As voters and their representatives in the East Midlands,
North West and Yorkshire pored
over the preferred route announcement for the second phase of the HS2
project, those routinely opposed broke cover and told whoever would listen why
the whole business was, variously, a white elephant, a “railway for the rich”, laid with “gold plated tracks”, and that they weren’t happy.
Faster even than the one on the left ... perhaps
Also noticeable were those who had previously opposed the
scheme, but this time had decided to remain silent, most significantly the Adam
Smith Institute (ASI), that museum of economic thought that has fraudulently
appropriated the name of the founder of economics. The ASI’s report, “High Speed Fail”, much lauded by its
right wing bedfellows, had
not even been read for technical competence.
One of those bedfellows praising a report whose author
couldn’t correctly figure out the distance between the rails was
the so-called Taxpayers’ Alliance (TPA), whose chief non-job holder Matthew
Sinclair most certainly was not going to keep schtum: “deluding itself ... vast sums ... white elephant ... isn’t credible ...
flawed projections ... rich man’s train line ... fundamental flaws ... enormous
bill”.
Sadly, though, Sinclair sprayed his credibility up the wall
by citing only the TPA’s own “research”
on HS2, which
as I’ve pointed out
previously, includes false
assumptions, logic
leaps and forthright
figure fiddling, as well
as backing a capacity
improvement exercise for the West Coast Main Line (WCML) that would not be
workable and would reduce
capacity for commuters.
And the TPA is not the only body indulging in this sort of
thing: the template was set by the Centre
for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) back in 2011, with “We have
considerable credibility here”, they say, then provide no links or other
citations to back up what looks suspiciously like their own alterations to the
assumptions in the business case to produce the required results.
That approach was
taken forward yesterday by the New Economics Foundation (NEF), whose
argument was, unsurprisingly, that their own “independent” analysis supported their conclusion that HS2 was A
Very Bad Thing. Then they wheel out phrases like “full steam ahead”. And suggested they were taken on trust. It was
little better with pundits
like Harry Mount at the Telegraph.
“£34 billion will be
splurged ... crazily optimistic ... gold-plated railway line through some of
Britain’s prettiest countryside” he moans, while wibbling about William The
Conqueror and the Winchester Accord, as if what happened in 1072 has any
relevance to HS2. I’m sure, though, that he is familiar with that “prettiest countryside” and isn’t just
ranting about places he’s never visited.
Thus the motley band of doom mongers. Dionysius
Lardner would have approved.
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