How much of that is provided to rail track (ignore in HS2 which is an investment project)?Which Tyler wrote:£5.3 Billion p.a. (higher currently with HS2)Sandydragon wrote: The price of the fare is far too high - but the only way to reduce that is for the government to subsidise by some means. The current model means that the railways cost the government nothing (or very little in the great scheme of things).
https://fullfact.org/economy/how-much-d ... -railways/
From Wiki
So half of the total spend is provided by government, to its ALB Railtrack, and the rest is the spend from the franchises, probably with a small government overhead along the way to manage the franchise system.The financing of the rail industry in Great Britain is how rail transport in Great Britain is paid for. Most of the industry's income comes from passengers, with the government also providing rail subsidies, and income from property and freight also providing a small proportion. The majority of the expenditure (£12.1 billion) is spent by train operating companies on leasing/maintaining trains, paying staff, and purchasing fuel. Network Rail spends the other £6.6 billion on maintaining and upgrading track, stations, tunnels, signals and bridges.