I originally posted about Thames Water in the 'anti-woke' thread (though Bedinsis was right that it was better placed here)--
talking about how since privatisation in 1989, they financed millions in shareholder payments every year through borrowing, often with shareholder payments alone dwarfing the year's profits. Then the owner company can just sell off, leaving someone else to finance the debt.
Hence how they've gone from near-zero debt as a publicly-owned utility, to >15billion pounds of debt today.
Well, an update: the government is considering a contingency-- to transfer most of that 15bn debt directly to the public purse.
Exclusive: Under Whitehall blueprint for water company some lenders could lose up to 40% of their money
www.theguardian.com
I'd
love for someone to explain the benefit of utility privatisation and how it squares with our experience here in the UK. Because right now, I'm staring at my own bills rising by 40%, and 15bn added to public debt paid by my taxes,
just to bail the fucking company out.
This is hardly the first time this has happened. In 2014, Network Rail's 30bn debt it had accrued as a private entity was transferred to the public.
I'd ask what went wrong, but then I remember that this is the intended function of the Conservative Party: squeeze value from public assets, transfer it directly to private shareholders, then make the public pay for it. Rinse and repeat-- emphasis on the 'rinse'.