(Warning: lengthy post, read only if interested in analysis of the effects of regulation.) Jim and Randy, I respectfully disagree. As I've said previously, it is difficult to overestimate the damage done to railroads by the ICC, as well as the cost to society. Your position overlooks the far-reaching deleterious indirect effects of regulation, and supports the myth that RR's problems were largely self-inflicted by mismanagement. Few would argue the necessity of the creation of the ICC in 1887 to stabilize RR cartels. The problem came in later years when its powers were expanded, particularly in 1920 when it should have been scaled back in the face of emerging competition. Instead, it gained jurisdiction over minimum rates, and building and abandonment, among others. Yes, it was simply carrying out the mandate given to it by Congress, but it had a fair amount of discretion over how it was interpreted and of course, complete control over how efficiently it was carried out. One of the ICC's goals was to promote capital investment as well as safeguard shareholders' equity, but in fact, it achieved the opposite. It attempted to engineer various merger scenarios in true Big Government Knows Best tradition, instead of allowing the free market to determine what was needed. Expanded regulation came at precisely the wrong time. The rails became heavily regulated in the manner of utilities which generally enjoyed geographic monopolies; meanwhile, their monopoly disappeared in the face of competition. 1920-76 was indeed the era of Positive regulation: positive for the less-regulated trucking and barge lines, and destructive for the rail network. A big problem with rate regulation was the support of a "value"-based tariff structure (roughly the ratio of value to weight of a commodity). As well as requiring armies of personnel to administer this structure, it kept rates on manufactured goods artificially elevated, which had two effects: the tendency to balkanize commerce into self-sufficient regions, reducing the available long-haul traffic the RR's are best suited for; also, diverting traffic to unregulated truckers who based rates on actual cost of providing service. Prime casualties were the container systems developed by NYC and PRR in the 1920's. Rates were FAK (freight-all-kinds) based on weight and distance, ie: cost. In 1931 the ICC determined that FAK threatened the existing rate structure, and raised container rates so high it killed off the business, setting containerization back 40 years. The ICC approach to merger regulation tended to preserve the regional cartels that existed in the late 19th century. At the same time, with the "dead hand" of regulation restricting the ability of management to innovate and seek new markets, RR's concentrated on controlling costs, especially cost of labor. This entailed bigger power for longer trains, and bigger yards to classify cars more efficiently. Longer trains mean reduced frequency and service degradation. They also reduce equipment utilization, increasing the industry's capital costs, thus making it difficult to attract investment capital. Cost control also provided the incentive for merging parallel, competing lines, because this was where the cost savings were: elimination of duplicate routes and facilities. EL (list content!), SCL, PC and BN are examples of this. What was needed instead were end-to-end mergers, creating true transcons to compete with the emerging coast-to-coast truckers. However, this type of combination produces minimal cost saving. I often refer to the Rock Island case as a pivotal example of a dithering, counterproductive ICC. This merger proposal extended the SP to KC and the UP to Chicago and St Louis, a small step in the right direction; it was submitted in 1964 and paralyzed the ICC for 9 years. After 4 years and 45,000 pages of testimony, the lead ICC examiner handed off the case due to health problems, and his substitute, in Fred Frailey's words, "went into deep hibernation" for 5 years before rendering an opinion. It attached so many protections for competitors and the Rock deteriorated so much during the delay, that UP and SP bailed and the Rock entered bankruptcy in 1975. Your tax dollars at work. It is correct to say that progressive rail mergers were often opposed by competitors. However, ICC mechanisms provided the means by which opposing interests could hold them up. If the Commission considered itself the arbiter of the evolving rail map, it should have exhibited leadership instead of paralysis. As RR's became increasingly a long-distance mode, their restriction to regions (or ICC "districts") meant that by the 1950's, over half of rail traffic was interchanged. This mandated that all rolling stock must be compatible and therefore, similar. This stifled innovation since the cost and logistics of modifying or replacing the entire car fleet was too great. This is largely why the long-obsolete late-19th century innovations, the air brake and semi-automatic coupler are still with us. Combined with the long trains and hump yards mentioned above, they produce the slack action and violent coupling impacts that damage cargo and help divert it to trucks. A route structure consisting of a handful of competing transcons would have less need for compatibility. Each system would have been less beholden to existing technology, promoting creation of modern systems incorporating fully automatic couplers and electropneumatic brake systems, integral trains etc. Again we turn to intermodal for a couple of instructive examples. NYC's Flexivan had its shortcomings, but features including the fuel efficiency inherent in low tare and low profile made it in some ways superior to conventional piggyback. If NYC had become part of a transcon system (say, NYC+ATSF+MILW), the technology could have been further developed. Instead, it was jettisoned in favor of conventional TOFC to make NYC combatible with parallel merger partner PRR and western connections (by the mid-60's close to half of Chicago intermodal loads were interchanged). Conventional TOFC used the LCD (lowest common denominator) profile that everyone could use: a long, inherently unstable flat with heavy deck to accomodate circus-loading that put trailers with their heavy wheel assemblies up where wind resistance was maximized. Although shifting to a more efficient profile of articulated skeleton platforms did not entail use of exotic technology, it did not occur on a large scale until after dereg because Trailer Train was reluctant to jeapordize its vast investment in long flats. So in sum, regulation under the ICC produced or contributed to the following deleterious effects on RR's: 1. A rate structure which tended to balkanize commerce and minimize the long-distance traffic the rails are best suited for. 2. A rate structure which stifled innovation and diverted traffic to trucks 3. An approach to merger regulation which tended to restrict RR's to limited geographic areas; this in turn helped perpetuate use of obsolete technology which damages cargo, diverting traffic to trucks, and which discourages capital investment. Limited geographic reach also place the industry at a competetive disadvantage to coast-to-coast trucking. The above discussion just scratches the surface; it would require a book to fully document the subject. A conservative estimate of the overall annual cost to society of the inefficiencies produced by ICC regulation is $5 billion in 1972 dollars. Clearly, it was an archaic, counterproductive authority which should have been scaled back in the 1920's, and abolished and replaced with a limited, more streamlined mechanism like the STB decades before this actually occurred. In combination with publicly subsidized competition, it almost resulted in nationalization of the rail network. As evidence, look at what happened to the industry after dereg: solvent carriers, a doubling of traffic, and a decline in freight rates in constant dollars. We're still dealing with the legacies of regional carriers and 19th century technology, but at least the trend is now in the right direction. Anyone who would like a list of references on this subject can contact me off-list. Paul B From: "Jim Guthrie" <jguthrie_@_pipeline.com> Subject: Re: Re:Re: (erielack) More Merger Scenarios - Comments Randy writes: > The ICC gets a bum rap. Every now and then (three or four times a day), a > posting blames the ICC >for all the past, present and future woes of the > railroad industry in general and, specifically, for denying >us the > business structures we would like to see -- even while we can't agree on > what they would be. AMEN. Thanks for injecting a note of sanity here. The other thing I find interesting is the tendency of railfans (and others) to treat the ICC as if it were the same agency with the same mission over its entire life. One way to break it down is the era of Negative Regulation (1887-1920), Positive Regulation (1920-1976) and Deregulation (1976-1995). In the era of negative regulation, it was "The People" vs the big bad railroads. But that period is subdivided again -- for the first 15 years or so, the ICC didn't even think it had much in the way of powers to do anything, and it didn't. The railroads still maintained their own rate cartels as best they could -- even employing the NYS&Ws Garrett A Hobart as one of the enforcers (list content). After the DL&Ws Truesdale, the Erie's Eben Thomas and Fred Underwood (more list content) and the other anthracite barons insulted President Teddy Roosevelt in 1902, the calls for an agency with teeth were answered by a Presidnet of the United States who was not going to put up with B.S. from these railroad guys. World War I turned out to be a disaster for the railroads -- not as in the sense of later railroad propaganda about the evils of the USRA (which actually left management in place), but because the railroads squabbling and inability to handle demands were preventing execution of the war effort -- hence government direction to get freight moving (there's nothing in Penn Central's operations mismangement that wasn't SOP on the part of the Erie, PRR, DL&W and most of the rest in the months immediately preceding the USRA). With passage of the Transportation Act of 1920, there was a major change -- including a mandate to merge railroads in a smaller number of balanced carriers. One of the ICCs goals (and that of the Prince plan and the rest) was to merge everyone so as to protect the security holders -- people who owend stocks and bonds -- or all the railroads by making sure the strong also had to take care of the weak. Once can make the case that the experts working for the ICC had a much better handle on the long range economics of the situation than the railroads' own lawyers and economists. And that men like John Barriger and other familiar names of railroading management from the 50s and 60s (and the merger movement of the era) were products of the ICC merger effort. Some plans -- like the Vans' C&O-PM-Erie-NKP merger were unacceptible because they would weaken the competitors without additional mergers and protections. In the long run, the DL&W and LV would have been wiped out as the anthracite industry went away, for example. And the mandate was to protect and enhance railroad investment, not to destroy it. The Great Depression made a mess of everything, of course, and one could say World War II did as well. But the railroads managed a magnificent job during the war, no matter how much regulation was out there. Congress and a succession of Presidents were involved in rate regulation to be sure, but the biggest "enforcer" of what we might describe as bad decisions by the ICC were other railroads, using protests and political clout alike to tear down each other. Did the ICC fail in some cases? Sure. Probably the most eggregious was its utter disinterest in enforcing a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1946 that banned racial segregation in interstate commerce -- i.e. trains and buses. When the Freedom Riders forced the issue, embarassing the Kennedy administration, Attorney General Bobby Kennedy told the ICC to enforce the law it had ignored for 16 years -- and that was the end of Freedom Riders (and Jim Crow Coaches on the railroads). Railroads and airlines were deregulated in the Carter administration, of course (Reagan deregulated Savings and Loans <g>); FWIW, Boxcar freight was deregulated almost at the beginning, and has just about disappeared. That's a great toic by itself <g>. In any case, we fast-forward to today, where the issue has become lack of capacity in a deregulated environment, causing a huge increase in transportation costs (with no benefit to the invester -- at least of you listen to that hedge fund hectoring CSX <g>). But in the end, whatever one thinks of regulation pro or con, it should warm the hearts of EL list members that The presidents of the DL&W and the Erie were among the fewer than a dozen people most responsible for giving us railroad regualtion in the first place. Cheers, Jim Guthrie ELHS #1296 The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List http://EL-List.railfan.net/ To Unsubscribe: http://Lists.Railfan.net/erielackunsub.html ------------------------------
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