Bus fares rose last December
2019. And there are plans to increase
train fares towards the end of the year.
Understandably, people are upset, but it is important to have a sense of
perspective, and look at some numbers.
Public transportation, as an industry,
is generally unprofitable. This explains
why there is so little investment in it all over the world, since the municipal,
or state authorities end up subsidising them.
Whilst it can be argued that there are economic, and other benefits, to
be extracted, it is unlike bureaucrats and populist politicians to see those
benefits since they are hardly immediate.
This also explains why there are virtually no listed companies whose core
business is public transportation. The
Singapore model is the exception.
Singapore Mass Rapid Transit
Corporation, SMRT, is ridiculously profitable.
Up to 2013, its profit after tax was just over 18%. Due to mismanagement of maintenance by the
previous regime, this has dropped in the intervening years to an after-tax loss
of $86 million in FY2018. In the years
2010 and before, the profit margin was even higher. We must understand that the market did not
change - they are part of a public transport duopoly with Comfort Delgro
Group. Their loss was entirely self-inflicted.
However, despite this, SMRT has
always complained to the Public Transport Council, and elsewhere, that its
business model is unsustainable, and that fares need to be increased. This is despite the fact that the Singapore
government effectively subsidises SMRT.
For example, in December 2017, the 5-year Bus Service Enhancement
Programme effectively gifted buses to the duopoly. The Singapore government also undertakes the
cost of building the infrastructure for the tunnels, new lines, and supporting
infrastructure for SMRT trains. This is taxpayer
money subsidising a profit centre to the tune of hundreds of billions of
dollars.
If we were to consider the amounts
used to subsidise SMRT as a loan, at prevailing market rates of between 4% to 5%,
over a period of a decade, like many corporate papers, SMRT would be looking at
paying between $140 million to $150 million, to service that loan. When we contrast that with the declared profit
after tax for the last decade, it starkly shows how SMRT’s profits are really subsidised
by taxpayers. Coming back to the funds paid
out for infrastructure development, we have no real idea the true scale of the
subsidy, but an educated guess would make it over 100% of the profits.
I agree that making SMRT into a
profit centre promotes efficiency, but that should not be at the expense of the
taxpayers, where that pursuit of executive bonuses means seeking ever higher
profits. This has been seen in two
ways. The first is that profits generated
are outsized, and yet, there is this pressure to continually increase
prices. Prices should not be increased
when declared profits, except for the last year, are in double digits. The second, is in the measures to cut costs
which lead to the series of breakdowns.
This is obvious mismanagement, and short-termism, and the people truly
responsible have not been seen to be taken to account. There is no announcement of heads rolling,
and bonuses clawed back. This engenders
some scepticism of their management standards.
In summary, I am not convinced that
SMRT, and by extension, the public transport companies under Temasek Holdings’
stable, have a good enough reason to ask for fare increases. They are not justified when we, in effect,
have subsidised their growth. We want
something in return, and there should be more dialogue on the matter.
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