China's Trillion-Dollar Bet on High-Speed Rail Transformation (msn.com) 136
China's high-speed rail network, which has tripled to nearly 30,000 miles under President Xi Jinping's leadership, faces mounting financial challenges amid aggressive expansion plans. China State Railway Group, the national operator, has accumulated nearly $1 trillion in debt and liabilities, requiring $25 billion annually for debt service.
Despite this, plans call for adding 15,000 more miles by 2035. While flagship routes between major cities like Beijing and Shanghai remain profitable, newer lines into rural regions are struggling with low ridership. In Sichuan province's Fushun County, which received high-speed rail service in 2021, stations built for thousands sit largely empty despite having 12 high-speed rail stops within a 40-mile radius.
The expansion has become a symbol of China's technological advancement but raises concerns about economic viability. Ticket prices are maintained at about one-quarter of global averages to ensure public access, limiting profit potential. The railway operator turned a modest $460 million profit in 2023, aided by government subsidies, after three years of losses during the pandemic.
Despite this, plans call for adding 15,000 more miles by 2035. While flagship routes between major cities like Beijing and Shanghai remain profitable, newer lines into rural regions are struggling with low ridership. In Sichuan province's Fushun County, which received high-speed rail service in 2021, stations built for thousands sit largely empty despite having 12 high-speed rail stops within a 40-mile radius.
The expansion has become a symbol of China's technological advancement but raises concerns about economic viability. Ticket prices are maintained at about one-quarter of global averages to ensure public access, limiting profit potential. The railway operator turned a modest $460 million profit in 2023, aided by government subsidies, after three years of losses during the pandemic.
Re:California High Speed Rail (Score:5, Interesting)
In China's case, this may also be a similar proposition: If you count the rail service as a stand-alone, for profit business, it looks like it's losing money but if you look at the bigger picture, it's helping to stimulate & grow the whole economy. That China is building the world's largest & fastest rail network in history means that they need to invest a lot of money in it. I think the trick is to look at it over the longer term to see what it contributes overall, i.e. "the big picture." - Let's see.
Meanwhile, countries that insist that all infrastructure & public services need to be private, for-profit, self-sustaining entities that make a healthy return on investment (ROI) for VC/shareholders (even though that ROI may have to be tax payer subsidised, i.e. public money anyway) may find that they get left behind.
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Meanwhile, countries that insist that all infrastructure & public services need to be private, for-profit, self-sustaining entities that make a healthy return on investment (ROI) for VC/shareholders (even though that ROI may have to be tax payer subsidised, i.e. public money anyway) may find that they get left behind.
Fortunately, the US never demands that roads pay for themselves.
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In China's case, this may also be a similar proposition: If you count the rail service as a stand-alone, for profit business, it looks like it's losing money but if you look at the bigger picture, it's helping to stimulate & grow the whole economy. That China is building the world's largest & fastest rail network in history means that they need to invest a lot of money in it. I think the trick is to look at it over the longer term to see what it contributes overall, i.e. "the big picture." - Let's see.
China is doing a good thing in terms of building out national infrastructure. The part that might be bad is in building out train lines to unnecessary places that have little traffic. Those lines don't contribute to the economy and are just for glory and propaganda. China has likely already built the train lines they need, and the new lines are more for glory and propaganda. This is an example of China's great strength and weakness, having a strongman who can dictate whatever he wants.
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As I see it, it's probably a much bigger problem that they are building multiple HSR stations in places where there is little use than that they are building the lines to places which are currently not producing much traffic. Every station makes HSR less HS, so any through trains are suffering for that. Figure out where you want the sites, set aside the land, build them later.
On the other hand, building stuff is a jobs program that keeps their ability to build things going, which is handy for all kinds of e
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. In Australia they often propose a High Speed rail line between Sydney and Melbourne with the claim that the land sales along the route would easily pay for the line.
It's also the most profitable (or maybe the second-most. It moves around) airline route in the world. There is a huge vested interest in not having a convenient, efficient, low-carbon alternative.
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High speed rail doesn't have to be profitable. Besides select routes, rail in general usually isn't.
However it can bring wealth to the regions it connects, resulting in higher tax revenue, which pays for the subsidies railway operators may get.
All Tranport Needs Public Infrastructure (Score:2)
High speed rail doesn't have to be profitable. Besides select routes, rail in general usually isn't.
It depends on how you define your profit. The problem with passenger transport companies is that you are competing with road vehicles which use an infrastructure that is heavily subsidized by government. Commercial long-distance coaches would be massively more expensive if they actually had to pay for the road infrsastructure that they use and even airlines get to use airports whose construction is paid for by governments, similarly ports for ships and ferries and usually government owned or subsidized. Ot
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I used to criticize California High-speed rail because of fiscal concerns. Then I realized, California is going into debt no matter what. Sacramento will find something to spend money on. So we might as well get something concrete from it. And high-speed rail is a decent thing.
And then there is PA.
There was a proposal to build a high speed rail here some years ago. Philadelphia to Pittsburgh. And the question that killed it was "What will it be used for?" and the answer was "To get back and forth between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh." Turns out there were not that many people that ever wanted or needed to do that. So the extremely expensive rail system through the Ridge and valley region to the Allegheny front and Laurel Highlands kinda died right there. It is a beautiful state
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The entire Pennsylvania Turnpike essentially goes from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh with some very expensive tunnels through the mountains. USAir used to have a flight every hour from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh. I'm not saying an HSR connection would be economical, but going from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh is a pretty normal thing to do.
If you want to see some scale of the project, take a look at the last section of Interstate 80 to be built. The area around Mackeyville to Snow Shoe. to It required moving mountains - no exaggeration - and was the single most expensive part of Interstate 80. In Mackeyville there is about 500 feet of sheer cliff for some miles created by the needed excavation. Nearing Snow Shoe they have an ongoing Acid drainage problem created by removing huge swaths of mountain and dumping the fill where needed, exposi
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Nearing Snow Shoe they have an ongoing Acid drainage problem created by removing huge swaths of mountain and dumping the fill where needed, exposing Iron pyrite, and of course the leachate from the fill.
A similar thing happened on Interstate 99 in Skytop, Pennsylvania.
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Nearing Snow Shoe they have an ongoing Acid drainage problem created by removing huge swaths of mountain and dumping the fill where needed, exposing Iron pyrite, and of course the leachate from the fill.
A similar thing happened on Interstate 99 in Skytop, Pennsylvania.
Oh yeah. Traveling through the area, the "fix" is almost comical. Plastic webbing over the mountain, then covered with Limestone. It sorta works, but now the webbing is showing through. So it will probably be an ongoing problem.
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In the old days the miners just let the acid flow and kill the environment.
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Seriously, New York to Pittsburgh is a pretty important route. So is Washington DC to Pittsburgh.
There's a reason Amtrak is adding a second daily train to PGH.
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Wonder if other high-speed rail projects have better economics?
Literally everyone. The sole purpose of the California HSR project is to make the UK not be the worst.
HSR in the UK is always going to be expensive compared to many other countries, for a variety of reasons, but it was utterly, monumentally fucked up by the Tories doing all the worst possible things including sheer spite and destroying what remained as the were leaving office.
Conservatives insist that the government is bad running things, and wh
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I think that it's still a favourable comparison (in favour of China) in this case. Because while they may have spent a huge sum of money to build it, they got 46,000 kilometers for that money, at an average cost of $17-21 million per kilometer. I've seen cost estimates as high as $320 million per kilometer for California. I also think that the deployment speed can't be overlooked. California will have spent 18 years building the first 275 kilometers of track. China builds out that amount of new track in aro
Re: California High Speed Rail (Score:1)
Exactly. Chiba uses their good credit rating for good, unlike the USA, for one.
Re: California High Speed Rail (Score:3, Interesting)
Hmm...you missed a spot.
The railway operator turned a modest $460 million profit in 2023, aided by government subsidies
Re: California High Speed Rail (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm...you missed a spot.
The railway operator turned a modest $460 million profit in 2023, aided by government subsidies
And you make that sound like a bad thing... Ironically it's beneficial for the economy to subsidise public transport as it helps people get from home to work for far less money. That money they save isn't wasted, it also goes back into the economy in the form of discretionary spending.
That surely has to be a better use of government funds than say, giving it to oil executives or spending it on putting up the Secret Service at inflated rates in the Grifter in Chief's hotel.
Re: California High Speed Rail (Score:2)
And you make that sound like a bad thing...
He said "in this case, China is making a profit." Except it's not.
Re: California High Speed Rail (Score:2)
Tesla has received barely any kind of subsidies at all, you're thinking of tax credits that the buyers receive.
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Hmm...you missed a spot.
The railway operator turned a modest $460 million profit in 2023, aided by government subsidies
If we look at the article, China has profitable lines, and unprofitable lines. And it should not be surprising that the lines that lose money are the ones outside of the urban areas.
It is an inescapable fact that mass transit, outside of heavily populated areas, loses money. If government wants mass transit in low volume areas, they must pay, up to nearly 100 percent.
Here in my area, we have mini-transit buses - think maybe 20 passengers - for outlying areas, and they are dispatched on a need basis. D
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swap out high speed rail for minibusses... And you wonder why Chinese infrastructure is so much better than America's
So you do not believe in Tofu Dregs? https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] https://www.youtube.com/shorts... [youtube.com] https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] They even export their superior infrastructure https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
And that's just a small sample of the supior infrastructure Pooh has implemented.
How many yuan did you collect for posting this?
Re: California High Speed Rail (Score:2)
According to the Phillips curve, sure. But the Phillips curve hasn't aged well. It turns out that governments can't simply spend their way out of recessions. It didn't even work for the great depression.
How much profit is not the only way to evaluate. (Score:1)
Whether it has value or not is not only how much profit it makes, although in this case they are making a profit.
Why not look at other factors. Like how much time everyone saves taking the trains, etc. Adding that all up per passenger multiplied by how much their time is worth as well as happiness. Why not look at other factors like pollution, or even national security.
It's the same as universal free education up to the tertiary level in e.g. Europe vs the USA or any other social programs Europe has but
Too many stops (Score:2)
The American mind (Score:5, Insightful)
can't comprehend that public services are perfectly fine to be run at break-even, or even at a modest loss, as long as the general public benefits from them.
Re:The American mind (Score:5, Informative)
Came here to say exactly this. It's a public service, it doesn't have to be profitable. It's a good way to spend taxpayer money.
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and not lose money.
Why? Pretty much every municipal water treatment plant loses money, that's why they're supported by taxpayer money. I LIKE civilization. I like that when I flush the shit goes down the drain and someone else takes care of it, I don't care that I have to pay taxes to support it. It's a public good that our tax dollars go to inspect meat packing plants and oil refineries, and I don't give a rip if it isn't a profitable. Civilization has a cost, suck it up and pay it.
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That sounds like a great idea, keep the Nazis fighting so that Russia can finish the job of "stomping" them.
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Profitability is just revenue minus expenses. It's a very narrow viewpoint if you're a government that everything you provide must be profitable.
Because there are other things that might be non-monetary benefits. I'm sure the US Interstate System doesn't exactly run a profit, but the ease at which goods move throughout the nation means the overall economy profits from it being ther
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Arguably though, we ought to make a highway run cost-neutral based on fees for highway use. Who pays what is obviously a potential argument, as is how the fees are collected. But that would cause the costs to be baked in to prices, and directly promote decreases in unnecessary trips and promote alternatives.
It's also why social programs, despite being "negative" (free money to people?!) are often more beneficial
It's interesting you mention that since that kind of ties in to the prior part. Here in CA we have a program called IHSS that pays people to provide home care for others. It doesn't pay much, but its pri
The Financial Reality. (Score:1, Flamebait)
can't comprehend that public services are perfectly fine to be run at break-even, or even at a modest loss, as long as the general public benefits from them.
The story is about China. Also known as the one holding “nearly $1 trillion worth of debt and liabilities”, which is hardly a “modest” loss. That’s a financial problem for anyone holding that bag. You are hell and gone from break-even, even if that was and still is your financial mantra.
I’d be willing to bet most or all public services like this could be run at break-even. Now I wonder how many are saddled paying debt-plus-interest on building the damn thing. Gut fee
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Iâ(TM)d be willing to bet most or all public services like this could be run at break-even.
I'd be willing to let you take that bet since I know you haven't done the math.
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Iâ(TM)d be willing to bet most or all public services like this could be run at break-even.
I'd be willing to let you take that bet since I know you haven't done the math.
If most around the world can or are, then it can be done and project debt (or corruption) is the reason why.
If some around the world can or are, then it can be done but it is damn hard. Or took decades to get there after paying off the initial build.
If no one around the world can or has, then we’re discussing nothing but clickbait bullshit.
We’re betting on our own taxes anyway. No one really wins. Some lose less.
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trillion dollar debt for a vast modern high speed rail system, vs 1/2 trillion (2008 dollars) cost for the US Highway system.
pretty sure that infrastructure will pay massive dividends. especially when China starts asking the US to put it's CO2 emission money where it's mouth is.
We need free/low CO2 transport and there's basically no drop in replacement for air travel - except for high speed rail. US can't (and wouldn't) build it.
This is a gov't basically borrowing against lowering future disaster spendin
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A sizeable portion of them having just voted a climate denialist president into office for another four years, and their yardstick of success arguably being quarterly stock dividends, I'm un
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At which point China can pretty much go fuck off....
Not that we'd ever need to "answer" to them over something like this....but, they're the ones building coal plants left and right and generating the most pollution in the world currently.
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Are they perfect? of course not. They have power needs *now* and are building to support those.
They *ALSO* installed more solar power in 2023 than the US has *ever* installed. They have some of the largest grid scale batteries already in operation.
Etc. They are investing for a green future because they aren't playing stupid politics like the US is.
Infrastructure is build once and then zero fuel cost for 30+ years. Utterly stupid to ignore that benefit...but the US is trying.
Re:The Financial Reality. (Score:5, Insightful)
The story is about China. Also known as the one holding "nearly $1 trillion worth of debt and liabilities", which is hardly a "modest" loss. That's a financial problem for anyone holding that bag. You are hell and gone from break-even, even if that was and still is your financial mantra.
So nothing like the USA which is funnelling a large proportion of its revenues from its economy into the hands of a minority of private individuals who gamble with it, move it offshore to tax havens, & use it to undermine & corrupt its political system for their own benefit. Yeah, sounds like a much better use of a people's wealth.
Sure, complain about the US (Score:2)
You can complain about the US all you want, it won't change the fact that $1 trillion is a very problematic level of debt for a rail organization that is costing them $25 billion a year just in interest payments. Most countries don't even carry that much debt https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] .
I see no problem running rail at a loss for society's benefit but there are of course reasonable limits to that. When your rail system is racking up debt greater than that of most nations you're setting yourself up fo
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You mean the New Deal that was in response to the great depression of the 1930's? I have no idea how much we spent (it was a lot) but running up a bunch of debt to combat one of the greatest financial crisis the US has ever faced makes a hell of a lot more sense than going a trillion in debt strictly supporting a rail network. One prevented a lot of human suffering, the other is just bad planning and money management.
But hey, maybe unlike their ghost cities this will turn out to be a good long term investme
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Almost everything in the USA is moved around in trucks & cars due to the New De
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It's very clear from some comments in this thread that there are those that don't understand the value of rail networks, especially in a rapidly (though not rapidly enough!) de-carbonising world.
It's also apparent from reading the comments there are those that dont understand the value of money or have even read the linked to article. Money is a finite resource, that trillion is going to have to come from their government eventually as even servicing a 25 billion yearly interest bill is completely impossible on their rail company's meager profits let alone with their plans for expansion. That's money that could be spent on a whole lot of far more effective global warming reducing measures.
One of th
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A trillion dollars in debt for a rail system (and only a rail system) in the US would be insane and we have a much higher GDP than China.
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can't comprehend that public services are perfectly fine to be run at break-even, or even at a modest loss, as long as the general public benefits from them.
The question Chinese policymakers should be asking is whether the benefit to the general public would have been greater if they had invested $1,000,000,000,000 (plus $25,000,000,000 in annual debt service) on, for example, improving rural access to healthcare, job training programs, early childhood education, etc.
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can't comprehend that public services are perfectly fine to be run at break-even, or even at a modest loss, as long as the general public benefits from them.
The question Chinese policymakers should be asking is whether the benefit to the general public would have been greater if they had invested $1,000,000,000,000 (plus $25,000,000,000 in annual debt service) on, for example, improving rural access to healthcare, job training programs, early childhood education, etc.
You mean like drastically reducing extreme poverty at a breath-taking pace? e.g. https://www.bbc.com/news/56213... [bbc.com] Meanwhile, child poverty is increasing in the UK & USA.
How much did the USA spend on public infrastructure during the "New Deal"? How did that work out for ordinary citizens? Why isn't the US govt doing the same again to transition away from high-CO2 systems? Weren't there some proposals to do this a decade or so ago? What happened to those?
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You're expecting a South African billionaire to care about the lives and aspirations of the average American?
Lemon only cares about his bank balance.
Re:The American mind (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't understand the point you're trying to make. "China has lifted a lot of people out of poverty" doesn't establish that building high speed rail was better for their population than investment in other social programs, and a lot more goes into answering that question than assessing whether the programs break even or lose money.
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The point is that the state doesn't actually have to choose between one or the other once you establish a) they are programs within the authority granted to the state, b) they are net-positive benefit, and c) there is sufficient labor supply.
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This comment thread started with the point that a program doesn't need to monetarily break even. In that context this:
the state doesn't actually have to choose between one or the other once you establish a) they are programs within the authority granted to the state, b) they are net-positive benefit, and c) there is sufficient labor supply.
only holds to the extent that the state can fund those beneficial programs by raising revenue or borrowing. Such programs will (hopefully, if the "bet" described in the headline pays off) encourage growth in a way that increases the country's long term ability to raise revenue and borrow - the key qualifier there being "long term".
Don't take this as one of those "I can't believe we're fund
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Is your contention then that the Chinese government has a pool of labor and resource that they could direct towards whatever social programs they want, without having to make tradeoffs in pulling labor and resource from other activities? If not, then we're back where we started. The choice to invest labor and resources in infrastructure carries an opportunity cost that needs to be evaluated.
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The point is that the state doesn't actually have to choose between one or the other once you establish a) they are programs within the authority granted to the state, b) they are net-positive benefit, and c) there is sufficient labor supply.
Yep. This.
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It's weird how everybody has this mentality right now, and it's given a total pass, and is based on nothing.
here [nhfpi.org] is the poverty rate. Its net movement since 2000 is just about 0. It peaked in 2010, and has decreased steadily since then for the last 14 years except that in 2020 it took a 1-year dip due to covid handouts, which were totally unsustainable and caused a wave of inflation that took it all back, and more.
The "poverty is increasin
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The UK continues to do what it's always done: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] (Mitchell & Webb's "Kill the Poor").
Re:The American mind (Score:5, Interesting)
TFA makes the classic mistake if assuming that infrastructure was designed for today. Like the articles are ghost cities from a decade ago, which are now full of people. Those trains will create demand and fill up as people migrate from rural areas.
Re:The American mind (Score:5, Interesting)
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https://wonderfulengineering.c... [wonderfulengineering.com]
https://www.aljazeera.com/econ... [aljazeera.com]
Re:The American mind (Score:4, Informative)
This is simply nonsense. It's like that famous photo of the "subway station to nowhere", which is now in the middle of a busy neighborhood.
https://edition.cnn.com/travel... [cnn.com]
The Chinese are not compete idiots, they don't build entire cities randomly. It's just that late stage capitalism is failing to deliver this kind of infrastructure and improvement to people's lives, in fact it feels like it's going backwards, but communism must be worse so journalists have to lie about it. Not that China actually is communist, but there's another lie they like because it means anything they do must automatically be bad and a failure, not anything we could possibly learn from. Like how to build high speed rail.
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Nobody expects the US interstate highway system to make a profit. Or roads in general.
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Its always double standards wrt roads vs rail. Money spent on rail is "subsidy", money spent on roads is "investment". This mindset needs to change.
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Its always double standards wrt roads vs rail.
It's only a double standard because the assumption is that the proposal is double spending. Unless you're proposing to REPLACE a given road with rail you can't point at the cost of the road as justification to spend the same amount on rail. You certainly can't point at the cost X miles of road as a justification for spending the same money on a smaller number of miles of rail.
Most of the roads that the governments in the US (and the rest of the world) build and maintain would be needed no matter how much ra
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Thats a load of meaningless word salad. Road and rail are both public utilities and should be treated in the same way wrt financial investment.
Re: The American mind (Score:5, Insightful)
Our interstate highway system isn't profitable, has never been profitable, and has no roadmap to ever becoming profitable, and we continue to dump billions of dollars into it every year to expand it or just to barely maintain it. Everyone thinks this is perfectly fine and not a failure or boondoggle at all. But if you try to build a train everyone instantly turns into an accountant and starts talking about ROI.
My county alone spends 80 million dollars or so every year just on road expansion. Not operation or maintenance, just NEW roads. Every year. 80 million. Nobody cares, hell nobody even knows. But if you tried to set up a bus line or something and it cost $20mil everyone would be like "20 million? Where would we possibly get that kind of money??!!"
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Our interstate highway system isn't profitable,
Define "profitable". For public services, profitability is the ability to skim tax revenues from one system and use them to support another. Like taking fuel taxes and road tolls to be used to fund programs for homeless meth addicts.
Given the above example, our state's highway system is fantastically profitable.
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The point is that people don't use consistent accounting methods or even apparently consistent universes when talking about transportation.
True. Or any other government spending for that matter. Not just transportation. The problem, as I see it, is that government spending and budget making laws were largely written in an era before there was a distinction between capital and expense spending*. Therefore, governments were free to shuffle funds back and forth between programs with little or no fiscal accountability. And still claim a "public benefit".
*To be fair, this situation occurred up until modern tax laws imposed the need for such a dist
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Modest loss? Most of America's rail transport operates at a 40%-60% loss at all times.
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HIgh Speed Rail is Geopolitical asset (Score:4, Interesting)
China has ample reason to over-invest in their high-speed rail system.
The commercial airline market is mostly divided between Europe's Airbus and America's Boeing, with the PRC's COMAC still a work in progress. A robust internal HSR system serves as a hedge against loss of access to the commercial airliner supply
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China has ample reason to over-invest in their high-speed rail system.
The commercial airline market is mostly divided between Europe's Airbus and America's Boeing, with the PRC's COMAC still a work in progress. A robust internal HSR system serves as a hedge against loss of access to the commercial airliner supply
It's worse than a work in progress. COMAC's "domestically" produced aircraft are basically western aircraft assembled in china. Rockwell Collins Avionics, Honeywell APU, Leibherr landing gear, Parker hydraulics. Even the engines are straight up bought from the west (CFM LEAPs as seen on the A320/B737 families). Basically they got all the bits together (and stole a fair bit of knowledge via Industrial Espianage) but still can't make a plane as good as the last generation of Boeing/Airbus (high fuel consumpti
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Sure it's still govt. subsidised
I find it weird that people harp on about the evils of subsidisation of trains and completely ignore the massively subsidised roads.
Does your country invest in infra (Score:3)
A trillion sure sounds like a lot, but not really if you are talking about running high speed rail all across China! Google says, "In 2023, the Fortune 500 companies made a total profit of $2.1 trillion". So yeah, I could see a country that owns everything being able to fund some amazing infrastructure. Doing it all at once would be deciding, I think I'll pay it off now and telling those F500s to give them 6 months of profit to pay it off. One of those sheer fantasy what are you smoking kind of whatifs that could be doable in China, at least as long as that guy is still in power. The other thing is, I have no idea about their current infrastructure but if they actually are able to build a railway system like Japan's I would expect their economy to soar. Maybe it is the one of the most obvious things to spend money on to build the economy. If they get nothing out of it that would be horrible. In Japan, railway stations are where real estate gets more expensive too.. so it might even attract (internal) investment.
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I'd say the question isn't really so much about whether China "can" do this (apparently, that's a settled matter) but whether they "should". Rather than building underutilized railways across the country they could also have built hospitals and schools, funded pensions for the elderly, etc. (if you're a lefty) or simply put cash back into the pockets of the people to spend how they believe will most benefit them (if you're a righty).
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Who does China owe this trillion dollars to? Isn't most of it to China's own central bank - did they borrow the money, who from?
Also bets: Healthcare, Social Security, Climate (Score:1, Insightful)
Even an evil dictatorship like China sees that.
Bean counter economics (Score:2)
China's economy has been suffering from mild deflation over the last few years - that means that there is essentially idle workers and capital that is not being utilised.
The government is trying to soak up this surplus capacity with an infrastructure building program. This isn't a terrible idea - infrastructure has a lot of derivative benefits that can be hard to quantify. Maybe your train line allows access to a deeper talent pull around big centres which boost productivity in those centre? Maybe it stimul
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The really bonkers part of this is that much of the economic planning in the west is allegedly Keynesian, but that would involve this kind of counter-cyclial approach where you build and spend more during a recession, then slow building and start saving during growth periods. But of course we've ended up doing neither of these with predictably poor results
Chinese statistics are of limited value (Score:2)
Goodhart's law seems to apply - whatever data is used for economic decision making will immediately become inaccurate. Why? Because Chinese bureaucrats get promoted if their area of responsibility performs as it is supposed to. It isn't doing so? Make up the statistics
https://money.cnn.com/2015/07/... [cnn.com]
https://www.economist.com/brie... [economist.com]
What we DO know is that there is a rapidly rising level of youth unemployment - so much so that the data has been suppressed - and that the building sector is facing a massive c
Re: (Score:2)
Lets be real. We are in a hyperinflationary period here.
You obviously have never lived with hyperinflation or you wouldn't make such an absurd statement. Even low triple digit inflation isn't hyperinflation. Hyperinflation is a 50 cent bottle of Coca Cola on the first of the month and 50 dollars for that same bottle at the end of the month.
Re: Bean counter economics (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Even better, a requirement that every executive, every politician, and every frelling economist actually work for a living for a year or two and have to live on the pittance we peons receive. Instead they graduate university with six figures of debt and their shiny new diploma and go on to manage things they don't understand into the ground.
Isn't ... (Score:1)
... the case for high speed rail shrinking, not growing?
As remote work replaces in person work, and robot work replaces people work - from a financial point of view, at least, ferrying people around becomes less and less important, not more and more important.
Well USA blows $1T for sh1ts and giggles (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Got that right. We were in the UK for Worldcon, and then traveled around the UK via rail.
COACH CLASS, and the train, most of the time, is moving at 125mph.
Transportation isn't supposed to be profitable (Score:2)
Transportation isn't supposed to be profitable since the 1800s.
We pay taxes and tolls for roadways.
The federal government (in the US) owns and operates all airports.
There is no reasonable way all transportation modes shouldn't be subsidized, because *all* of it is, including rail.
Rail transportation is the red-headed stepchild of Capitalism.