I've worked in the industry since 1996 and Thames Water are one of those in whom we have embedded consultants. We are intimately familiar with their inner workings and, being embedded, are treated/privity to the same insider knowledge as any direct employee.
If the last 40 years were a case study, the evidence that's true is pretty weak.
The post-privatisation 1990s saw a complete turnaround, from the abject failure of the industry under previous governments (Labour and Tory in the 60s and 70s) to seeing massive investment and infrastructure improvements. It's only once things became decent that the likes of RWE and Macquarrie slimed their way in.
We are being milked by foriegn states,let it go bankrupt, and split it up, have 8 water companies in London not one
We used to have ^that... and it was an absolute **** show, with zero investment, miles of red tape, siloed working, contradictions and arguments over asset responsibility, widespread dissonance, highly inconsistent bill/pricing and a service so far below even current standards you couldn't imagine.
It's things like that which led to the consolidation of responsibility under the ten water authorities.
Raising prices and asking for a hand out because dividends have been paid out is the same as to pay out, in the end.
Increasing taxes to try and fix what the previous government ****** up is pretty common. This is basically the same thing, at this point.
It is, the combined debt of the privatised water companies is almost exactly the same as the combine dicidends paid since privatisation, no water company paying a dividend should be allowed to significantly increase bills doubly so if they are failing in their basic duties.
Dividends... or loan repayments?
Most of the loans are bonded debt, which legally must be repaid.
TW shareholders have not been paid dividends for over 5 years, now.
Vile. I wish individuals involved in these company failures could be punished.
Seems a big issue to me the ceos etc get a pay off, and another job and never actually get hit for failure
CEO Steve Robertson was booted out of TW,
supposedly over failed leakage targets, although the truth is more telling in regard to CEOs vs their executive board members and what happens when they try to take a more active role in sorting things out.
The issue is that it's not the CEOs who are the problem. They're little more than a figurehead. You want to look more closely at the executive team and the owners...
Yeah the government could quite easily let them fail and get them cheap. To be fair they did a good thing with Northern Rock for example but that was under Labour.
They could buy the company cheap and **** over the shareholders, yes. That was Corbyn's plan.
What they'll then stumble over are the billions in bonded loans, which they will still be legally obliged to repay, along with the costs of improving and then maintaining service. Without private investment, that will come down to public borrowing.