as myopic as it did 200 years ago. That’s clear enough over our mindless worship of the NHS, and our utter reluctance to countenance something better. You might say the reverse about the EU. Never mind that it ships migrants to Libyan hellholes: for a tiresome kind of British liberal, it remains a progressive Utopia.

Yet I think it’s in the railways that our modern insularity is most pronounced. For years, Britons have tolerated shockingly low standards from Glasgow Central to Exeter St Davids, even as we seem bewilderingly unaware of the vast possibilities just across the sea. But whatever we’ve grown comfortable accepting, another world is possible, one that not only makes train travel cheap and easy — but also a sheer delight. For that to happen here, it’s finally time to look beyond our islands, and embrace foreign efficiency not just in the grand principle of nationalisation, but also in engineering and food, and simply too in grasping the fundamental point of a railway.

Labour partly won the election on a promise to renationalise the railways, all under the banner of Great British Railways. The mangled status quo of semi-privatisation is clearly no longer sustainable: compared to similar European countries, our railways underperform to an extraordinary degree. That’s clear, if nothing else, in the development of high-speed rail (HSR). Britain hasn’t added a single mile of high-speed line since November 2007, when the 67-mile dedicated link from St Pancras to the Channel Tunnel opened. Since then, we’ve had five general elections and seven Prime Ministers, but not a single mile of new HSR.

It took well over a decade to approve the HS2 project, which is still almost 10 years from completion — it is finally projected to open in 2033, over a quarter of a century on from HS1. The Spanish have had HSR since the early Nineties, enjoying almost 2,500 miles in total, much of it added in the last 20 years, even as British politicians twiddled their thumbs. France, for its part, has about 1,700 miles, while Germany boasts over 1,000. Despite growing pressure from reforming groups like Britain Remade, which publicises the endless systemic barriers to getting infrastructure built, there seems to be remarkable resistance among transport planners to learning from other countries.

When John Major’s government privatised British Rail in the Nineties, it separated private ownership of the track and infrastructure from private ownership of the train-operating companies. This approach had very few precedents anywhere on earth, and, sure enough, problems quickly arose. Railtrack, the company that initially held responsibility for maintenance, collapsed after a spate of crashes around the turn of the century, ascribed to poor repair and monitoring. It was later revealed that fragmented privatisation had led to a severe loss of expertise and institutional experience right across Railtrack, as experienced British Rail engineers weren’t retained.

Nor is the curious parochialism of British railways limited merely to technical issues or a consistent failure to deliver large projects. A constant bugbear of many British rail passengers is poor punctuality, and a lack of information about delays and other problems. If you pass through large London railway stations, you will occasionally see senior rail company managers enduring a “listening” session, with passengers invited to come and ask questions or express their frustrations. While I admire the intent and the willingness of high-ups to meet the public rather than leaving harassed station staff to their fate, it’s hard to see how this is much more than cosmetic. Persistent unreliability is a problem of systems and culture, and there are other countries, other rail operators, that operate much better in this area than Britain.

That’s clear enough from the statistics. The most recent figures suggest that only about 80% of British long-distance trains arrive on time. By contrast, the Baltics, Scandinavia and the Low Countries all enjoy a rate of 90% or higher. Spain and Austria are in the same boat, and even Bulgaria, the poorest country in the EU, manages 89%. Further afield, the Japanese railways are famously proud of their punctuality: delays of just a few minutes, which British passengers would barely notice, are treated as serious failures in Kyoto or Osaka. How exactly the Japanese achieve this is unclear, but it appears to be a combination of powerful cultural norms around service and excellence, and a demanding management style where individuals are rigorously held to account.

In fairness, there have been stories of fact-finding missions abroad by British rail bosses and politicians. The late John Prescott visited Japan during his time as Transport Secretary. Executives from Avanti West Coast, the firm that currently operates the West Coast Main Line and is 30% owned by Trenitalia, are said to have visited Italy for consultations, while British officials also visited the Nordic countries to discuss rail operations there.

The difficulty here is translating useful observations into concrete improvements. But that would require serious changes in mindset, attitude and working practices; it certainly can’t be claimed that technical barriers are an insurmountable problem. Consider something like wifi, with one recent report finding that Britain has among the worst onboard access on earth. Having travelled by train, I can entirely believe this. But other railways, many of them in places we might once have regarded as less prosperous or sophisticated than ourselves, provide first-class internet as a matter of course. Eastern European nations, which have only experienced real prosperity in the last two or three decades, have not had the time to become complacent about their wealth and comfort. They therefore understand the need to keep developing and innovating in infrastructure and service.

“Railways in places we might once have regarded as less prosperous or sophisticated than ourselves provide first-class internet as a matter of course.”

Not that all of Britain’s railway woes are technical. Long-distance rail travellers in, say, Italy, will hardly fail to notice the high quality of the food on offer. Trenitalia menus advertise “light recipes packed with flavour” and dishes created by culinary luminaries like Carlo Cracco. In practice, that encompasses everything from salads and charcuterie to beer, bubbly and fresh Illy coffee. It’s a far cry from the lukewarm sausage rolls and pre-packed sandwiches typical of British railways — but surely it shouldn’t be impossible to prepare some decent English fare in a train galley.

Other amenities are clearly better elsewhere too. Finland, for instance, provides play areas in some carriages. That’d obviously be useful in Britain, especially when childcare is so pricey. At any rate, introducing such perks here would require not so much a leap of technology as a shift in mindset, an openness to learning and developing rather than a “computer says no” assumption about how things are done.

Comparisons with other countries might also involve reflection on the kind of society that shapes the passenger experience. In a sense this is the hardest challenge of all. Culture is just so hard to prod in a positive direction; people get stuck in their ways, and find it hard to move the assumptions and perspectives which dominate beyond the station forecourt. Yet, shifting the dial isn’t impossible, if the will is there, and this is yet another arena in which British offerings can improve — especially if the newly renationalised Great British Railways can truly grasp the public’s imagination. One option is that GBR launches with explicit commitments to specific improvements, dovetailed with a public plan for how they’d be delivered. This would establish a clear expectation of accountability from the start.

Money, of course, is always a factor here. Running a railway line at a constant profit has always been tough, ever since the first routes were built 200 years ago. In the laissez-faire Victorian era, companies were forever going bust or being swallowed by larger competitors. Even now, private companies struggle without various forms of direct or indirect subsidy, partly explaining Starmer’s commitment to bring trains back under state control to start with.

The principle behind nationalisation — that the railways are something akin to a public service, and a fundamental good even if unprofitable by the laws of the market — is clearly largely true. Yet here, again, it would be good to see Labour look across the channel as they grapple with this bewilderingly complex policy area. Though both are state-controlled, France’s SNCF and Germany’s Deutsche Bahn enjoy different structures: while the former is entirely owned by government, the latter does have some private ownership, as does Trenitalia in Italy. Japan has an almost entirely private system, but a very impressive one that requires little subsidy, not least because private firms can also develop housing and other services on the land they own. Nationalisation, in short, is not a magic bullet. Among other things, it can incentivise under-investment, something Starmer should be conscious of as Great British Railways chugs out the station.

Beyond all this, though, I think there’s one more reason to examine the neighbours: to decide what railways are actually for. A weakness of Keir Starmer’s style is that he’s focused on procedures, not outcomes, perhaps unsurprisingly for a human rights lawyer. But ultimately, it’s very hard to quantify the precise benefits of a well-functioning rail system when constrained by a spreadsheet mentality. The gains are diffuse. They show up in different domains, in different ways, at different times. To commit yourself to achieving them requires stepping away from “process brain” and thinking about the common good, unseen costs and benefits, and gradual advances in public health and social contentment. Given the way Britain’s been run for the last several decades, that’s perhaps the fog that needs lifting most.


Niall Gooch is a public sector worker and occasional writer who lives in Kent.

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Andrew D
Andrew D
3 days ago

It’s like football and a lot of other things, we invent it, and foreigners do it better.

David Morley
David Morley
2 days ago

The conclusion seems to be than state run railway networks can run successfully, and privately run networks likewise – but the British can’t manage either. Why is that?

Could it be that there is just something a bit useless about the British social classes who run things.

Brendan O'Leary
Brendan O'Leary
2 days ago

The author praised Japan.
The forty years of nationalised rail (1947 – 87) in Japan had some high points but overall was not a great success, to be fair, in a period of declining trail travel in all OECD countries, ,and the system is now run by “100 private companies” to quote Wikipedia. Or should I say “once again run by private companies” since they after all built the railways in the first place. Much like the UK.
The author also praised Germany’s system, which despite its geographical advantages and much more evenly distributed demographics than UK, finds its rail system in a bit of a mess, as I’m sure many regular DB users will acknowledge.
And Austria, which I’ve noticed on business trips there has other companies than OBB.
From the viewpoint of northeast Scotland, I can say that I find LNER provides a generally superior services than ScotRail, on routes where a choice exists. And even ScotRail provides somewhat improved trains on those routes where it has to compete.
However we can only look with envy at southeast England, with its one high speed line providing an express route out of the UK, rather than connecting it to the rest of the country.

Rocky Martiano
Rocky Martiano
2 days ago

“But other railways, many of them in places we might once have regarded as less prosperous or sophisticated than ourselves”…
Recently took a return trip Beijing to Shanghai, 4.5 hours at 150 mph+, comfortable trains with three seat classes, wi-fi, refreshments. 12 trains a day in each direction, all punctual to within 30 seconds. Similar networks criss- cross China in all directions.
Anyone who thinks Europe is still the height of prosperity or sophistication will have their eyes opened by a visit to the Middle Kingdom.

Niels Georg Bach Christensen
Niels Georg Bach Christensen
2 days ago
Reply to  Rocky Martiano

We can’t build train lines a the chinese do. They don’t look at the people living there before the lines, an it’s strongly state supported.

Rocky Martiano
Rocky Martiano
2 days ago

Of course, but that’s the whole point of the article. Either you accept that good infrastructure and transport links are essential for a modern functioning economy, or you settle for second (or third) best as we do in the UK.
Both the French and Spanish rail systems which are cited in the article are heavily state supported.

Harry Phillips
Harry Phillips
2 days ago
Reply to  Rocky Martiano

Have you seen the newish Beijing Capital Airport?

Even the slower regional trains (sleepers) are very good in China. In fact, trains throughout much of Asia are superior to those in the UK – including Korea, Taiwan, Japan of course, and possibly even Malaysia.

Privatisation was a massive set back for UK rail. As bad, if not worse, was the loss of rail manufacturing – now reduced to assembly by Bombardier and Hitachi.

Rocky Martiano
Rocky Martiano
2 days ago
Reply to  Harry Phillips

Indeed. Airports, rail and road networks across much of Asia are far superior to those in the UK. New-high speed line being built from southern China, through sleepy Laos and Thailand, down to Malaysia and Singapore. We are being left behind in so many fields it’s debatable which are the third-world countries now.

Graham Cunningham
Graham Cunningham
2 days ago

Here’s my plan for a railway system of comparable quality to the foreign ones discussed here: Sack the entire railway workforce; sack the entire D of Transport workforce; sack the entire lawyer-parasite British political class…..and start again from scratch. Only kidding (mostly).

JR Stoker
JR Stoker
2 days ago

Sounds pretty sensible to me. The railway workforce below senior management level I would spare though; lions led by donkeys but unionised by dinosaurs. The structure brought in at privatisation was idiotic, just go back 100 years, that struture was fine. Just let it run as a series of businesses and the government’s sole role be to prevent the creation of abusive monopolies.

Andrew D
Andrew D
2 days ago

Over at the Spectator, Rory Sutherland has suggested that trains can be driven entirely by volunteers – there’d be no shortage of applicants for (say) a two-week stint. They’d need an hour or two of induction of course.

mac mahmood
mac mahmood
1 day ago
Reply to  Andrew D

Autonomous trains?

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
2 days ago

There’s a lot of “grass is greener” about this article. I’ve read a lot this year about how the German rail system is crumbling from decades of underinvestment. My son, who lives in Hamburg, would agree, although I travelled around Germany this summer with no problems.
France & Spain are much less densely populated, making HSR routes much easier to build. I travelled on. Spanish high-speed route from Valencia to Madrid a few years back. It was far from busy and the intermediate stops were almost deserted. Essentially, it was an EU-funded vanity project.
Privatisation has been very successful in increasing passenger numbers but the system is now full. There is very little capacity for running additional services. That said, I agree there is plenty of room for improvement but this seems impossible without tackling the unions.
Finally, Starmer should note that should he be successful in taking us back into the EU, the railway system will have to be re-opened to competition under EU directives.

Chipoko
Chipoko
2 days ago

British railways are crap!

Graham Stull
Graham Stull
3 days ago

The state of the British railways is indeed abysmal, compared to the Belgian national rail service SNCB, to name but one example. On a recent trip from London to Stockport, I found myself in the near comical situation of running to a platform alongside hundreds of other dismayed commuters, to just barely catch a train that had been cancelled and then, magically, reinstated once everyone had dispersed to search for bad, overpriced tea in the vicinity of Euston Station. Once on board, the train was full, uncomfortable and predictably arrived too late for us to get our connecting train, which was equally bad. And all for three times the price of an equivalent trip on the continent.
BUT, this also presents a tremendous opportunity for the country and a clever politician to renationalise, invest heavily and deliver a service that would revitalise the country. You could slogan it, “taking back control”. Lol.

Simon Phillips
Simon Phillips
3 days ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

The nationalisation thing was tried and it failed. This thesis also assumes we have “clever” politicians.

Graham Stull
Graham Stull
1 day ago
Reply to  Simon Phillips

Well, as I say, national rail companies are functioning – imperfectly, but still better – elsewhere so it MUST be possible.
You can’t pretend to believe that there is something inherently inept about the British political class, not shared with that of other Western nations?
There must be a man with the testicles to take on this challenge?

Peter B
Peter B
3 days ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

What makes you believe this is a problem that a change of ownership will solve ?
It’s far more likely that the serious problems here are deeply embedded ones of poor management, outdated working practices, appalling regulation and (in the case of building anything new in the UK) ridiculous over-regulation so that everything costs at least 5x what it needs to and takes at least 3x as long to build as it should.
The only way you can really change any of this is to bring in new people with fresh ideas. The very last place I’d be looking is within government and the public sector. The railways were never really nationalised in many ways – government ministers are still ordering new trains and handing out state subsidies to train operators.
My understanding is that funding for the railways has significantly increased over the last 30 years. The trains themselves are certainly newer and better. The fares are far higher and subsidies have apparently increased. I suspect that as in so many areas, we’re just getting a lot less back for the money.
I don’t necessarily object to renationalisation of railways. Just so long as we get better management and leadership in and start reducing all the overhead and planning delays.
Curious how one never hears the expression “value for money” these days. Politicians prefer to talk about “investment” (aka spending your money).

Andrew Dalton
Andrew Dalton
3 days ago
Reply to  Peter B

I agree. This is a structural problem.
My suspicion is that if government did nationalise the rail service again, it would be a semantic accounting change – government would employ private companies to provide a nationalised service instead of private companies subsidised to provide a free-market one. The punter would be left wondering what happened.
That said, I am a regular user of rail and it’s current state is abysmal.

Rasmus Fogh
Rasmus Fogh
2 days ago
Reply to  Peter B

New people with fresh ideas will only help if they are actually trying to make a better railway service. If their ideas are all about extracting maximum money to shareholders the travelling public is not likely to benefit. Nationalisation might at least serve to keep the rip-off artists at a distance.

Where do you think all that money is going anyway? My guess is dividends.

Jonathan Gibbs
Jonathan Gibbs
2 days ago
Reply to  Graham Stull

Any political class that can s***k £66 BILLION on a high speed link between population centres that are too close together to benefit (London/Birmingham) has rather lost that argument before it’s started.

John Riordan
John Riordan
3 days ago

“But ultimately, it’s very hard to quantify the precise benefits of a well-functioning rail system when constrained by a spreadsheet mentality. The gains are diffuse. They show up in different domains, in different ways, at different times.”

Here’s the problem with expecting any statist politician to open their eyes to such a reality: their entire existence to date has depended upon remaining blind to the millions of dispersed effects in markets that always result from statist intervention. It is only market-oriented economists and policymakers who pay any attention to that sort of stuff, and even they almost never get listened to.

Rasmus Fogh
Rasmus Fogh
2 days ago
Reply to  John Riordan

Markets are very good at providing profits for the people in control. How good are, for instance, the US health insurance companies at providing services for the sick, as opposed to providing profits for the owners? How much attention will a corporation pay to the dispersed effects in the marke that result from their own profit maximisation? Might Enron be a good example here?

Michael Kellett
Michael Kellett
3 days ago

I travel on trains a lot and find this article so depressing. Unfortunately, it’s very accurate.

John Tyler
John Tyler
2 days ago

The railways have been pushed into stagnation by a lethal concoction of monopoly mentality and union activity.

Udo Wieshmann
Udo Wieshmann
2 days ago

If the author finds the trains are running late in Britain, he should go to Germany. Delays are a well known problem there.

Simon Cornish
Simon Cornish
2 days ago

My understanding is that The French intercity railways are still very good but that regional railways which were once in the ownership of SNCF have been handed to regional authorities to run as they are less profitable. In consequence, the regional service has become underfunded and much less efficient. I believe the German railways are run in a similar pattern.

James Kirk
James Kirk
2 days ago

For all the Brexit unpleasantness from the Remain school, for 45 years we availed ourselves of the Brussels bureaucracy without taking advantage of euro expertise. We were more on the outside while we were ‘in’ regarding health, farming, infrastructure, transport.
The so called EUphile elite never considered seeking advantage then and now approach Brussels to report the sky is falling down.
Not, come and sort out our railways, our NHS etc. which even an avid Brexiteer would welcome. But we’ll welcome a Canadian Trudeauite to look after the bank.
Too late, Europe has fallen to our disease. They let Islam and socialism in to finish them off. Perhaps they’ll recover with their rightward swing?
“Dear Europe, Britain here. The sky is falling down.”

Christopher Chantrill
Christopher Chantrill
1 day ago

Here’s an idea. First get the NHS sorted. If Starmer & Co. can do that then I’d say they can get the railways sorted.
But don’t forget dear old Col. Sibthorp “who particularly hated railways — ‘the Steam Humbug’ — which he predicted would bring an array of disasters ranging from moral ruin to wholesale slaughter. Sibthorp enjoyed the support of at least one important supporter, the old Duke of Wellington, who was also suspicious of railways because “they encourage lower classes to move about.”
Yes. First let’s cancel RyanAir.

Richard Sharp
Richard Sharp
22 hours ago

Although I am a bit late and probably nobody will notice I feel obliged to comment on this. As a British person living near Hamburg who has travelled to Britain several times in the past few years and used the train system, I am deeply saddened that the British can so trash their country. Why can’t they, as I did, walk through Liverpool Street and Paddington and just take in the sheer beauty of the architecture, how clean and well appointed those stations are and how well the system runs.
The main station in Berlin is very good too, but it was rebuilt from the ground up, but Hamburg is small and shabby and hell to get through on a busy day. The rail system is a mess and getting worse. My son works for a company that do electrical work for Deutsche Bahn. The inside story is horrifying. The infrastructure is old and nearing end-of-life, as are the people who know how to maintain the ageing equipment. And DB knows it. They need to redo large parts of the network from the ground up, but many sections are too critical to be just shut down. Never mind that nobody knows where the money will come from.
My impression this year was that the system is getting to the point of being dysfunctional. If you really need to get somewhere for a flight or something really important you should consider other means of transport. When I was in Bristol this year I talked to somebody who related how disappointed many of the football fans were at how poorly the trains ran near Cologne. Up until then they thought “that doesn’t happen in Germany”. Well it does.
But what really disappoints me is that the British live in a country that has so much going for it. The countryside, the people, even the weather is not all that bad (try a grey German winter). British people are humorous, kind and polite. And yet all they can do is complain that things are going down the drain. And how much better it is elsewhere.
You can live a good life in Germany, and I do my best. But you can live a good life in Britain too, if you are prepared to look around a bit.