do you do private tutoring on subjects and presentation? I'm sure you do, i am in no doubt that this can be true. I've seen your students in the newspapers, news channels and all over social media. I'm going to take wild guess and say that all these politicians like Boris Johnson changing costumes and talking a lot. Although i'm not totally sure the message they took away was the same.
The crazy part is South Africa is thinking of privatizing electricity Because of the ineptitude of government and corruption of government suppliers 😩😩😩😩😩
Back in Bulgaria mass privatisation in the 90s went so horribly that growing up I thought that to "privatise" a factory simply meant to shut down said factory. 😂
@@MustaphaRashiduddin-zx7rn Nope, they'd buy the factories, fire employees and stop production if needed, disassemble the whole thing and sell it for scraps. These went for such low prices, that the "investors" became billionaires just pulling this stunt a few times. Most of these facilities were not capable to turn a profit without massive investment and restructuring, and even the ones that tried mostly failed. Same happened in Romania. Some people suspect that a few of these industrial assets were actually strategically disabled and wiped out to prevent competition with western companies. Or, at least, to provide "a better environment" for western investment - which the politician were very happy to facilitate (I wonder why). Of course, privatization of various sectors of the national economy was the IMFs favorite demand.
@@MustaphaRashiduddin-zx7rn more likely the buyers were 1) stripping it for parts as corporate raiders 2) deliberately shutting down competitors at cost to ensure a monopoly
Nah, new owners usually knowingly bankrupted said factory for financial gains. Why run factory and try to make it profitable when you could take loans, effectively steal them, sell of factory's assets at discounted prices and bankrupt what left? Happened in Russia too at crazy scale
It's insane to me that we as humans allow certain things that are necessary to life to be ran by profit driven corporations. It's such a stupid thing to do..
The Gilded age tycoons became tycoons because they controlled industries that governments were dependent on. They effectively became more powerful than government because the government needed railroads, oil, and steel, especially for war. Once they had that power, they could shape government because what could any PM or president do if their supply of oil, steel, or transportation was cut-off? Edit: this is based on the idea that once Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, and Carnegie got a foothold in America they built an international culture over generations that gave other nationalized industries the pathway to cut a check to some politicians (like Thatcher and some boomers) in exchange for them relinquishing power to a private organization
It's because we live in a capitalist system, where the most important thing is profits, not people. They always ask "how're gonna pay for it?". Even though we can pay for it easily, they'll find a nitpick and dismantle that. Really, it shouldn't matter how much we pay for it - any price is worth it. If we can't afford to pay the salesman, then the problem is the salesman. And whatever it takes, live-saving care and power and food should be accessible to all.
@@austinfletchermusicbeing in America.. it's weird that "how would we pay for it?" Is always a problem when it comes to anything that would help Americans.. yet, billions and billions upon billions of dollars are always ready to be sent to any country that needs it.. It all just hurts my brain.. this entire system just isn't sustainable.
@gamingwiththisguy8106 Blame Pete Peterson. He's an ultra-rich guy who managed (after failing Hard with the general public) to convince news networks to push this question in recent years.
@Gaming With This Guy huh, you think we send money to other countries without strings attached? Every dollar of aid is designed to benefit a US based corporation. Every bit of corruption funnels money into corporate contracts, corporate tax breaks, etc. You're focusing on the wrong things. The aid is a form of power that allows us to dictate what policies other governments will implement, always policies that benefit US corporations. You know, the corporations we keep failing to tax. We keep doing handouts using public money to corporations. The profit driven corporations are the ones pulling the strings, and the investors, CEOs, and board of directors are the main beneficiaries. That's who the US government works for. Military aid ends in corporate contracts. That's why we spend so much on the military, funnel it into private defense contractors. Additionally, to bully other countries more directly to force them to implement policies that benefit US corporations. That's the "democracy" they tell you they're spreading. Installed governments that spend another countries money on US contractors and sells off public goods to US investors. "We have money for aid" no, we have money for corporate handouts.
There was a story in the UK news this week about an elderly woman died of hypothermia in her home because she was terrified of not being able to pay her energy bill.
Yeah I think she lived in Bury, a small Town next to Bolton in the North West. I told my 89 year old Gran Dad not to worry about putting the heating on. It's not worth worrying about, if you can't pay it, what are they going to do, cut off a 90 year old? To my knowledge they are not allowed to cut off OAPS, which I'm guessing this lady didn't know. So sad that are OAPs are living in cold homes.
It's not so bad on its own. It just costs 4x the value you rolled. But if they also get the the electric company, it jumps up to 10x. Getting into housing and hotels is much more lucrative.
Private Eye have been calling out the privatisation of utilities since it happened. so have the guardian, just less loud and often. Its not ignored by ALL media.
I'm fortunate enough to live in a town in the US that has its own municipal electrical service. Electricity is .08 cents per KWh here. In the 1950s, my town signed on with the FDR Power Project initiative to source power from the St. Lawrence River from a dam on Bernhart Island. Towns were given the option to vote and pay into the project. Mine did, and now, 70 years later, we still reap that reward.
At the expense of your tax money, and others that can't pay for it at the low price, looks good on paper when they say they charge 0.8USD per Kw/H additionally but when you factor what is paid on top of the local tax that is sent out to the hydroelectric generator for maintenance that would be 0.25USD per KWH which is ironic because privatised Hydroelectric Damns only run at 0.2 kwh , funny huh
We did the same in New Zealand, the private power companys made record profits and still do to this day they are barely competitive and most users are too lazy to keep switch over to better plans that give little gains for little periods of time, we basically sold our country's backbone to corporations.
The UK's situation is worse. It's like if the government sold its remaining controlling stake in Mercury, Meridian and Genesis and on top of that sold Transpower as well
It's not as bad in Denmark as in England currently, but kind of same story. Privatization -> price hikes. EDIT: And honestly, it feels like, to me, that selling your infrastructure is like pissing your pants to keep warm. Or, I don't know, selling off your organs to pay your bills.
Argentinian here, we privatized a massive ammount of our infrastructure in the 90s. As far as i renembered we have power cuts in summer that went from 12 hours to several days, several times in a daily basis in summer. Now with the Ukraine crisis we had in winter too Everyone belive it's a bullshit system safe for our former president that has shares in the company, and now he insist if he wins again to privatize even more
Our problem in Denmark was generaly that the old state run instiution was HORRIBLY ineffecient.. privatisation could have been done better but yet we are still mostly in control of our grid.
I am Swedish currently living in Scotland. Our flat was a toasty 14-16 degrees Celsius before we noticed whenever we caught colds they weren't going away like at all and we caved in and turned the heating on (to a whopping 17 or 18 degrees, so still just bordering on that "probably not detrimental to your health" temp, thanks WHO...). It is now end of May and we have had the heating off for months and for some reason our energy company decides that NOW is a good time to increase our energy bills from £70/month to £189/month. That is a 170% increase in our electricity bill. I saw an ad at a bus stop "informing" people that lowering your heating by just a degree could help you save up to £30 a year or something ridiculous like that. And that's when I decided I can't live in this country anymore. I'm so sad that I have to leave the UK, I love the social life and a lot of the general culture, I've absolutely loved living here and I would have liked to continue that. But it is simply unaffordable. SCANDINAVIA is cheaper to live in. It is absolutely fkn insane and I'm so upset that this decision was an escape route rather than a choice that I could make for myself in my own time when I felt ready.
@@THCBach I moved to England for uni and then to Scotland for my masters and at that point I was on the EU settlement scheme so now I'm kind of just sticking around so I can become permanently settled and not have to deal with visas and stuff if I ever want to move back to or work in the UK
"Let's take our most essential and most dangerous industries and incentivize spending as little as possible on maintenance and improvements" -people who should never have been in charge of anything but somehow are ruling the world
The summary of Thatcher privatisation reminded me of Russia's 1990s privatisation effort. Each citizen got a voucher to buy shares with. The idea was to introduce capitalism in an equitable way. My family got Gazprom shares, but many others sold theirs for cash, needing the money. I have a strong suspicion this was instrumental in propping up Russia's oligarchy.
It was absolutely. I recommend Trauma Zone. It very nicely explains how global business industries conspired with local Russian oligarchs during the "shock therapy" to disenfranchise the Russian people and lay the path toward the fascistic oligopoly that has gripped the Kremlin right now.
So, what is the value of Gasprom shares that your family hold? Britian like most countries subsidized their power. Cannot sustain forever. Energy is the foundation of economy, and we cannot subsidize it. In the US, energy in all forms is at cost, varies slightly depending on taxation in states and cities yet still cheaper than milk. Government run system is the least inefficient., even in the US.
It's not like these end results weren't already economically well understood. In Smith's Wealth of Nations, he talks about how the effects of profit have a very significant outcome on increasing prices, and privatising things is just the act of introducing profits. Of course, the term "privatisation" did not exist in his day, it was only coined in the early 20th century to describe Nazi economic policy. He also talks about how the profit motive itself, left unchecked, is just going to result in an effective "tax" being placed on society, as companies reduce competition. So you've got to wonder. If all this was obvious to Adam Smith, the so called founder of modern economics, where the hell do these people get this idea that simply privatising things increases "efficiency"? Smith also gives a hint as to the source of such ideas in wealth of nations, talking about how the merchant class tends to have a far better understanding of their self interests than anyone else, and will convince themselves, and everyone else, that it is their self interest, that is the common interest, even though it is usually contradictory to the common interest.
Relevant quotes "His employers constitute the third order, that of those who live by profit. It is the stock that is employed for the sake of profit, which puts into motion the greater part of the useful labor of every society. The plans and projects of the employers of stock regulate and direct all the most important operations of labor, and profit is the end proposed by all those plans and projects. But the rate of profit does not, like rent and wages, rise with the prosperity, and fall with the declension, of the society. On the contrary, it is naturally low in rich, and high in poor countries, and it is always highest in the countries which are going fastest to ruin. The interest of this third order, therefore, has not the same connection with the general interest of the society as that of the other two. Merchants and master manufacturers are, in this order, the two classes of people who commonly employ the largest capitals, and who by their wealth draw to themselves the greatest share of the public consideration. As during their whole lives they are engaged in plans and projects, they have frequently more acuteness of understanding than the greater part of country gentlemen. As their thoughts, however, are commonly exercised rather about the interest of their own particular branch of business, than about that of the society, their judgment, even when given with the greatest candor (which it has not been upon every occasion), is much more to be depended upon with regard to the former of those two objects, than with regard to the latter. Their superiority over the country gentleman is, not so much in their knowledge of the public interest, as in their having a better knowledge of their own interest than he has of his. It is by this superior knowledge of their own interest that they have frequently imposed upon his generosity, and persuaded him to give up both his own interest and that of the public, from a very simple but honest conviction, that their interest, and not his, was the interest of the public. The interest of the dealers, however, in any particular branch of trade or manufactures, is always in some respects different from, and even opposite to, that of the public. To widen the market and to narrow the competition is always the interest of the dealers. To widen the market may frequently be agreeable enough to the interest of the public; but to narrow the competition must always be against it, and can serve only to enable the dealers, by raising their profits above what they naturally would be, to levy, for their own benefit, an absurd tax upon the rest of their fellow citizens. The proposal of any new law or regulation of commerce which comes from this order, ought always to be listened to with great precaution, and ought never to be adopted till after having been long and carefully examined, not only with the most scrupulous, but with the most suspicious attention. It comes from an order of men whose interest is never exactly the same with that of the public, who have generally an interest to deceive and even to oppress the public, and who accordingly have, upon many occasions, both deceived and oppressed it." ... "In reality high profits tend much more to raise the price of work than high wages. If in the linen manufacture, for example, the wages of the different working people, the flax-dressers, the spinners, the weavers, etc., should, all of them, be advanced twopence a day, it would be necessary to heighten the price of a piece of linen only by a number of twopences equal to the number of people that had been employed about it, multiplied by the number of days during which they had been so employed. That part of the price of the commodity which resolved itself into wages would, through all the different stages of the manufacture, rise only in arithmetical proportion to this rise of wages. But if the profits of all the different employers of those working people should be raised five per cent, that part of the price of the commodity which resolved itself into profit would, through all the different stages of the manufacture, rise in geometrical proportion to this rise of profit. The employer of the flax-dressers would, in selling his flax, require an additional five per cent upon the whole value of the materials and wages which he advanced to his workmen. The employer of the spinners would require an additional five per cent both upon the advanced price of the flax and upon the wages of the spinners. And the employer of the weavers would require a like five per cent both upon the advanced price of the linen yarn and upon the wages of the weavers. In raising the price of commodities, the rise of wages operates in the same manner as simple interest does in the accumulation of debt. The rise of profit operates like compound interest. Our merchants and master-manufacturers complain much of the bad effects of high wages in raising the price, and thereby lessening the sale of their goods both at home and abroad. They say nothing concerning the bad effects of high profits. They are silent with regard to the pernicious effects of their own gains. They complain only of those of other people."
@@Joostmhw Marx was heavily inspired by smith, he even makes this explicit. I see Marx's Capital as a natural updating of wealth of Nations given the developments of capitalism that did occur between them.
Holy Frick the second quote made me realise just how disastrous an artificially enforced "2% inflation" is in an environment where capitalists do not accept falling RATE of profit. Each year, every single middleman in the chain for...anything...demands their profits rise by at least 2% and it compounds geometrically, the more sub-sub-sub-sub-sub-contractors you have!
They turned the energy industry over to private competition, but they conveniently forgot that these companies are competing to make the most money, not to provide the best prices.
And that a power grid only has one line to each endpoint so there is no possible way this could be anything but a monopoly with no real competitive forces to self regulate profiteering. At best of we ran like 5 of the same wire to each house we could maybe hope to have an oligopoly and try to regulate that.
Doesn't anybody understand economics anymore? Get the Govmnt out of the way.. Let the drillers DRILL. Let the refineries refine. They will make money and you will have the energy you need. Ramp-up supply, and prices go down... OR start building Gen IV reactors, YESTERDAY! Energy fuels Civilization.
Reasonable Speculation - dude we are talking about power grid not power generation, and definitely not extraction and refining. Generation is not a monopoly so it functions OK as a market economy. Arguably it is a bit leaning toward oligopoly but that can be worked around. No one on this thread said anything about nationalizing extraction and refining. That is definitely open market model due to the vastness of the market. We are talking about nationalizing the actual electricity and gas grids which take the energy from the refineries and generation to each endpoint. That is what is called a Natural Monopoly because there is no practical way to make it competitive. There is only one wire and one gas pipe and one water pipe to every house, so there is no way it can actually be "competitive". The national grids would buy from the open market generators and refineries to distribute to households based on competitive bidding. 1. This would allow a variety of different generation sources including gas, nuclear and "green renewables" to all compete against each other for sales. 2. Also a national grid may reduce regulations on endpoint generation which have been put in place strictly to preserve profits of the formerly privatized grid. Allowing endpoint generation sites (your rooftop solar) to be bigger than your demand so you can sell the excess energy back to the grid for a profit, giving more competition to the free market generators. Or you could put in solar heating or geothermal to compete with the gas refineries. Who is stopping the drillers from drilling and the refiners from refining? They are the most privileged industry on the planet and receive the most subsidies of any industry, actually pretty close to the same subsidies as all other industries combined. Plus their infrastructure crammed through communities risking disaster. The "greens" do not want to ban oil (only a few uneducated say that, every movement has them). They want to add new energy sources on top of the oil growing supply, which would reduce demand for oil and give it competitive market forces to reduce costs for energy. Many actually do support the nuclear power you are fond of as well.
Cleveland, Ohio's public power company has survived since 1907. It avoided a privatization scam in 1983 that forced the City into default and cost the mayor his job. It's currently taking over streetlight maintenance from the privately owned utility company that can't seem to manage it anymore; one step in the direction of public administration of the local grid itself.
When you think about it for even 2 seconds, "privatization is better because people only work well if there's profit in it for them" is an incredible self-report from a politician.
Group of 20, you're the only one who works. No disabilities or anything, just extremely lazy. You going to provide for all those people with a smile on your face til you die?
...I don't want to take away from Lizbet's amazing comment, but I just realized Among Us has reached mainstream-enough popularity that we can now use "self-report"
Thank you Tom. Entertaining, informative and chilling in equal measure. I'm 67 years old, and as a British citizen, I can remember a time before "The Dear Sainted Margaret" and I experienced first hand, the wholesale destruction of communities and livelihoods that she wrought. Rule number 1, Never trust a tory, Rule number 2, Never forget rule number 1. I seem to remember that, at the time, National Insurance and State Pension funds were raided to fund the several privatisation schemes. And before I forget, the privatisations were done for one reason only. To enable private companies to price gouge the entire population, and pass on kick-back to their friends in government.
given your rules, i feel the need to ask: well then, why do you folks keep having an endless parade of tory PMs? seems like you, as a country, are complaining that each new one is worse than the last, but you can't seem to stop.
It's so criminal. It just so absolutely criminal. This has been repeated by these types of scamming assholes many times over. I'm not necessarily against a for profit business model but I am when political thugs apply it in this manner, towards fundamental public needs and resources.
Netherlands has the exact same thing. Energy and health have been privatised resulting in exactly what you are describing in this video. Also the whole thing about the customer not caring about changing every single year is super true. Every Dutch person has to write a paper to the 6-ish major health and energy companies about why they are not interested in switching because they're just trying to live through december. (hyperbolly of course, but all major companies WILL go door to door like salesmen and ask you if you want to switch. Every Dutch person hates it and knows that it happens from since they were kids.) The 'heating or eating' thing hit hard. We have the exact same slogan in the Netherlands. People here also have to choose between heating their homes or having food on the table....
In November of last year the government gave a 23 billion Euro blank check to make sure the energy companies didn't fail. This is almost enough to buy them all up and nationalize the whole system.
You didn't really mention it but in the late 90s the supply companies initially tried to make price comparison as baffling for consumers as possible. IIRC the offers would look like you pay this much for the first number of units per quarter... but then that much for the remaining units per quarter providing you buy at least some other number of units per year etc etc. you'd have needed to be a spreadsheet master to make any sense of it. Then once you'd found a slightly cheaper deal it'd suddenly turn into an expensive deal after 12 months.
Absolutely. I did have a whole sequence about this in an earlier draft but the video just became far too long and needed some pruning! But, yeah, making things confusing was a deliberate strategy for some time and led to them being referred to the monopolies commission.
@@Tom_Nicholas So how do you think you would sell the e.g. gas yourself? Do you think it is as easy as "buy X bottles of gas, store the bottles at the location at address Y, and deliver it to the address Z by mailman"? Genuinely interesting. Yes, the bills are confusing sometimes, but it is good if companies actually provide the breakdown for you. Your statement seems to be just a classic "oh, I have no clue about the thing, but it is definitely a alien lizards conspiracy!" I'm not saying that privatization of such a type of a company is "total good", but look at e.g. NYC metro - it is horrible! Do you think putting someone competent at the head, audit the black hole of spending and actually do something to make it profitable (while probably making the service better - or going bankrupt as an alternative) is a "bad" option?
@@TaranovskiAlex government can do that too, as long as they avoid corruption, cronyism, nepotism, to pick a CEO and auditor based on merit. (I mean, a government can indeed own a private company without running them as part of a ministry, in that case they act like a shareholder and hold the management accountable for their action)
My house was sitting at 11 degrees at times. I can't afford to have the heating on and have health issues. When I mentioned it in passing my GP simply said they woke up to a house at 13 degrees and it was 'fine for them'... The irony being said Gp is on way more money than I am. She also said the best things in life are free. Some people just don't get it
Many of us in Australia have the opposite problem. Our former conservative governments sold us out too, and that leaves vulnerable people sweltering in 40+ degree temperatures unable to afford the electricity to run fans or air conditioning (if you’re fortunate enough to have it).
@@asilver2889 no but there are things Gps can socially prescribe and they can also offer a listening ear. In addition, she makes up to 4-5 times what I make so can afford heating. I once sat in on a group patient meeting where we were told after someone explained the impact of cost of living on their health that they should focus on the idea that the best things in life are free. Ironically coming from a medical professional who had just come back off a holiday
@@asilver2889 I: They said they only mentioned it in passing, and the GP started downplaying the issue. No, they weren't expecting the GP to help pay; only to have some freaking compassion
I was alive in 1986 and just entering the job market, the wealth never trickled down and being at the mercy of private corporation for basic services is a free market hellscape.
Yeah, anyone that remembers the push to privatise across the Commonwealth and suffered as a result pretty much had one response to the news of Thatcher's death "Ding dong...".
If you aren't happy with a private company, you can withdraw your funding and go to a competitor. If it's a state monopoly, and you are forced to pay for it via taxation, what power do you have, as an individual, to withhold your funding?
@@lochnessmunster1189 yes, you're a propagandist who has never been right. tell me more about trickle down wealth and other lies from eth extreme right, the NEO CONS. Not neo liberals, you don't get to try to shift the blame decades after the fact, it was NEO CONSERVATIVES who stole our future using the 'but tax is theft" bullshit you're still peddling even though there's no proof of any of the bullshit you are pushing ever worked the way your side claimed it did.
@@lochnessmunster1189 The main underlying assumption is that a government acts as a not-for-profit organisation, but is there any way to guarantee that a government doesn't act for profit (known more commonly as corruption)?
Great video, as always! One thing I'm surprised you didn't mention is that gas prices have dropped to 2021 level by now, and are expected to drop further. Yet the consumers in the UK don't experience any of that price drop.
Tbf there is always lag on such. The gas prices sale and resale are done over months in advance. So current wholesale prices would be reflected in retail prices. This would be true even if state owned.
@@tisFrancesfault so why did gas prices for the consumer rose at the same time as gas prices for the provider, yet gas prices for the consumer haven't dropped with gas prices for the provider? Maybe this entire industry as it stands is inheently predatory?
@@tisFrancesfault Tbf, the "lag" is always much greater when the wholesale prices have gone down than when they have gone up, when the lag can be in nanoseconds.
@@KyrieFortune It depended on whether the energy companies were buying futures contracts (which didn't track directly) or buying gas from the market live. All the companies which were doing the latter were the ones who went bust in quick succession. Now the only ones left are the ones who buy the futures contracts hence why we're seeing more of a lag doing down (also there wil be profitieering I am sure too)
I always love how “competition” is viewed as a universal good under neoliberalism. There is zero thought given to what they are competing over. They are not competing over your patronage, they are competing over profits. The company that makes the most profits wins the day. This is a good thing when it comes to commodity production. Some companies compete for profits by lowering their prices in a bid to undercut their competition and steal some of their market share. Other companies compete by improving their products to a point where the increased cost to consumers is acceptable given the quality of the product. This model, however, becomes very perverse when applied to major industries that we need to survive. Given the way energy grids work, it makes zero sense to introduce competition. The infrastructure needed to supply power to an entire city is too expensive to justify multiple providers. Therefore, you end up with 2 or 3 competitors with little to no overlap in coverage area. You have one power line coming into your house. The power company isn’t going to run a new line to your house every time you switch providers. You’re just stuck with the provider in your area. Therefore, if you have 2 or 3 businesses competing for profits in an industry with very little overlap, it is a recipe for oligopoly. If I’m a CEO trying to show the shareholders that I’ve won the competition for profits with the other energy company, then my goal is to increase my prices as high as possible before people just decide to live without power. Who are they going to turn to? There are competitors in the market, but if you can’t move your home into their coverage area then you’re stuck paying whatever I demand. I therefore have a de facto monopoly.
Arguably more important (at least of equal importance) to the idea of "what they are competing over" is also "are they actually fucking competing?" Competition can be quite good! If they're actually competing, and not say.. Creating fiefdoms and then colluding to raise prices across the board.
It's really illogical especially when competition is irrelevant to industries like power generation, where it is a geographic monopoly. There's only one company sending the juice from the power plant to your home. It's not like a TV streaming service or a cell phone provider. You can't just drop your electric company and switch to another unless you move.
@@krisstarring It would make some vague kind of sense if the competition was between like.. Oil, natural gas, green, and other forms of energy generation? But we all know that's not the case so it really don't apply too much here.
they can still get competition from places which they would not ecpect if their prices would be so high so other options could be more profitable, for example in my country when prices raised after war on Ukraine started there been a huge demand for solar panels so there been actual shortage of them and even now when market stabilized little bit I see new solar panels on lot of houses. People want to at least have their own electricity production in case of prices raising even more so they will buy less electricity from external supplier which will put a pressure on them to lower their prices. But there is still government which can regulate and outlaw individuals who want to be self sufficient.
@@nikdonic I agree with you, but that is also a problem of private industry controlling government action. If the government is the entity producing and distributing power, then what do they care if some rural people go off-grid with solar panels? All that means is that the government can save money on distribution to those remote locations. The only time the government cares about people going off-grid is when private companies profit off of the distribution of that power, because they rely on that distribution for their profits. If you start taking people off the grid, you are taking that out of their profits and they will lobby the government against it, hence you get stupid rules where you have to feed into the grid, which means you have to remain a customer of the private power distributors even though you produce your own power.
The worst thing is that many of us that were around in the 80s knew that public utilities shouldn’t be privatised. I could have made a few quid buying shares but didn’t because of my fundamental opposition to the principle. Even those that did mainly made a modest short term windfall as the number of shares available for individual investors was small and the majority were quickly seduced by the idea of taking a quick profit.
The neoliberals are pretty hell bent on taking people's money hostage in the stock market. "Oh, we have to bail out the market, think of your retirement!"
I mean obviously any money made from shares in British Gas was value fleeced from the taxpayer i.e. everyone in the country, shareholders in British Gas or not. But I know people don't always see the big picture in that way.
It's so frustrating! I argued with my friend the other day about this, and they just repeat the talking points and don't ever engage with what I am saying. DA brain rot is a real thing...
Yeah. Even if a public power grid isn't the best, you can guarantee that the private version is gonna be worse, simply because the corporations are only ever gonna do enough repairs when something goes down to get stuff flowing again, not to try and make sure it won't happen again, unless it's in a super damage prone spot and they'd make more money not having to go out and fix it constantly.
Living here for work for a few years has also shown me how difficult it can be to even get the account set up with these companies. The logistics are all over the place and it is a mess.
It makes me feel so much better to know that Privatization of industries best left to the government( and thus held accountable to the people) is ruining countries other than mine 😭🤣 -Me, an American
AHHHHH Privatization! Because everything is better when there is someone making a profit from it. That's why I am still paying down my debt for parental services. Mom and dad were really nice. They only charged me 30% of all I ever make. Thanks guys. You're the best! I know that profit motivation made it so!
@@cloudycolacorp Lol! Like that's how that works! But don't let it stop us from calling it my choice. I thought of running away to find my real parents. I could have. Maybe I would have found them. Who knows? Today I'm still not sure their mine. I never did a paternity test! Why didn't I chose to run away and find them? 1) I didn't know where they could be. 2) I didn't know who they were. 3) I had no clues** as to who they were. 4) I didn't know how to drive. 5) I wasn't sure how I would get food and clothes. 6) I cannot remember the other reasons, but there were more, so I talked myself out of it. **Mom said I was "the worst kid ever and the worst kid ever possible," so I knew these weren't my real parents. They wouldn't have said that! So, keep that in mind when you're ever feeling low or you're the worst. Just tell them, "NO! That's David Peppers!"
@MarioW Presumably, OP was not raised by his true parents (whether biological or adoptive) but by a couple of parents provided by such a service, which charged a fee that somehow has been imposed on him. If that's the case, I find it perverse because naturally, children should be a cost to the parents, not the other way around.
@@mariow7818 It is a capitalist's logic. There is nothing so good in this world, that adding the profit motive cannot make it better. Nothing within current markets or without, that shouldn't be made a source of profit for some one. Why are so many surprised when the economy and economic motivations behave as they are supposed to? When people lock up clean water and put guards on it and charge $6 or more per liter while all around homes have been devastated and men, women and children are getting deadly diseases and parasite infections for want of clean water, why are people appalled and shocked? The system is working like it is supposed to. I took numerous courses on economics, including some at college level. Find a need, fill the need, maximize profits. You cannot maximize profits by just letting people have what they need for free! In the press you see this too. Let people have their profit making. If something is important enough, some charity will eventually come along later and take care of those needs after the profits have been made. Never mind that the very profit making enterprise may be ever undermining the efforts to see that those needs are met. The government should not interfere by guaranteeing anything for health or general welfare -- no matter what the US Constitution might say -- with the possible exception of national defense and the livelihoods of defense contractors. Interference only makes markets fail more.
I love that central heating companies in Denmark aren’t allowed to make a profit. I only pay around €30/month on average to heat my apartment. They set their prices to what their expected expenses are in the coming year, and use their “profits” to expand and maintain the central heating network.
@@illegalopinions4082 basing this on French utility companies, but generally, they reduce price estimates for the next year to compensate. That, or they just invest more into infrastructure (stuff like renewable energies for example)
I live in Bath with other students and we don’t even turn on the heater unless the temperature outside goes negative. Even before the energy increase, rental housing has such inefficient heater and bad insulation that most of the heat just yeeted out the window anyway. It has been like this for 3 years and I’m honestly surprised I haven’t gone terribly insane yet.
I remember this talk, growing up in the 80s. These days I provide advice to older people on how to keep their homes energy efficient. It is both fascinating and disturbing to see how the country got into this mess.
You allowed it to become a mess by expecting that other people than you will start sticking their necks out. It is pure laziness, political lethargy that's allowing your political system to go corrupt. Britain is doomed, just like Big Brother USA. Both Labour and the Tories are being payed to advance your elite's agendas.
@@ascelot Even when they're not listed, the age and design of certain homes is a limitation. I live in North Wales and there is a LOT of older housing stock here!
I'm not even British and this was a truly brilliant video. Seems like it was researched really well and the arguments were put across in an entertaining, educational and non-condescending way (which is unfortunately a high bar on YT for video essays these days). Fantastic video, keep up the good work!
It got down to 13° in my newly-insulated flat this winter. I couldn't afford to heat when it dropped below freezing, despite the £66 a month (which would have paid for one inadequate storage heater for about 5 days). I was with a socialist energy company prior to the big collapse in 2021 and they made such a difference - and they were lovely people, too.
When it comes to industries that require massively expensive, permanent infrastructure like energy generation and railroads, "more competition = lower consumer prices" is a lie and they know it's a lie. The main goal of privatization is to create new sources of revenue for the already wealthy. Privatization achieved this goal. It's working as intended.
I think of it like this. ESSENTIAL things shouldn't be (fully) privatized. Things that without you can't live life. Education, infrastructure, healthcare, basic food/water and housing. With all of these you're just not in a position to bargain. Have a heart attack? You MUST go to the hospital regardless of what they charge. Need clean water and food? You must buy it regardless of price. Need a house? Must pay regardless your situation. In a price negotiation you're in an incredibly weak position compared to the private company. They can charge WHATEVER they want and you have to pay. Because of this trade position disadvantage. So, it makes sense to pay the government to negotiate on our behalf. Since they are in an even stronger trading position than these private companies. They can actually slam out a decent deal instead of paying 600$ for a 30$ medicine like in the privatized Healthcare system in the USA (epi pen per pen). Or 10.000$ to have your baby delivered in the private USA hospital.(yes, it costs 10.000$ to have a baby in the USA...) It's simple marketing. If you're not in a strong position to negotiate, then it's smart to get someone in a strong position (the government) to trade on your behalf.
@@lochnessmunster1189 He did say "bankrupting" not "is bankrupt". But I can't take it literally because I don't know how it's possible for a country to declare bankruptcy. Apart from Greece. But that's obviously different.
@@ericmollison2760 Well, that is true. But it's not in the interest of the energy companies to actually bankrupt a country, because if they do, they will make no income.
@@ericmollison2760 No... if you want to be pedantic about it, the original title _was_ 'How Energy Privatisation Bankrupted Britain'. It's been changed. Not that it matters - the original more hyperbolic title was fine. You can verify this by searching the original title in Google, in quotation marks.
It reminds me of the 'privatization' and 'deregulation' of electric distribution markets in California in 2000, which led to price spikes. Does anyone remember Enron? Will we ever learn?
We must not only undo what Thatcher did, but reverse it. So ... not just un-privatize, but ... give to the people. We need to ... take control of ... the way you make the thing. ... hm.
Hmm. Is that the thing where the, uh, producers obtain the... materials necessary ...for the creation of things? I swear I've heard this before... it's on the tip of my tongue...
@@Pensnmusic I see what you did there ;) ... I guess where Marx and/or Lenin went wrong was that he did not believe people would accept communism voluntarily hence single party dictatorship. And that did not work nor end well. An other thing they got wrong was the almost complete lack of private ownership and having everything controller centrally and by the government. People who have no stake in ownership treat common property as trash and who cannot own anything substantial like a house have little incentive. And for most things centralised control and decision making leads to bad decisions because it is does not respond well to demand. However for utilities and health care centralised ownership seems to produce better results. What seems to be working better is not ideological communism nor capitalism but having the more or less natural monopolies and utilities including health care in the hands of the government and let that part of the economy where there is actual competition and incentives for people to work be private.
If you ever want to do a spotlight on the other consequences of the privatization of electricity, you could look at Texas here in the US. Every time it gets under 40F or over 95F (relatively frequently), we get emails telling us to remember to turn our thermostats so low or so high that we might as well not have them, all so that the grid the state refuses to repair doesn't completely fail.
Very much this. Over 3 cents higher kwh average than neighboring states too and raising per year nearly 1c/kwh while Oklahoma, Louisiana, etc. went down this year. But always happy some of my bill go towards lobbying!
From this video I have learned that the core problem we face is that while the original intention was to generate power from childrens' screams they're now so jaded by quite how horrible everything around them is today. As a result it's hard to get them to scream at normal scary things any more. Laughter energy was proven to be far too intermittent and unsustainable as well.
In SA most of our grid is still technically under state control, but the fuel gets mined by private companies and maintenance work is also largely outsourced. At this point, we have 6-10 hours without power per day. The other day it came out that the maintenance companies have been sabotaging our electrical infrastructure to get more work. Shocker.
The timing of this dropping is wild. The ice storm in the US this week knocked out thousands upon thousands of people's power. I work at a public library, and we've been flooded with people without electricity or heat. We're doing our best, but there's only so much a library can do. Our infrastructure is a joke, and everyone is paying for it. In more ways than one.
Ive been told its going to take a week to restore my power. Over 200k people just in michigan, just serviced by Consumers Energy, have lost power. I have no idea how im gonna afford to keep a generator running for that long, im extremely fortunate i have a natural gas heater otherwise my family would likely have to freeze.
And the average American is so hopelessly stupid that they'll swallow the reactionary lies about how it's all Biden's fault, somehow. Not the companies running the private services, and certainly not the gas industry, no. It's the fault of an imaginary government cabal & a non-existent socialism. We're doomed because the polity is a bunch of crayon-eating retards and we decided they should have political power via electoral politics.
You're really good at utilising very mild-mannered and historical language to describe events, (and please don't take this as an indictment) in the same way educational texts can lay out ideas in a clearer way than excerpts from primary sources or personal experience! This means I can show this to a right-wing family member of mine as a reference to their lived experience, and it doesn't seem as aggressively politicised and personal as something identity related. Useful stuff, thank you for your work!
Moved from Scotland to the USA last year and found myself stunned when National Grid were my energy supplier in the USA. Yes. The same National Grid. Fingers in every pie that lot.
Technically national grid isn't an energy supplier it runs the infrastructure required to get gas and electricity to homes. Kinda funny it's actually an EU regulation that created the series of EDCs or electric distribution companies we see today. With national grid originally being called north west power. Ofc it was more of an excuse because what other countries did was just create a seperate public company to run the infrastructure and then also production.
As any large company, they have an obligation to expand and increase their market. What do you do when you've got 100% market share in your country of operation? You have to expand internationally.
In Norway we _had_ a great transportation system when it was publicly owned. When they sold it all off bit by bit, it became *terrible.* The trains are never on time and tracks aren't kept up well enough, the pricing is not nationalised, the actual routes and departures of most buses are stupid and the list goes on and on. We are also suffering pricing issues with our electricity because we started privatising, so now people are _really_ feeling it here too. Every time something is privatised, it just gets worse. Additionally, they keep cutting the budgets of the public services we really need, like hospitals and education, while not making laws and agreements with other countries that ensure we don't have "tax refugees" who mooch wealth off our country. We need to start making international agreements that make companies and owners pay proper taxes in the countries they produce AND sell products in, so they can't escape taxes by moving to places like Switzerland. This might mean twisting Switzerland's arm, but they know what they are doing...
As a Swiss I need to counter your argument a bit, with the new international tax laws it will be fairer overall. And companies will leabe Switzerland but you know where they go? Ireland, the Channel Isles maybe even Panama. Because they are actually far cheaper in corporate taxes than Switzerland. In my opinion stuff should be nationalised much more often, we have the same problems here as well but still to a lesser degree since privatisation is often stopped by strong political resistance from citizens and left parties.
Very nice video. Worth mentioning that international exchange of electricity is quite substantial in Europe. There are a bunch of systems in place to harmonize the market, such that if there is a ton of wind in one country their cheap energy is exported to neighbours. The UK left many of the mechanisms used to optimize the process after Brexit, making the electricity prices higher in the long run.
Worth mentioning is that with this "substantial international exchange of electricity" the horrendous gas prices in German make the consumer in the Scandinavia and Finland pay the same horrendous prices for wind electricity which is almost free to produce compared to gas. So in effect because German shunned and destroyed their nuclear energy and decided to rely on Putins gas the northern countries that made better decisions are now footing the bill.
@@Axel_Andersen This is unrelated to the UK but sure. Those utilities in Scandinavia are making profit by selling energy to Germany. Bringing in tons of money for Scandinavia in the process. Who makes the profit? Private companies? National producers? (I honestly don't know) If they are private then tax the hell out of them, or nationalise them, and heavily regulate them... then the profit actually belongs to the people of Scandinavia, what would be so bad about that?
@@aitor9185 They are private companies. Yeah, taxing them would seem like a good option. Not likely to happen though in any meaningful manner. Also at the same time some large energy companies are getting large sums of government subsidies because they speculated with electricity prices with futures and would go under unless they get emergency funding. As tax payer and customer to those companies this does not seem fair.
@@Axel_Andersen privatisazion seems terrible in Scandinavia too. Certainly no one to blame but greed and subpar politicians. Like any other commodity if managed right it could bring large amounts of wealth to those countries, like the Norwegians with their Oil and Gas sovereign fund. That being said, them exporting their clean hydro and wind energy is pretty good for the environment. Also sometimes some countries produce more energy than they need with wind/solar, which if they cannot sell anywhere often goes unused. Energy trading across borders is the way for a renewable future. The exports are not a problem on their own, private profits on those exports is the problem.
@@aitor9185 "their cheap energy is exported to neighbours" - it's not even sold cheaply in their own countries as its pegged to the most expensive type of energy genius. Same old argument, ppl like you with your kind of thinking are so incredibility boring, "if it was this way" or "if we just do this" or "because this was'nt implemented in this way" bla bla bla, none of you have the ability to argue coherently as to why in Europe, the U.S or the U.K that privatisation has had 40 years to prove itself and has utterly failed, you just can't admit privatisation was a solution in search of a problem that never and still doesn't exist.
In France, the motorways have been privatized. We are paying for them twice, with taxes that paid for the land and construction, and with tolls for their maintenance. I pay as much in tolls as for the fuel when I travel. This is why car sharing is so popular in France. The companies (like Vinci) that profit from this have huge lobbying power.
That is somewhat comforting to hear. I know of places where you pay taxes in buying a car, taxes for using that same car, if its a gasoline engine you get away with only paying additional taxes in the fuel price, if its diesel, you pay taxes for the car being a diesel powered car, and also pay taxes on the diesel fuel. This is a country that is sparcely populated.
Don't worry lad, we're used to being ignored up in Scotland. I'll cry myself to sleep hugging my free degree and sense of loss over my lack of student loans.
You know, coming from Cornwall, I do feel a certain envy for you other Celts who resisted complete annexation. Being a 'county of England', while rotting with the same care Westminster shows any Celtic nation- really blessed with the sh*t aspects of both, and not even the illusion of autonomy. At this point I don't even support Celtic nations independence, so much as getting together to vote England out. We can call it Exit.
@@e.s.r5809The irony is that after Elizabeth 1st of England died, England was effectively annexed by the Scottish crown which promptly relocated the Capital down to London and James 6th of Scotland became James 1st of his new United Kingdom of Great Britain. If it had been the other way around we'd probably just call the whole place England.
@@Tom_Nicholas Yeah, great video, but it should have come with a health warning. I live in an area of the country that suffered horribly under Maggie, and still hasn't recovered, probably never will either.
I live in the US in a state that has universal publicly owned non-profit electricity companies. For a few years in the early 2000s I moved to a state with privately owned electrical utilities and my monthly electric bills absolutely skyrocketed. Whenever anyone asked me what I missed most about my home state my answer was always “SOCIALIZED ELECTRICITY!” By the way, when you were speaking about the investors who profited off the privatization British electrical utilities you mentioned 37:51 Warren Buffett who ironically lives in my hometown, you know in a state that’s had socialized electricity for over 80 years.
Coming from the US, it's pretty amazing how the privatization of energy producers and sellers seems to have become entirely decoupled from everything else in the country. Part of privatization is diversification; but somehow the energy companies in the UK forgot that in order for them to make money they can't profiteer so much that no one else can. Even American gas companies know that rule. It's just fascinating how many UK industries are so disconnected and decoupled from each other.
I'm so impressed by the quality of Tom's work. It's so good it distracts me from staring at my smart meter readout, watching the bill go up because I had the audacity to want a cup of tea and put the kettle on...
41:43 - This is why the Victorian state government here in Australia did the homework for you and based on your inputs, listed the best priced energy companies for you - and it gave you a VERY good bribe of $250 to use their website. And not just a once-off either. This is season 2 of it and yes, you can apply for it even if you've got it before.
Another exceptional video, if not one that made me incredibly angry as a young person who has recently moved into my own (rental) flat, and having to live in the cold over the winter since energy was so unaffordable. My Nebula subscription recently lapsed, and come payday I’ll find the change to use your link since my Patreon budget is still yet to manifest. Keep up the incredible work Tom! ❤
@@lochnessmunster1189 When a large proportion of the country's population is unable to afford to heat their homes, one could say the country is broke/bankrupt. It's even worse when you consider how mild the winter is in the UK, compared to places like Canada or the northern US, where people can heat their homes just fine.
@@thelight3112 But when you say "large proportion", which numbers do you have? And when you say "is unable to afford to heat their homes", do you mean, heat them in any way? Your claim is very vague: and I'm not meaning to be facetious.
And the crazy part is that Australia has plenty of gas, but the government allowed private companies to export all of it overseas - just because it was more profitable!
@@simonabunker Not in WA. 10% of gasnos reserved. Gas prices are low, power prices never spiked. It's very possible to have a functional system, you just have to remember that gas and power companies are sometimes bastards.
@@letsburn00 I almost did say except WA! And I think that just proves even more how this is a product of corporate greed rather than being a real crisis.
@@letsburn00 Yep - if anything Australia has a direct local point of comparison about what privatisation does, insane so many people there still support it! Though the traditional conservative response to that is to white-ant, scupper, or generally ruin anything they can't privatise to make it so dysfunctional the public will WANT it privatised (eg. NBN)
Back in the era of mass privatization of national assets such as power, water, railways, etc it was predicted that this would happen. The money that goes into the system does not stay in the system as it would have under nationalized operation, rather it goes out to dividends and other payouts to shareholders and business owners - very few of which are actually in the UK. There are also those payments that go out on losses such as advertising, door to door knockers, crisis management, consultants, Golden parachutes, bailouts,.... I could go on but the problems of the privatized industries are well known in the UK. There is no going back, No individual politician or party has the political standing nor the balls to do it, and no one has come up with a fix for the problem.
Just reading an article about the loss of orchards in Kent due to the cost of electricity for cold storage. The prices have gone up 300% so consequently growers are digging up their orchards because it’s unsustainable. From now on we can expect to import apples. The knock-on effect of privatised energy is far-reaching.
@@lochnessmunster1189 you are quite the capitalist reply guy lmao, smh. I'd suggest you take a peek at Capital for beginners by Michael Wayne iirc, it will clear up many of the misconceptions you have been parroting around the comment section. Take care and please try to read something about economics, even Adam Smith realized the faults in the talking points you so enthusiastically repeat again and again.
WRONG. “Prices have gone up…” This is the result of the price shock from stopping Putin in Ukraine, and the consequent supply disruption of cut-off Russian energy. Six months ago, were I a political leader, I would have made peace with the evil Putin to cease the shortage. And their knock ons.
When the North Sea oil and gas rigs came up for sale, the two owners, Norway and Britain had a choice, retain the oil and gas fields or sell them off. Maggie had an election coming up where she had promised tax cuts. She decided to sell the rights so as to remain in power. Norway retained their ownership and created one of the largest Sovereign Wealth Funds in the world. Thus making Noeway a very rich nation, if Maggie had the nation's wealth at heart she could have made Britain compatible with Norway. As we all now know now, when something is privatised, the price goes up and the service goes down. If only Milton Friedman had not been born the world would be a different place, especially in the environmental sense. We now ravage the planet for profit and shareholder dividends. “Politicians are a strange breed of bird. They sing about their noble intentions and charitable hearts, and they roost with the most contemptible and corrupt of creatures.” “The main problem in any democracy is that crowd-pleasers are generally brainless swine who can go out on a stage & whup their supporters into an orgiastic frenzy-then go back to the office & sell every one of the poor bastards down the tube for a nickel apiece.” ― Hunter S. Thompson,
"We now ravage the planet for profit"- if you lived alone on an island, and needed to utilise the resources, would you be "ravaging" the planet for profit, even in a tiny way?
Insane that society at large isn't up in arms about the way privatization of basic, necessary resources is being used to extract so much wealth from ordinary people
@@lochnessmunster1189 depends on the preexisting condition. If there's already 15 different private providers, one more changes nothing. If the only provider is public, then any money that goes to the private alternative's profit is money that exits the pocket of the community, so yes.
@@bacicinvatteneaca "one more changes nothing"- not correct. If there are 15 private providers already and another is to emerge, it must be competitive (undercut prices of others) if it is to exist at all.
One of the ironies of grid privatization in the name of "consumer choice" is that it's a CLASSIC example of the sorts of things even orthodox economics would say shouldn't be privatized. Energy companies, especially power lines, are textbook examples of natural monopolies
Also the best things about "price competition" are 12-36 months of minimum contract term and similar ridiculous notice periods. In other words, most of the time you can't switch even if you want too.
“We’re going to ignore Scotland” while leaving Northern Ireland out of all the moving bits of the animations and not even acknowledging it exists. We’re used to it.
I feel you, I also live in an area of the country that isn't London or the South East, and the recent media coverage of the "new leveling up" is a joke, the media kept quoting 10's of millions going to this region or that region, whilst they failed to mention that 2/3rds of the billions on offer are being spent in London and the South East. Rishi just carrying on diverting funds from the poor regions to the rich regions, again.
Man Tom you're so real, I wish I could've met someone like you growing up to validate my beliefs. Oh well I'm glad I've found your channel and you're spreading good word to convince and change the seemingly unconvinceable especially up here in the north. Good job man
I think what anyone who claims private industry is more efficient than public government has failed to realize - is that private profit is mechanically the same thing as public corruption. And as profit is the entire point of private industry... There is no way it can actually be more efficient than public government.
Must be some pretty big boxes when they contain not only one, but SEVERAL space marines! Maybe one could conquer the British power industry in the name of the Emperor!
@@Tom_Nicholas Well unfortunately these days GW will call them "Primarian Grobbleslaughterers" or some other trademarkable world salad, so rhyming them is a bit more of a stretch :P
Excellent presentation young person. When I first became a tax payer, as a citizen I owned a railway company, a power company, a water company but thatcher sold all the family silver and now I own nothing 😢 Most of us want them put back into public ownership. Those in power are not there for our benefit but the benefit of the few individuals that seek to control us people. We have to rebel and once we get together we are legion. Peace and community 😊
Your videos are incredible. For better or worse, the internet is the only place one can be a semi-impactful public intellectual today. Keep doing the good work that many of us are too lazy, timid, or technically incompetent to do.
The only issue is the right wing, sell your grandmother for a buck types, are much better funded and selling their liea all the time. Ben Shapiro and his ilk from propaganda university make many young people think more of the same poison will heal you.
Both France and Britain used to have civilian nuclear power as a part of the nationally owned electricity production authority. It has turned out that although reactors run by ordinary civil servants can be a brilliant success, private ownership probably doesn't know how to hire the right people. EDF used to be Électricité de France, and the energy companies of the EU could not compete with it. It is now a private company mostly owned by the French government, but it has lost its soul. This is all the more horrid in that nuclear is the only technology that is both more reliable, safer, and environmentally cleaner than fossil fuels. The actual quantity of fuel and waste per unit of energy, or of average power for a year, is millions of times less than for fossil fuel.
Interesting extra tidbit: nuclear produces less radioactive waste than coal, except the one produced by nuclear is solid while that of coal is dust suspended in the fumes...
In Finland the electricity market has been privatised since 1995. Prices have increased, but part of that is caused by a government mandate that requires electricity companies to bury power lines underground to reduce the number of power outages. This has made electricity pretty expensive in more rural areas, where the cost is split among fewer people. Still, at least in cities the prices are fairly reasonable. The biggest monthly bill that I got in the crazy period of 2022-2023 was 50€ for a 65m2 apartment. Nowadays monthly bills are around 10€. Also, cities typically have district heating, so I don't need to pay extra just to heat my home. In the countryside the situation is worse, but definitely not unmanageable. Some people save money by burning wood for heating, and heat pumps have also become popular.
As a Canadian I couldn't help feeling a bit astonished that UK households only spent £450/year on utilities in 2020 (3:43). I spend $250/month in the summer, and as much as $550/month in the winter, and that's just always been normal for me. Not trying to detract from this horrible situation, it just surprised me. Great video as always!
Me, from Scandinavia, also was wondering. However the latitude is different AND you and me I presume live in single family houses, that is different from the average when a substantial part of the population lives in blocks of flats. My children who live in BoFs pay something like €50/month for their utilities because of heating that is the by product of electricity production.
Air conditioning in homes is very rare in the UK. It just isn't worthwhile - why spend all that money on something which /might/ be needed for a short time in any year? It's not like the southern US, where a typical home would be unliveable without it. Of course homes could be designed better there, but... cultural issues. Heating though is universal, and almost always gas-fuelled, except in very rural areas.
That number does not include telecom and water bills, there are 5 Canadian dollars to 3 pounds and the UK temperature is far more stable. The temperature pretty rarely goes outside of 5-25 degrees
Are Canada's utilities ran by the mafia or something? Or do you live in a very cold part of Canada, or in a particularly large household? Or are you including anything other than electricity or water in that $550 (e.g. water, internet etc.) I do agree even as a Brit that £450 a year seems a touch on the low side, I reckon I was paying about that in a single person household. But $550 is not far off my mortgage (admittedly that too is going to skyrocket in the near future), I think the day that my electricity and gas is comparable to my mortgage will be a very bad day for my finances!
The intense wildfires in California can basically all be attributed to PG&E, the private company that runs all of our power here. There is no incentive for them to properly check, maintain, and update their infrastructure, and thus extreme conditions cause breakdowns. Part of it is also definitely that we don't do controlled burns like the native american tribes did before us, but easily broken power systems do not help.
What is a "human necessity" is always a matter of opinion, and never an absolute fact. Why shouldn't non-governmental organisations be allowed to run energy supplies?
@@lochnessmunster1189 I'm sorry what semantic arse did you pull that out of. "Oh well you can't define human necessities can you checkmate" except I can, something that leads to death without it... Not very hard to understand
The one great thing about the Tories excessive push for privatisation and capitalisation of everything in the country is they've disproved their own philosophy more effectively than anyone else could have. The downside is the UK had to be destroyed in the process. Maybe the other countries can learn from this although probably not as capital and billionaires rule everything now so there's no getting the power out of their hands without probably more extensive collapses.
I built my own off grid system. It`s easy to do and you can do it in staged. It cost about £2000 when I finished but saved me a fortune whilst the batteries lasted. It`s just a canal boat type set up but bigger. Now the batteries have dead I`ve just connected the panels to the grid with mini off grid inverters. This is the way forward for poor people like me. Buy a few solar panels when you can afford it and a small mini grid tied inverter. You can use as many mini grid inverters as you like. So just add to the system when you can afford to. I just have the panels on sheds etc. You can plug them into any mains socket even ones in out buildings. I got up to 2 kilowatts which means I have lots of spare energy which I send to the hot water tank using a solar immersion diverter. So I have as much hot water in the summer as I need. I am lucky to have a wood burner that also heats the water so I don`t pay for heating or hot water. No gas bill and electric is £26 a month.
Energy policy is one of those areas where the capture of governments by capital is most egregiously on display. It has never and will never result in increased competition, it is purely a commitment to channelling wealth into the hands of rent-seekers. It is illogical, even in high school economics (because what competition could meaningfully exist in a natural monopoly) but it is an amazing tool for wealth extraction.
There is a reason why it came mainly in the late 80's and 90's when the European empires had collapsed. It was basically imperialism within your own borders. If capitalists couldn't take foreign assets they increased their hold over domestic ones.
Support the channel and get 40% off a Nebula subscription by heading to go.nebula.tv/tomnicholas
U should have cut in merica fuck yeah song for americas electrical accent
do you do private tutoring on subjects and presentation? I'm sure you do, i am in no doubt that this can be true. I've seen your students in the newspapers, news channels and all over social media. I'm going to take wild guess and say that all these politicians like Boris Johnson changing costumes and talking a lot. Although i'm not totally sure the message they took away was the same.
@TomNicholas Could you link to the source for the UK company profitability and Gas and electricity distribution companies?
Isn't a bit iffy using anita's work to pitch your nebula, that is good, without providing a easy link for her content?
The crazy part is South Africa is thinking of privatizing electricity
Because of the ineptitude of government and corruption of government suppliers
😩😩😩😩😩
Back in Bulgaria mass privatisation in the 90s went so horribly that growing up I thought that to "privatise" a factory simply meant to shut down said factory. 😂
they couldn't find private buyers so they shut it down?
@@MustaphaRashiduddin-zx7rn Nope, they'd buy the factories, fire employees and stop production if needed, disassemble the whole thing and sell it for scraps. These went for such low prices, that the "investors" became billionaires just pulling this stunt a few times. Most of these facilities were not capable to turn a profit without massive investment and restructuring, and even the ones that tried mostly failed.
Same happened in Romania. Some people suspect that a few of these industrial assets were actually strategically disabled and wiped out to prevent competition with western companies. Or, at least, to provide "a better environment" for western investment - which the politician were very happy to facilitate (I wonder why).
Of course, privatization of various sectors of the national economy was the IMFs favorite demand.
@@MustaphaRashiduddin-zx7rn more likely the buyers were 1) stripping it for parts as corporate raiders 2) deliberately shutting down competitors at cost to ensure a monopoly
Nah, new owners usually knowingly bankrupted said factory for financial gains.
Why run factory and try to make it profitable when you could take loans, effectively steal them, sell of factory's assets at discounted prices and bankrupt what left?
Happened in Russia too at crazy scale
Same right around 1993 in Bolivia.
It's insane to me that we as humans allow certain things that are necessary to life to be ran by profit driven corporations. It's such a stupid thing to do..
The Gilded age tycoons became tycoons because they controlled industries that governments were dependent on.
They effectively became more powerful than government because the government needed railroads, oil, and steel, especially for war.
Once they had that power, they could shape government because what could any PM or president do if their supply of oil, steel, or transportation was cut-off?
Edit: this is based on the idea that once Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, and Carnegie got a foothold in America they built an international culture over generations that gave other nationalized industries the pathway to cut a check to some politicians (like Thatcher and some boomers) in exchange for them relinquishing power to a private organization
It's because we live in a capitalist system, where the most important thing is profits, not people. They always ask "how're gonna pay for it?". Even though we can pay for it easily, they'll find a nitpick and dismantle that. Really, it shouldn't matter how much we pay for it - any price is worth it. If we can't afford to pay the salesman, then the problem is the salesman. And whatever it takes, live-saving care and power and food should be accessible to all.
@@austinfletchermusicbeing in America.. it's weird that "how would we pay for it?" Is always a problem when it comes to anything that would help Americans.. yet, billions and billions upon billions of dollars are always ready to be sent to any country that needs it..
It all just hurts my brain.. this entire system just isn't sustainable.
@gamingwiththisguy8106 Blame Pete Peterson. He's an ultra-rich guy who managed (after failing Hard with the general public) to convince news networks to push this question in recent years.
@Gaming With This Guy huh, you think we send money to other countries without strings attached?
Every dollar of aid is designed to benefit a US based corporation. Every bit of corruption funnels money into corporate contracts, corporate tax breaks, etc.
You're focusing on the wrong things. The aid is a form of power that allows us to dictate what policies other governments will implement, always policies that benefit US corporations. You know, the corporations we keep failing to tax. We keep doing handouts using public money to corporations. The profit driven corporations are the ones pulling the strings, and the investors, CEOs, and board of directors are the main beneficiaries. That's who the US government works for. Military aid ends in corporate contracts. That's why we spend so much on the military, funnel it into private defense contractors. Additionally, to bully other countries more directly to force them to implement policies that benefit US corporations. That's the "democracy" they tell you they're spreading. Installed governments that spend another countries money on US contractors and sells off public goods to US investors.
"We have money for aid" no, we have money for corporate handouts.
There was a story in the UK news this week about an elderly woman died of hypothermia in her home because she was terrified of not being able to pay her energy bill.
Really ? Oh dear. That is terrifying !!
@@DipayanPyne94indeed it is😊
it is not a new thing that happen every winter in UK at 1000 people die every year.
i thought uk was a first world country. had me fooled
Yeah I think she lived in Bury, a small Town next to Bolton in the North West. I told my 89 year old Gran Dad not to worry about putting the heating on. It's not worth worrying about, if you can't pay it, what are they going to do, cut off a 90 year old? To my knowledge they are not allowed to cut off OAPS, which I'm guessing this lady didn't know. So sad that are OAPs are living in cold homes.
One of the biggest, longest national cons was utilities privatization. Water is especially galling to me. It's literally a monopoly!
Don't forget privatizing the airwaves!
What do you mean? If you want cheaper water just...move house by 50-100miles!
Even the most capetalistic politician in other places have objections to water privitisation.
It's not so bad on its own. It just costs 4x the value you rolled. But if they also get the the electric company, it jumps up to 10x. Getting into housing and hotels is much more lucrative.
Yeah this is the worst one, while the gov makes it more profitable to dump the waste in the rivers than to fix the infrastructure
Great well researched documentary. The fact that similar analysis is never presented by today's national media says it all.
Thank you very much. Yes, I really hope it adds something to the conversation that is usually missing in more mainstream analyses.
Private Eye have been calling out the privatisation of utilities since it happened. so have the guardian, just less loud and often. Its not ignored by ALL media.
@@keefymckeefface8330 Yeah and when they were provided with an electoral candidate, truly opposed to privatisation, they opposed him.
Media wont bite the hand that pays the ad bills. Its also why they hate any public broadcasting
Yes, but I feel like this video could be shortened by a significant amount, even while retaining the information provided.
I'm fortunate enough to live in a town in the US that has its own municipal electrical service. Electricity is .08 cents per KWh here. In the 1950s, my town signed on with the FDR Power Project initiative to source power from the St. Lawrence River from a dam on Bernhart Island. Towns were given the option to vote and pay into the project. Mine did, and now, 70 years later, we still reap that reward.
The trouble is they don't make great characters like Franklin and Elleanor who was apparently key in influenceing his decision regards the new deal
Today's Republicans will call what you have Kaamunism. People are so easily fooled.
Wow!!! 😮 - I wish! I'm charged 32p per Kwh "Day" charge & 11p per Kwh "Night" charge with an additional 39p per day Standing Charge each month! 😔
At the expense of your tax money, and others that can't pay for it at the low price, looks good on paper when they say they charge 0.8USD per Kw/H additionally but when you factor what is paid on top of the local tax that is sent out to the hydroelectric generator for maintenance that would be 0.25USD per KWH which is ironic because privatised Hydroelectric Damns only run at 0.2 kwh , funny huh
A private damn in Sri Lanka provides electricity at 0.04kw/h. All built by students on top of that
We did the same in New Zealand, the private power companys made record profits and still do to this day they are barely competitive and most users are too lazy to keep switch over to better plans that give little gains for little periods of time, we basically sold our country's backbone to corporations.
The UK's situation is worse. It's like if the government sold its remaining controlling stake in Mercury, Meridian and Genesis and on top of that sold Transpower as well
The amount I want to destroy the "stop 3 waters" posters increases ever day
Neoliberalism moment
Too lazy, or there is no real choice in pricing
Did you lot sell off as many services as we did in Australia? Banks, telephone network, electricity, we’ve got nothing left here.
It's not as bad in Denmark as in England currently, but kind of same story. Privatization -> price hikes. EDIT: And honestly, it feels like, to me, that selling your infrastructure is like pissing your pants to keep warm. Or, I don't know, selling off your organs to pay your bills.
Yeah, it's a scam like everything else nowadays
Both metaphors are accurate.
Argentinian here, we privatized a massive ammount of our infrastructure in the 90s.
As far as i renembered we have power cuts in summer that went from 12 hours to several days, several times in a daily basis in summer. Now with the Ukraine crisis we had in winter too
Everyone belive it's a bullshit system safe for our former president that has shares in the company, and now he insist if he wins again to privatize even more
Our problem in Denmark was generaly that the old state run instiution was HORRIBLY ineffecient.. privatisation could have been done better but yet we are still mostly in control of our grid.
NoW yOu SoUnD lIkE a SoCiAlIsT
I am Swedish currently living in Scotland. Our flat was a toasty 14-16 degrees Celsius before we noticed whenever we caught colds they weren't going away like at all and we caved in and turned the heating on (to a whopping 17 or 18 degrees, so still just bordering on that "probably not detrimental to your health" temp, thanks WHO...). It is now end of May and we have had the heating off for months and for some reason our energy company decides that NOW is a good time to increase our energy bills from £70/month to £189/month. That is a 170% increase in our electricity bill. I saw an ad at a bus stop "informing" people that lowering your heating by just a degree could help you save up to £30 a year or something ridiculous like that. And that's when I decided I can't live in this country anymore.
I'm so sad that I have to leave the UK, I love the social life and a lot of the general culture, I've absolutely loved living here and I would have liked to continue that. But it is simply unaffordable. SCANDINAVIA is cheaper to live in. It is absolutely fkn insane and I'm so upset that this decision was an escape route rather than a choice that I could make for myself in my own time when I felt ready.
Out of curiosity, why did you relocate to Scotland in the first place? Isn't everything better run in Sweden? 😂
@@THCBach I moved to England for uni and then to Scotland for my masters and at that point I was on the EU settlement scheme so now I'm kind of just sticking around so I can become permanently settled and not have to deal with visas and stuff if I ever want to move back to or work in the UK
@@Trampolina2000 Thank you for sharing that! Good luck with the home office - absolute pain in the ass, I speak from personal experience!
@@Trampolina2000 Funny how i want to move to Sweden cause of how much nicer it is than England
If they don't make enough money they raise prices to make their arbitrary forecast and if they make money they up prices claiming high demand.
"Let's take our most essential and most dangerous industries and incentivize spending as little as possible on maintenance and improvements"
-people who should never have been in charge of anything but somehow are ruling the world
"What could possibly go wrong?"
**looks at East Palestine, Ohio**
We live in an idiocracy. The dumbest and least qualified people succeed while the most intelligent and most capable of leading starve on the streets
They just wanna speedrun revolutions again and frick around to find out :)
@@sonicboy678 i don't see the problem, there are 1000 of accident every year, what so special about this one?
*Texas has entered the chat*
people are freezing to death but profits are up is the most dystopian thing ever
Shortages are always government generated.
You noted they would make a lovely profit if they could supply all the power people can buy.
It should have been called corporate games instead of hunger Games
Helping the poor and commons aint profitable.
@@Commievn the poor don’t donate to political campaigns.
@@thorinbane maybe with a little 1984 thrown in lol
The summary of Thatcher privatisation reminded me of Russia's 1990s privatisation effort. Each citizen got a voucher to buy shares with. The idea was to introduce capitalism in an equitable way.
My family got Gazprom shares, but many others sold theirs for cash, needing the money.
I have a strong suspicion this was instrumental in propping up Russia's oligarchy.
It was absolutely. I recommend Trauma Zone. It very nicely explains how global business industries conspired with local Russian oligarchs during the "shock therapy" to disenfranchise the Russian people and lay the path toward the fascistic oligopoly that has gripped the Kremlin right now.
At least it was nationalised under Putin
@@kabzaify to bad he's focused spending it on external issues rather then internal ones.
@@kabzaify That would be advantageous, if the russian state wasnt putins property, making it while not owned by a oligarch, but a dictator.
So, what is the value of Gasprom shares that your family hold? Britian like most countries subsidized their power. Cannot sustain forever. Energy is the foundation of economy, and we cannot subsidize it. In the US, energy in all forms is at cost, varies slightly depending on taxation in states and cities yet still cheaper than milk.
Government run system is the least inefficient., even in the US.
It's not like these end results weren't already economically well understood. In Smith's Wealth of Nations, he talks about how the effects of profit have a very significant outcome on increasing prices, and privatising things is just the act of introducing profits. Of course, the term "privatisation" did not exist in his day, it was only coined in the early 20th century to describe Nazi economic policy. He also talks about how the profit motive itself, left unchecked, is just going to result in an effective "tax" being placed on society, as companies reduce competition.
So you've got to wonder. If all this was obvious to Adam Smith, the so called founder of modern economics, where the hell do these people get this idea that simply privatising things increases "efficiency"? Smith also gives a hint as to the source of such ideas in wealth of nations, talking about how the merchant class tends to have a far better understanding of their self interests than anyone else, and will convince themselves, and everyone else, that it is their self interest, that is the common interest, even though it is usually contradictory to the common interest.
Relevant quotes
"His employers constitute the third order, that of those who live by profit. It is the stock that is employed for the sake of profit, which puts into motion the greater part of the useful labor of every society. The plans and projects of the employers of stock regulate and direct all the most important operations of labor, and profit is the end proposed by all those plans and projects. But the rate of profit does not, like rent and wages, rise with the prosperity, and fall with the declension, of the society. On the contrary, it is naturally low in rich, and high in poor countries, and it is always highest in the countries which are going fastest to ruin. The interest of this third order, therefore, has not the same connection with the general interest of the society as that of the other two. Merchants and master manufacturers are, in this order, the two classes of people who commonly employ the largest capitals, and who by their wealth draw to themselves the greatest share of the public consideration. As during their whole lives they are engaged in plans and projects, they have frequently more acuteness of understanding than the greater part of country gentlemen. As their thoughts, however, are commonly exercised rather about the interest of their own particular branch of business, than about that of the society, their judgment, even when given with the greatest candor (which it has not been upon every occasion), is much more to be depended upon with regard to the former of those two objects, than with regard to the latter. Their superiority over the country gentleman is, not so much in their knowledge of the public interest, as in their having a better knowledge of their own interest than he has of his. It is by this superior knowledge of their own interest that they have frequently imposed upon his generosity, and persuaded him to give up both his own interest and that of the public, from a very simple but honest conviction, that their interest, and not his, was the interest of the public. The interest of the dealers, however, in any particular branch of trade or manufactures, is always in some respects different from, and even opposite to, that of the public. To widen the market and to narrow the competition is always the interest of the dealers. To widen the market may frequently be agreeable enough to the interest of the public; but to narrow the competition must always be against it, and can serve only to enable the dealers, by raising their profits above what they naturally would be, to levy, for their own benefit, an absurd tax upon the rest of their fellow citizens. The proposal of any new law or regulation of commerce which comes from this order, ought always to be listened to with great precaution, and ought never to be adopted till after having been long and carefully examined, not only with the most scrupulous, but with the most suspicious attention. It comes from an order of men whose interest is never exactly the same with that of the public, who have generally an interest to deceive and even to oppress the public, and who accordingly have, upon many occasions, both deceived and oppressed it."
...
"In reality high profits tend much more to raise the price of work than high wages. If in the linen manufacture, for example, the wages of the different working people, the flax-dressers, the spinners, the weavers, etc., should, all of them, be advanced twopence a day, it would be necessary to heighten the price of a piece of linen only by a number of twopences equal to the number of people that had been employed about it, multiplied by the number of days during which they had been so employed. That part of the price of the commodity which resolved itself into wages would, through all the different stages of the manufacture, rise only in arithmetical proportion to this rise of wages. But if the profits of all the different employers of those working people should be raised five per cent, that part of the price of the commodity which resolved itself into profit would, through all the different stages of the manufacture, rise in geometrical proportion to this rise of profit. The employer of the flax-dressers would, in selling his flax, require an additional five per cent upon the whole value of the materials and wages which he advanced to his workmen. The employer of the spinners would require an additional five per cent both upon the advanced price of the flax and upon the wages of the spinners. And the employer of the weavers would require a like five per cent both upon the advanced price of the linen yarn and upon the wages of the weavers. In raising the price of commodities, the rise of wages operates in the same manner as simple interest does in the accumulation of debt. The rise of profit operates like compound interest. Our merchants and master-manufacturers complain much of the bad effects of high wages in raising the price, and thereby lessening the sale of their goods both at home and abroad. They say nothing concerning the bad effects of high profits. They are silent with regard to the pernicious effects of their own gains. They complain only of those of other people."
Hence why Marx came to the conclusions he did, both of them were similar in terms of goals but not method
@@Joostmhw Marx was heavily inspired by smith, he even makes this explicit. I see Marx's Capital as a natural updating of wealth of Nations given the developments of capitalism that did occur between them.
Holy Frick the second quote made me realise just how disastrous an artificially enforced "2% inflation" is in an environment where capitalists do not accept falling RATE of profit. Each year, every single middleman in the chain for...anything...demands their profits rise by at least 2% and it compounds geometrically, the more sub-sub-sub-sub-sub-contractors you have!
Economists and neoliberal politicians only read the first couple of pages of Adam Smith.
They turned the energy industry over to private competition, but they conveniently forgot that these companies are competing to make the most money, not to provide the best prices.
And that a power grid only has one line to each endpoint so there is no possible way this could be anything but a monopoly with no real competitive forces to self regulate profiteering.
At best of we ran like 5 of the same wire to each house we could maybe hope to have an oligopoly and try to regulate that.
This is very succinctly put. Thank you.
@@5353Jumper And that power grid was initially built with taxpayers money. "Private Profit, Public Costs".
Doesn't anybody understand economics anymore? Get the Govmnt out of the way..
Let the drillers DRILL. Let the refineries refine. They will make money and you will have
the energy you need. Ramp-up supply, and prices go down...
OR start building Gen IV reactors, YESTERDAY! Energy fuels Civilization.
Reasonable Speculation - dude we are talking about power grid not power generation, and definitely not extraction and refining.
Generation is not a monopoly so it functions OK as a market economy. Arguably it is a bit leaning toward oligopoly but that can be worked around.
No one on this thread said anything about nationalizing extraction and refining. That is definitely open market model due to the vastness of the market.
We are talking about nationalizing the actual electricity and gas grids which take the energy from the refineries and generation to each endpoint. That is what is called a Natural Monopoly because there is no practical way to make it competitive. There is only one wire and one gas pipe and one water pipe to every house, so there is no way it can actually be "competitive".
The national grids would buy from the open market generators and refineries to distribute to households based on competitive bidding.
1. This would allow a variety of different generation sources including gas, nuclear and "green renewables" to all compete against each other for sales.
2. Also a national grid may reduce regulations on endpoint generation which have been put in place strictly to preserve profits of the formerly privatized grid. Allowing endpoint generation sites (your rooftop solar) to be bigger than your demand so you can sell the excess energy back to the grid for a profit, giving more competition to the free market generators. Or you could put in solar heating or geothermal to compete with the gas refineries.
Who is stopping the drillers from drilling and the refiners from refining? They are the most privileged industry on the planet and receive the most subsidies of any industry, actually pretty close to the same subsidies as all other industries combined. Plus their infrastructure crammed through communities risking disaster.
The "greens" do not want to ban oil (only a few uneducated say that, every movement has them). They want to add new energy sources on top of the oil growing supply, which would reduce demand for oil and give it competitive market forces to reduce costs for energy. Many actually do support the nuclear power you are fond of as well.
Cleveland, Ohio's public power company has survived since 1907. It avoided a privatization scam in 1983 that forced the City into default and cost the mayor his job. It's currently taking over streetlight maintenance from the privately owned utility company that can't seem to manage it anymore; one step in the direction of public administration of the local grid itself.
Privatisation is an evil leading the march toward the corporate hellscape of cyberpunk 2077
and wtf has that to do with the uk in the 70s. Do u mericans actually know ur only 2 percent of the world
When you think about it for even 2 seconds, "privatization is better because people only work well if there's profit in it for them" is an incredible self-report from a politician.
Group of 20, you're the only one who works. No disabilities or anything, just extremely lazy. You going to provide for all those people with a smile on your face til you die?
😂🤣😂👍👍👍
Your comment is underrated)))
Yeap, the fact that people don't seem to realize that politicians are just influencers makes it worse. We give stupid people too much power
...I don't want to take away from Lizbet's amazing comment, but I just realized Among Us has reached mainstream-enough popularity that we can now use "self-report"
lmaooo imagine salivating over poor granny's electric & gas money
Thank you Tom. Entertaining, informative and chilling in equal measure. I'm 67 years old, and as a British citizen, I can remember a time before "The Dear Sainted Margaret" and I experienced first hand, the wholesale destruction of communities and livelihoods that she wrought.
Rule number 1, Never trust a tory, Rule number 2, Never forget rule number 1.
I seem to remember that, at the time, National Insurance and State Pension funds were raided to fund the several privatisation schemes. And before I forget, the privatisations were done for one reason only. To enable private companies to price gouge the entire population, and pass on kick-back to their friends in government.
given your rules, i feel the need to ask: well then, why do you folks keep having an endless parade of tory PMs? seems like you, as a country, are complaining that each new one is worse than the last, but you can't seem to stop.
@@perfectallycromulent They are not voted for by the general population, that would require a general election.
And Those who fail to ACTUALLY learn from history are DOOMED to repeat it. I’m sure you will!
Every problem in a UA-cam video about the UK/US begins with Thatcher/Reagon.
It's so criminal. It just so absolutely criminal. This has been repeated by these types of scamming assholes many times over.
I'm not necessarily against a for profit business model but I am when political thugs apply it in this manner, towards fundamental public needs and resources.
Netherlands has the exact same thing. Energy and health have been privatised resulting in exactly what you are describing in this video.
Also the whole thing about the customer not caring about changing every single year is super true. Every Dutch person has to write a paper to the 6-ish major health and energy companies about why they are not interested in switching because they're just trying to live through december. (hyperbolly of course, but all major companies WILL go door to door like salesmen and ask you if you want to switch. Every Dutch person hates it and knows that it happens from since they were kids.)
The 'heating or eating' thing hit hard. We have the exact same slogan in the Netherlands. People here also have to choose between heating their homes or having food on the table....
In November of last year the government gave a 23 billion Euro blank check to make sure the energy companies didn't fail. This is almost enough to buy them all up and nationalize the whole system.
You didn't really mention it but in the late 90s the supply companies initially tried to make price comparison as baffling for consumers as possible. IIRC the offers would look like
you pay this much for the first number of units per quarter... but then that much for the remaining units per quarter providing you buy at least some other number of units per year etc etc. you'd have needed to be a spreadsheet master to make any sense of it.
Then once you'd found a slightly cheaper deal it'd suddenly turn into an expensive deal after 12 months.
Absolutely. I did have a whole sequence about this in an earlier draft but the video just became far too long and needed some pruning! But, yeah, making things confusing was a deliberate strategy for some time and led to them being referred to the monopolies commission.
@@Tom_Nicholas
I would have loved even longer version of this!!!
As always Thanks for your hardwork!!
Your work is really really good!
@@Tom_Nicholas So how do you think you would sell the e.g. gas yourself? Do you think it is as easy as "buy X bottles of gas, store the bottles at the location at address Y, and deliver it to the address Z by mailman"? Genuinely interesting. Yes, the bills are confusing sometimes, but it is good if companies actually provide the breakdown for you. Your statement seems to be just a classic "oh, I have no clue about the thing, but it is definitely a alien lizards conspiracy!" I'm not saying that privatization of such a type of a company is "total good", but look at e.g. NYC metro - it is horrible! Do you think putting someone competent at the head, audit the black hole of spending and actually do something to make it profitable (while probably making the service better - or going bankrupt as an alternative) is a "bad" option?
@@TaranovskiAlex government can do that too, as long as they avoid corruption, cronyism, nepotism, to pick a CEO and auditor based on merit. (I mean, a government can indeed own a private company without running them as part of a ministry, in that case they act like a shareholder and hold the management accountable for their action)
@@xponen good luck with that!)))))
My house was sitting at 11 degrees at times. I can't afford to have the heating on and have health issues. When I mentioned it in passing my GP simply said they woke up to a house at 13 degrees and it was 'fine for them'... The irony being said Gp is on way more money than I am. She also said the best things in life are free. Some people just don't get it
Many of us in Australia have the opposite problem. Our former conservative governments sold us out too, and that leaves vulnerable people sweltering in 40+ degree temperatures unable to afford the electricity to run fans or air conditioning (if you’re fortunate enough to have it).
Does she work for free? Go steal her car, she can always conjure up another free one.
What were you expecting? GP to help pay your bill?
@@asilver2889 no but there are things Gps can socially prescribe and they can also offer a listening ear. In addition, she makes up to 4-5 times what I make so can afford heating. I once sat in on a group patient meeting where we were told after someone explained the impact of cost of living on their health that they should focus on the idea that the best things in life are free. Ironically coming from a medical professional who had just come back off a holiday
@@asilver2889 I: They said they only mentioned it in passing, and the GP started downplaying the issue. No, they weren't expecting the GP to help pay; only to have some freaking compassion
Reagan and thatcher are looking up from hell with a teary look of pride at the state of the world.
Liking this comment because it will piss off the right wing trolls.
Edit is fixing Star to state
This isn't wrong. They did some major damage.
I was alive in 1986 and just entering the job market, the wealth never trickled down and being at the mercy of private corporation for basic services is a free market hellscape.
Yeah, anyone that remembers the push to privatise across the Commonwealth and suffered as a result pretty much had one response to the news of Thatcher's death "Ding dong...".
If you aren't happy with a private company, you can withdraw your funding and go to a competitor. If it's a state monopoly, and you are forced to pay for it via taxation, what power do you have, as an individual, to withhold your funding?
@@lochnessmunster1189 yes, you're a propagandist who has never been right. tell me more about trickle down wealth and other lies from eth extreme right, the NEO CONS. Not neo liberals, you don't get to try to shift the blame decades after the fact, it was NEO CONSERVATIVES who stole our future using the 'but tax is theft" bullshit you're still peddling even though there's no proof of any of the bullshit you are pushing ever worked the way your side claimed it did.
@@dawggonevidz9140 So, tax cannot be theft, in any way, shape or form?
@@lochnessmunster1189 The main underlying assumption is that a government acts as a not-for-profit organisation, but is there any way to guarantee that a government doesn't act for profit (known more commonly as corruption)?
Great video, as always!
One thing I'm surprised you didn't mention is that gas prices have dropped to 2021 level by now, and are expected to drop further. Yet the consumers in the UK don't experience any of that price drop.
Course not
Once they know they can charge that much they will
Tbf there is always lag on such. The gas prices sale and resale are done over months in advance. So current wholesale prices would be reflected in retail prices. This would be true even if state owned.
@@tisFrancesfault so why did gas prices for the consumer rose at the same time as gas prices for the provider, yet gas prices for the consumer haven't dropped with gas prices for the provider?
Maybe this entire industry as it stands is inheently predatory?
@@tisFrancesfault Tbf, the "lag" is always much greater when the wholesale prices have gone down than when they have gone up, when the lag can be in nanoseconds.
@@KyrieFortune It depended on whether the energy companies were buying futures contracts (which didn't track directly) or buying gas from the market live. All the companies which were doing the latter were the ones who went bust in quick succession. Now the only ones left are the ones who buy the futures contracts hence why we're seeing more of a lag doing down (also there wil be profitieering I am sure too)
I always love how “competition” is viewed as a universal good under neoliberalism. There is zero thought given to what they are competing over.
They are not competing over your patronage, they are competing over profits. The company that makes the most profits wins the day. This is a good thing when it comes to commodity production. Some companies compete for profits by lowering their prices in a bid to undercut their competition and steal some of their market share. Other companies compete by improving their products to a point where the increased cost to consumers is acceptable given the quality of the product.
This model, however, becomes very perverse when applied to major industries that we need to survive. Given the way energy grids work, it makes zero sense to introduce competition. The infrastructure needed to supply power to an entire city is too expensive to justify multiple providers. Therefore, you end up with 2 or 3 competitors with little to no overlap in coverage area. You have one power line coming into your house. The power company isn’t going to run a new line to your house every time you switch providers. You’re just stuck with the provider in your area.
Therefore, if you have 2 or 3 businesses competing for profits in an industry with very little overlap, it is a recipe for oligopoly. If I’m a CEO trying to show the shareholders that I’ve won the competition for profits with the other energy company, then my goal is to increase my prices as high as possible before people just decide to live without power. Who are they going to turn to? There are competitors in the market, but if you can’t move your home into their coverage area then you’re stuck paying whatever I demand. I therefore have a de facto monopoly.
Arguably more important (at least of equal importance) to the idea of "what they are competing over" is also "are they actually fucking competing?" Competition can be quite good! If they're actually competing, and not say.. Creating fiefdoms and then colluding to raise prices across the board.
It's really illogical especially when competition is irrelevant to industries like power generation, where it is a geographic monopoly. There's only one company sending the juice from the power plant to your home. It's not like a TV streaming service or a cell phone provider. You can't just drop your electric company and switch to another unless you move.
@@krisstarring It would make some vague kind of sense if the competition was between like.. Oil, natural gas, green, and other forms of energy generation? But we all know that's not the case so it really don't apply too much here.
they can still get competition from places which they would not ecpect if their prices would be so high so other options could be more profitable, for example in my country when prices raised after war on Ukraine started there been a huge demand for solar panels so there been actual shortage of them and even now when market stabilized little bit I see new solar panels on lot of houses. People want to at least have their own electricity production in case of prices raising even more so they will buy less electricity from external supplier which will put a pressure on them to lower their prices. But there is still government which can regulate and outlaw individuals who want to be self sufficient.
@@nikdonic
I agree with you, but that is also a problem of private industry controlling government action.
If the government is the entity producing and distributing power, then what do they care if some rural people go off-grid with solar panels? All that means is that the government can save money on distribution to those remote locations. The only time the government cares about people going off-grid is when private companies profit off of the distribution of that power, because they rely on that distribution for their profits. If you start taking people off the grid, you are taking that out of their profits and they will lobby the government against it, hence you get stupid rules where you have to feed into the grid, which means you have to remain a customer of the private power distributors even though you produce your own power.
The worst thing is that many of us that were around in the 80s knew that public utilities shouldn’t be privatised. I could have made a few quid buying shares but didn’t because of my fundamental opposition to the principle. Even those that did mainly made a modest short term windfall as the number of shares available for individual investors was small and the majority were quickly seduced by the idea of taking a quick profit.
The neoliberals are pretty hell bent on taking people's money hostage in the stock market.
"Oh, we have to bail out the market, think of your retirement!"
I mean obviously any money made from shares in British Gas was value fleeced from the taxpayer i.e. everyone in the country, shareholders in British Gas or not. But I know people don't always see the big picture in that way.
If only the rest of your generation showed the same principles
If you see Sid, tell him he's a c**t...
@@Cream147player Cryptozoo was worth a lot of money at one point,
I don’t see why people can’t see the bigger picture.
As the public power provider in South Africa fails, many people think the solution is privatisation and when I say I am horrified at the thought.
It's so frustrating! I argued with my friend the other day about this, and they just repeat the talking points and don't ever engage with what I am saying. DA brain rot is a real thing...
Yeah. Even if a public power grid isn't the best, you can guarantee that the private version is gonna be worse, simply because the corporations are only ever gonna do enough repairs when something goes down to get stuff flowing again, not to try and make sure it won't happen again, unless it's in a super damage prone spot and they'd make more money not having to go out and fix it constantly.
Don't have to privatize the whole thing. Just production, which is what is lacking right now.
@@sharmarke3314
Private companies are only concerned if profit
@@sharmarke3314 Give an inch and they'll take a mile. Never privatize any part of it
Living here for work for a few years has also shown me how difficult it can be to even get the account set up with these companies. The logistics are all over the place and it is a mess.
It makes me feel so much better to know that Privatization of industries best left to the government( and thus held accountable to the people) is ruining countries other than mine 😭🤣
-Me, an American
I'm glad to provide such a service.
What about hearing such information from this video from the government & not from a private individual? 😄😅
Can't privatize what was never nationalized in the first place!
@@yengsabio5315 The smaller the government the more indistinguishable public and private becomes.
@@Furiends I concur.
AHHHHH Privatization! Because everything is better when there is someone making a profit from it. That's why I am still paying down my debt for parental services. Mom and dad were really nice. They only charged me 30% of all I ever make. Thanks guys. You're the best! I know that profit motivation made it so!
@@cloudycolacorp Lol! Like that's how that works! But don't let it stop us from calling it my choice.
I thought of running away to find my real parents. I could have. Maybe I would have found them. Who knows? Today I'm still not sure their mine. I never did a paternity test!
Why didn't I chose to run away and find them? 1) I didn't know where they could be. 2) I didn't know who they were. 3) I had no clues** as to who they were. 4) I didn't know how to drive. 5) I wasn't sure how I would get food and clothes. 6) I cannot remember the other reasons, but there were more, so I talked myself out of it.
**Mom said I was "the worst kid ever and the worst kid ever possible," so I knew these weren't my real parents. They wouldn't have said that!
So, keep that in mind when you're ever feeling low or you're the worst. Just tell them, "NO! That's David Peppers!"
@@davidpeppers551 Parental Services? What the hell is that?
@MarioW Presumably, OP was not raised by his true parents (whether biological or adoptive) but by a couple of parents provided by such a service, which charged a fee that somehow has been imposed on him. If that's the case, I find it perverse because naturally, children should be a cost to the parents, not the other way around.
@@jordias6436 Perverse like capitalism! Profit motive makes everything better!
@@mariow7818 It is a capitalist's logic. There is nothing so good in this world, that adding the profit motive cannot make it better. Nothing within current markets or without, that shouldn't be made a source of profit for some one.
Why are so many surprised when the economy and economic motivations behave as they are supposed to? When people lock up clean water and put guards on it and charge $6 or more per liter while all around homes have been devastated and men, women and children are getting deadly diseases and parasite infections for want of clean water, why are people appalled and shocked? The system is working like it is supposed to. I took numerous courses on economics, including some at college level. Find a need, fill the need, maximize profits. You cannot maximize profits by just letting people have what they need for free!
In the press you see this too. Let people have their profit making. If something is important enough, some charity will eventually come along later and take care of those needs after the profits have been made. Never mind that the very profit making enterprise may be ever undermining the efforts to see that those needs are met. The government should not interfere by guaranteeing anything for health or general welfare -- no matter what the US Constitution might say -- with the possible exception of national defense and the livelihoods of defense contractors. Interference only makes markets fail more.
I love that central heating companies in Denmark aren’t allowed to make a profit. I only pay around €30/month on average to heat my apartment.
They set their prices to what their expected expenses are in the coming year, and use their “profits” to expand and maintain the central heating network.
Anglosphere thinks it's socialism therefore communism therefore authoritarianism therefore totalitarianism therefore bad. Low utility bills = government tyranny 😂😂
@@richhornie7000What happens if they make a profit?
@@illegalopinions4082 basing this on French utility companies, but generally, they reduce price estimates for the next year to compensate. That, or they just invest more into infrastructure (stuff like renewable energies for example)
I live in Bath with other students and we don’t even turn on the heater unless the temperature outside goes negative. Even before the energy increase, rental housing has such inefficient heater and bad insulation that most of the heat just yeeted out the window anyway. It has been like this for 3 years and I’m honestly surprised I haven’t gone terribly insane yet.
I remember this talk, growing up in the 80s.
These days I provide advice to older people on how to keep their homes energy efficient. It is both fascinating and disturbing to see how the country got into this mess.
You allowed it to become a mess by expecting that other people than you will start sticking their necks out. It is pure laziness, political lethargy that's allowing your political system to go corrupt. Britain is doomed, just like Big Brother USA. Both Labour and the Tories are being payed to advance your elite's agendas.
Unfortunately, not all homes can be made energy efficient due to local laws such as conservation or listed buildings..
@@ascelot Even when they're not listed, the age and design of certain homes is a limitation. I live in North Wales and there is a LOT of older housing stock here!
@@MatthewCaunsfieldWhat can be done to make homes more energy efficient?
@@gregorymalchuk272 Various measures, it depends very much on the house.
Loft insulation is normally a pretty good first step though!
I'm not even British and this was a truly brilliant video. Seems like it was researched really well and the arguments were put across in an entertaining, educational and non-condescending way (which is unfortunately a high bar on YT for video essays these days). Fantastic video, keep up the good work!
There was condescension in the video and that's one of the reasons I love it 😂
It's a shame MSM don't allow factual discord
Not British either but lived in London for about half my life, and shit like that is why I moved out
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means
It got down to 13° in my newly-insulated flat this winter. I couldn't afford to heat when it dropped below freezing, despite the £66 a month (which would have paid for one inadequate storage heater for about 5 days).
I was with a socialist energy company prior to the big collapse in 2021 and they made such a difference - and they were lovely people, too.
There was a socialist energy company pre-2021?! Wish I’d bloody known! 😆
When it comes to industries that require massively expensive, permanent infrastructure like energy generation and railroads, "more competition = lower consumer prices" is a lie and they know it's a lie.
The main goal of privatization is to create new sources of revenue for the already wealthy.
Privatization achieved this goal. It's working as intended.
I think of it like this. ESSENTIAL things shouldn't be (fully) privatized. Things that without you can't live life. Education, infrastructure, healthcare, basic food/water and housing. With all of these you're just not in a position to bargain. Have a heart attack? You MUST go to the hospital regardless of what they charge. Need clean water and food? You must buy it regardless of price. Need a house? Must pay regardless your situation.
In a price negotiation you're in an incredibly weak position compared to the private company. They can charge WHATEVER they want and you have to pay. Because of this trade position disadvantage. So, it makes sense to pay the government to negotiate on our behalf. Since they are in an even stronger trading position than these private companies. They can actually slam out a decent deal instead of paying 600$ for a 30$ medicine like in the privatized Healthcare system in the USA (epi pen per pen). Or 10.000$ to have your baby delivered in the private USA hospital.(yes, it costs 10.000$ to have a baby in the USA...)
It's simple marketing. If you're not in a strong position to negotiate, then it's smart to get someone in a strong position (the government) to trade on your behalf.
I started this video skeptical, but you’ve done a wonderful job of breaking it down just how bad privatization has been for the UK’s grid.
Always a joy when you upload. This is absolutely the kind of media we need more of. You're doing important work.
Thank you, I really appreciate you saying so!
@@Tom_Nicholas Britain is NOT "bankrupt". Very disingenuous title here.
@@lochnessmunster1189 He did say "bankrupting" not "is bankrupt". But I can't take it literally because I don't know how it's possible for a country to declare bankruptcy. Apart from Greece. But that's obviously different.
@@ericmollison2760 Well, that is true. But it's not in the interest of the energy companies to actually bankrupt a country, because if they do, they will make no income.
@@ericmollison2760 No... if you want to be pedantic about it, the original title _was_ 'How Energy Privatisation Bankrupted Britain'. It's been changed. Not that it matters - the original more hyperbolic title was fine.
You can verify this by searching the original title in Google, in quotation marks.
It reminds me of the 'privatization' and 'deregulation' of electric distribution markets in California in 2000, which led to price spikes. Does anyone remember Enron? Will we ever learn?
The rest of us will, but the rich bastards that set policy are rich enough to eat those costs no problem
We must not only undo what Thatcher did, but reverse it. So ... not just un-privatize, but ... give to the people.
We need to ... take control of ... the way you make the thing. ... hm.
Hmm. Is that the thing where the, uh, producers obtain the... materials necessary ...for the creation of things?
I swear I've heard this before... it's on the tip of my tongue...
Like… Democracy… but where you work? Mmm…
Rise up, all victims of oppression
I think some guy named Mark, or Carl wrote about it…
@@Pensnmusic I see what you did there ;) ... I guess where Marx and/or Lenin went wrong was that he did not believe people would accept communism voluntarily hence single party dictatorship. And that did not work nor end well. An other thing they got wrong was the almost complete lack of private ownership and having everything controller centrally and by the government.
People who have no stake in ownership treat common property as trash and who cannot own anything substantial like a house have little incentive. And for most things centralised control and decision making leads to bad decisions because it is does not respond well to demand. However for utilities and health care centralised ownership seems to produce better results.
What seems to be working better is not ideological communism nor capitalism but having the more or less natural monopolies and utilities including health care in the hands of the government and let that part of the economy where there is actual competition and incentives for people to work be private.
If you ever want to do a spotlight on the other consequences of the privatization of electricity, you could look at Texas here in the US. Every time it gets under 40F or over 95F (relatively frequently), we get emails telling us to remember to turn our thermostats so low or so high that we might as well not have them, all so that the grid the state refuses to repair doesn't completely fail.
Very much this. Over 3 cents higher kwh average than neighboring states too and raising per year nearly 1c/kwh while Oklahoma, Louisiana, etc. went down this year. But always happy some of my bill go towards lobbying!
Why would the state maintain private utilities facilities?
From this video I have learned that the core problem we face is that while the original intention was to generate power from childrens' screams they're now so jaded by quite how horrible everything around them is today. As a result it's hard to get them to scream at normal scary things any more. Laughter energy was proven to be far too intermittent and unsustainable as well.
That also explain why the water companies got in trouble, when they relied on children's tears for their supply.
@@ziploc2000 Water companies could run on the tears of today's children and STILL go broke.
In SA most of our grid is still technically under state control, but the fuel gets mined by private companies and maintenance work is also largely outsourced. At this point, we have 6-10 hours without power per day. The other day it came out that the maintenance companies have been sabotaging our electrical infrastructure to get more work. Shocker.
The timing of this dropping is wild. The ice storm in the US this week knocked out thousands upon thousands of people's power. I work at a public library, and we've been flooded with people without electricity or heat. We're doing our best, but there's only so much a library can do. Our infrastructure is a joke, and everyone is paying for it. In more ways than one.
Well, you know what entertainment to put on for the masses now. :)
Thankfully Iowa's power grid was made public before become MAGA territory
Ive been told its going to take a week to restore my power. Over 200k people just in michigan, just serviced by Consumers Energy, have lost power. I have no idea how im gonna afford to keep a generator running for that long, im extremely fortunate i have a natural gas heater otherwise my family would likely have to freeze.
Power is out, again?
And the average American is so hopelessly stupid that they'll swallow the reactionary lies about how it's all Biden's fault, somehow. Not the companies running the private services, and certainly not the gas industry, no. It's the fault of an imaginary government cabal & a non-existent socialism.
We're doomed because the polity is a bunch of crayon-eating retards and we decided they should have political power via electoral politics.
It's great how virtually everything is privatised in the UK yet the taxes are that of a country with full state ownership
You're really good at utilising very mild-mannered and historical language to describe events, (and please don't take this as an indictment) in the same way educational texts can lay out ideas in a clearer way than excerpts from primary sources or personal experience!
This means I can show this to a right-wing family member of mine as a reference to their lived experience, and it doesn't seem as aggressively politicised and personal as something identity related.
Useful stuff, thank you for your work!
Moved from Scotland to the USA last year and found myself stunned when National Grid were my energy supplier in the USA. Yes. The same National Grid. Fingers in every pie that lot.
Technically national grid isn't an energy supplier it runs the infrastructure required to get gas and electricity to homes. Kinda funny it's actually an EU regulation that created the series of EDCs or electric distribution companies we see today. With national grid originally being called north west power. Ofc it was more of an excuse because what other countries did was just create a seperate public company to run the infrastructure and then also production.
As any large company, they have an obligation to expand and increase their market. What do you do when you've got 100% market share in your country of operation? You have to expand internationally.
@@vylbird8014 (Inter)National Grid 🥰
This is my third video and the quality has never faltered. You've earned a sub.
Once I was your fan but now I am a complete air conditioner. Every video is a wealth of information. Best of luck brother.
😂😂
Took me a good minute before I understood this joke. I thought you were just being weird lmao
😂😂@@Cakeses
Can't believe I haven't come across this channel before. Excellent video. Well researched, and brilliantly presented. New fan!
Thank you! And welcome! I hope you enjoy some of my other stuff!
You have made me incredibly happy that most electricity in Canada is both made and sold by government-owned companies called “crown corps”.
Looks at Ontario’s Hydro One with disappointment
I gotta say, "Crown corps" is a cool term
In Norway we _had_ a great transportation system when it was publicly owned.
When they sold it all off bit by bit, it became *terrible.* The trains are never on time and tracks aren't kept up well enough, the pricing is not nationalised, the actual routes and departures of most buses are stupid and the list goes on and on.
We are also suffering pricing issues with our electricity because we started privatising, so now people are _really_ feeling it here too.
Every time something is privatised, it just gets worse.
Additionally, they keep cutting the budgets of the public services we really need, like hospitals and education, while not making laws and agreements with other countries that ensure we don't have "tax refugees" who mooch wealth off our country.
We need to start making international agreements that make companies and owners pay proper taxes in the countries they produce AND sell products in, so they can't escape taxes by moving to places like Switzerland.
This might mean twisting Switzerland's arm, but they know what they are doing...
As a Swiss I need to counter your argument a bit, with the new international tax laws it will be fairer overall. And companies will leabe Switzerland but you know where they go?
Ireland, the Channel Isles maybe even Panama. Because they are actually far cheaper in corporate taxes than Switzerland.
In my opinion stuff should be nationalised much more often, we have the same problems here as well but still to a lesser degree since privatisation is often stopped by strong political resistance from citizens and left parties.
Very nice video.
Worth mentioning that international exchange of electricity is quite substantial in Europe. There are a bunch of systems in place to harmonize the market, such that if there is a ton of wind in one country their cheap energy is exported to neighbours. The UK left many of the mechanisms used to optimize the process after Brexit, making the electricity prices higher in the long run.
Worth mentioning is that with this "substantial international exchange of electricity" the horrendous gas prices in German make the consumer in the Scandinavia and Finland pay the same horrendous prices for wind electricity which is almost free to produce compared to gas. So in effect because German shunned and destroyed their nuclear energy and decided to rely on Putins gas the northern countries that made better decisions are now footing the bill.
@@Axel_Andersen This is unrelated to the UK but sure. Those utilities in Scandinavia are making profit by selling energy to Germany. Bringing in tons of money for Scandinavia in the process. Who makes the profit? Private companies? National producers? (I honestly don't know)
If they are private then tax the hell out of them, or nationalise them, and heavily regulate them... then the profit actually belongs to the people of Scandinavia, what would be so bad about that?
@@aitor9185 They are private companies. Yeah, taxing them would seem like a good option. Not likely to happen though in any meaningful manner. Also at the same time some large energy companies are getting large sums of government subsidies because they speculated with electricity prices with futures and would go under unless they get emergency funding. As tax payer and customer to those companies this does not seem fair.
@@Axel_Andersen privatisazion seems terrible in Scandinavia too. Certainly no one to blame but greed and subpar politicians. Like any other commodity if managed right it could bring large amounts of wealth to those countries, like the Norwegians with their Oil and Gas sovereign fund. That being said, them exporting their clean hydro and wind energy is pretty good for the environment. Also sometimes some countries produce more energy than they need with wind/solar, which if they cannot sell anywhere often goes unused. Energy trading across borders is the way for a renewable future. The exports are not a problem on their own, private profits on those exports is the problem.
@@aitor9185 "their cheap energy is exported to neighbours" - it's not even sold cheaply in their own countries as its pegged to the most expensive type of energy genius. Same old argument, ppl like you with your kind of thinking are so incredibility boring, "if it was this way" or "if we just do this" or "because this was'nt implemented in this way" bla bla bla, none of you have the ability to argue coherently as to why in Europe, the U.S or the U.K that privatisation has had 40 years to prove itself and has utterly failed, you just can't admit privatisation was a solution in search of a problem that never and still doesn't exist.
In France, the motorways have been privatized. We are paying for them twice, with taxes that paid for the land and construction, and with tolls for their maintenance. I pay as much in tolls as for the fuel when I travel. This is why car sharing is so popular in France. The companies (like Vinci) that profit from this have huge lobbying power.
sold off?
That is somewhat comforting to hear. I know of places where you pay taxes in buying a car, taxes for using that same car, if its a gasoline engine you get away with only paying additional taxes in the fuel price, if its diesel, you pay taxes for the car being a diesel powered car, and also pay taxes on the diesel fuel. This is a country that is sparcely populated.
Don't worry lad, we're used to being ignored up in Scotland. I'll cry myself to sleep hugging my free degree and sense of loss over my lack of student loans.
You know, coming from Cornwall, I do feel a certain envy for you other Celts who resisted complete annexation. Being a 'county of England', while rotting with the same care Westminster shows any Celtic nation- really blessed with the sh*t aspects of both, and not even the illusion of autonomy.
At this point I don't even support Celtic nations independence, so much as getting together to vote England out. We can call it Exit.
@@e.s.r5809The irony is that after Elizabeth 1st of England died, England was effectively annexed by the Scottish crown which promptly relocated the Capital down to London and James 6th of Scotland became James 1st of his new United Kingdom of Great Britain.
If it had been the other way around we'd probably just call the whole place England.
Dude, where's the content warning for that Maggie photo in the thumbnail? I saw that decrepit old ghost and nearly had a heart attack
My apologies, clearly UA-cam's filters haven't worked out how to catch such horrific images yet.
@@Tom_Nicholas Yeah, great video, but it should have come with a health warning. I live in an area of the country that suffered horribly under Maggie, and still hasn't recovered, probably never will either.
I'm glad you've utilised this video to spark conversation, got to the point and not gassed on about it. 😊
"The gas has to come from somewhere..."
He says, holding a can of beans...
Oh, come on...that was just low-hanging fruit there!
Look, I was just really keen to avoid putting any fart jokes in the video.
@@Tom_Nicholas And you resisted admirably, my friend!
@@Tom_Nicholas How could you hold it in?
Maybe even a musical fruit, the more you eat, the more you...
I live in the US in a state that has universal publicly owned non-profit electricity companies. For a few years in the early 2000s I moved to a state with privately owned electrical utilities and my monthly electric bills absolutely skyrocketed. Whenever anyone asked me what I missed most about my home state my answer was always “SOCIALIZED ELECTRICITY!”
By the way, when you were speaking about the investors who profited off the privatization British electrical utilities you mentioned 37:51 Warren Buffett who ironically lives in my hometown, you know in a state that’s had socialized electricity for over 80 years.
What state are you in? It can't be Texas which had the 2021 blackout.
@@absoleetBuffet lives in Omaha, Nebraska.
and wouldn't Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffet's company, love to get their hands on your state power company?
Coming from the US, it's pretty amazing how the privatization of energy producers and sellers seems to have become entirely decoupled from everything else in the country. Part of privatization is diversification; but somehow the energy companies in the UK forgot that in order for them to make money they can't profiteer so much that no one else can. Even American gas companies know that rule. It's just fascinating how many UK industries are so disconnected and decoupled from each other.
I'm so impressed by the quality of Tom's work. It's so good it distracts me from staring at my smart meter readout, watching the bill go up because I had the audacity to want a cup of tea and put the kettle on...
The title for the video is completely untrue. Britain hasn't been "bankrupted" at all.
41:43 - This is why the Victorian state government here in Australia did the homework for you and based on your inputs, listed the best priced energy companies for you - and it gave you a VERY good bribe of $250 to use their website. And not just a once-off either. This is season 2 of it and yes, you can apply for it even if you've got it before.
Another exceptional video, if not one that made me incredibly angry as a young person who has recently moved into my own (rental) flat, and having to live in the cold over the winter since energy was so unaffordable. My Nebula subscription recently lapsed, and come payday I’ll find the change to use your link since my Patreon budget is still yet to manifest. Keep up the incredible work Tom! ❤
Completely dishonest title for this video. Britain isn't "bankrupt" in any way, shape or form.
@@lochnessmunster1189 When a large proportion of the country's population is unable to afford to heat their homes, one could say the country is broke/bankrupt.
It's even worse when you consider how mild the winter is in the UK, compared to places like Canada or the northern US, where people can heat their homes just fine.
@@thelight3112 But when you say "large proportion", which numbers do you have? And when you say "is unable to afford to heat their homes", do you mean, heat them in any way? Your claim is very vague: and I'm not meaning to be facetious.
Unfortunately pretty much the same thing has happened here in Australia. Energy prices have skyrocketed.
Except in WA. The government still owns the companies. They are run as pseudo private entities owned by the government.
And the crazy part is that Australia has plenty of gas, but the government allowed private companies to export all of it overseas - just because it was more profitable!
@@simonabunker Not in WA. 10% of gasnos reserved. Gas prices are low, power prices never spiked. It's very possible to have a functional system, you just have to remember that gas and power companies are sometimes bastards.
@@letsburn00 I almost did say except WA! And I think that just proves even more how this is a product of corporate greed rather than being a real crisis.
@@letsburn00 Yep - if anything Australia has a direct local point of comparison about what privatisation does, insane so many people there still support it!
Though the traditional conservative response to that is to white-ant, scupper, or generally ruin anything they can't privatise to make it so dysfunctional the public will WANT it privatised (eg. NBN)
Back in the era of mass privatization of national assets such as power, water, railways, etc it was predicted that this would happen. The money that goes into the system does not stay in the system as it would have under nationalized operation, rather it goes out to dividends and other payouts to shareholders and business owners - very few of which are actually in the UK. There are also those payments that go out on losses such as advertising, door to door knockers, crisis management, consultants, Golden parachutes, bailouts,.... I could go on but the problems of the privatized industries are well known in the UK. There is no going back, No individual politician or party has the political standing nor the balls to do it, and no one has come up with a fix for the problem.
Talmid Andy,
Seems like the bloke/sheila looking at the reflection in the mirror is going to have to throw their weight around.
Just reading an article about the loss of orchards in Kent due to the cost of electricity for cold storage. The prices have gone up 300% so consequently growers are digging up their orchards because it’s unsustainable. From now on we can expect to import apples. The knock-on effect of privatised energy is far-reaching.
The knock-on effect for all prices is far-reaching, in fairness.
@@lochnessmunster1189 you are quite the capitalist reply guy lmao, smh. I'd suggest you take a peek at Capital for beginners by Michael Wayne iirc, it will clear up many of the misconceptions you have been parroting around the comment section. Take care and please try to read something about economics, even Adam Smith realized the faults in the talking points you so enthusiastically repeat again and again.
WRONG. “Prices have gone up…” This is the result of the price shock from stopping Putin in Ukraine, and the consequent supply disruption of cut-off Russian energy. Six months ago, were I a political leader, I would have made peace with the evil Putin to cease the shortage. And their knock ons.
@@lochnessmunster1189How much you getting paid? One has to be particularly dim not to see through all your comments.
@@thecrimsondragon9744 What do you mean?
When the North Sea oil and gas rigs came up for sale, the two owners, Norway and Britain had a choice, retain the oil and gas fields or sell them off. Maggie had an election coming up where she had promised tax cuts. She decided to sell the rights so as to remain in power. Norway retained their ownership and created one of the largest Sovereign Wealth Funds in the world. Thus making Noeway a very rich nation, if Maggie had the nation's wealth at heart she could have made Britain compatible with Norway.
As we all now know now, when something is privatised, the price goes up and the service goes down.
If only Milton Friedman had not been born the world would be a different place, especially in the environmental sense. We now ravage the planet for profit and shareholder dividends.
“Politicians are a strange breed of bird. They sing about their noble intentions and charitable hearts, and they roost with the most contemptible and corrupt of creatures.”
“The main problem in any democracy is that crowd-pleasers are generally brainless swine who can go out on a stage & whup their supporters into an orgiastic frenzy-then go back to the office & sell every one of the poor bastards down the tube for a nickel apiece.”
― Hunter S. Thompson,
"We now ravage the planet for profit"- if you lived alone on an island, and needed to utilise the resources, would you be "ravaging" the planet for profit, even in a tiny way?
This was fantastic work, well researched, great job to you and your editor!
A very important topic Tom, thank you.
Thanks so much Joe! I really appreciate it!
Insane that society at large isn't up in arms about the way privatization of basic, necessary resources is being used to extract so much wealth from ordinary people
Let's say a new energy-provider came onto the market. Would this lead to an increase in the "extracting of wealth" from the ordinary people?
@@lochnessmunster1189 depends on the preexisting condition. If there's already 15 different private providers, one more changes nothing. If the only provider is public, then any money that goes to the private alternative's profit is money that exits the pocket of the community, so yes.
@@bacicinvatteneaca "one more changes nothing"- not correct. If there are 15 private providers already and another is to emerge, it must be competitive (undercut prices of others) if it is to exist at all.
@@lochnessmunster1189thats doesn’t happen tho does it.
@@lsmithhat8541 Would a free market make it harder, or easier, for new competitors to emerge?
One of the ironies of grid privatization in the name of "consumer choice" is that it's a CLASSIC example of the sorts of things even orthodox economics would say shouldn't be privatized. Energy companies, especially power lines, are textbook examples of natural monopolies
Also the best things about "price competition" are 12-36 months of minimum contract term and similar ridiculous notice periods. In other words, most of the time you can't switch even if you want too.
'But what use is simple, when it's not creating any shareholder value?' basically sums it up
Excellent video. I appreciate how long this must have taken to make.
“We’re going to ignore Scotland” while leaving Northern Ireland out of all the moving bits of the animations and not even acknowledging it exists. We’re used to it.
I feel you, I also live in an area of the country that isn't London or the South East, and the recent media coverage of the "new leveling up" is a joke, the media kept quoting 10's of millions going to this region or that region, whilst they failed to mention that 2/3rds of the billions on offer are being spent in London and the South East. Rishi just carrying on diverting funds from the poor regions to the rich regions, again.
I really like that most of USA problems has originated on Reagan and the UK on Thatcher lol
Kicked off both candidates are Manchunceun candidates. Didn't matter who won.
Fantastic work and really effectively brings it all home. Thank you, I know a lot more about the situation now because of your quality content
What a brilliant, informative, and entertaining video as per usual.
With a completely dishonest title. Britain isn't "bankrupt" in any way, shape or form.
Half way through, very cool
Very proud of you Tom I remember subbing 5ish years ago and you're still at it, keep it up!
Man Tom you're so real, I wish I could've met someone like you growing up to validate my beliefs. Oh well I'm glad I've found your channel and you're spreading good word to convince and change the seemingly unconvinceable especially up here in the north. Good job man
I think what anyone who claims private industry is more efficient than public government has failed to realize - is that private profit is mechanically the same thing as public corruption. And as profit is the entire point of private industry... There is no way it can actually be more efficient than public government.
In America the power companies are private companies, but their prices are regulated by laws that limit their pricing.
the mention of boxes of space marines caught me SO OFF GUARD omfg 🤣
Must be some pretty big boxes when they contain not only one, but SEVERAL space marines!
Maybe one could conquer the British power industry in the name of the Emperor!
It pleased me no end that “Cans of Beans” and “Space Marines” rhymed.
@@Tom_Nicholas Space Marines in cans of beans?
@@Tom_Nicholas Well unfortunately these days GW will call them "Primarian Grobbleslaughterers" or some other trademarkable world salad, so rhyming them is a bit more of a stretch :P
It was brilliant along with the subtle reference to Star Wars when showing the logo of The Resistance
I certainly learned a lot, I was against privatisation in the first place as I feared it would lead to profiteering and basically that was the case.
So, state-run monopolies, in which people are forced to pay via taxation, are better?
@@lochnessmunster1189 That's what people are saying
@@lochnessmunster1189 evidently
@@2sik_UK State-run monopolies?
Excellent presentation young person. When I first became a tax payer, as a citizen I owned a railway company, a power company, a water company but thatcher sold all the family silver and now I own nothing 😢
Most of us want them put back into public ownership. Those in power are not there for our benefit but the benefit of the few individuals that seek to control us people. We have to rebel and once we get together we are legion. Peace and community 😊
Your videos are incredible.
For better or worse, the internet is the only place one can be a semi-impactful public intellectual today. Keep doing the good work that many of us are too lazy, timid, or technically incompetent to do.
This isn't an incredible video. Britain is NOT "bankrupt".
The only issue is the right wing, sell your grandmother for a buck types, are much better funded and selling their liea all the time. Ben Shapiro and his ilk from propaganda university make many young people think more of the same poison will heal you.
@@lochnessmunster1189 you've made about 40 comments on this video alone bootlicking a failed system
@@RealFemale69 Failed, how? Has North Korea proven better for the ordinary person, than the South?
@@lochnessmunster1189 Proof of that is the Coronation upcoming. The income disparity is obscene.
Both France and Britain used to have civilian nuclear power as a part of the nationally owned electricity production authority. It has turned out that although reactors run by ordinary civil servants can be a brilliant success, private ownership probably doesn't know how to hire the right people. EDF used to be Électricité de France, and the energy companies of the EU could not compete with it. It is now a private company mostly owned by the French government, but it has lost its soul.
This is all the more horrid in that nuclear is the only technology that is both more reliable, safer, and environmentally cleaner than fossil fuels. The actual quantity of fuel and waste per unit of energy, or of average power for a year, is millions of times less than for fossil fuel.
Interesting extra tidbit: nuclear produces less radioactive waste than coal, except the one produced by nuclear is solid while that of coal is dust suspended in the fumes...
In Finland the electricity market has been privatised since 1995. Prices have increased, but part of that is caused by a government mandate that requires electricity companies to bury power lines underground to reduce the number of power outages. This has made electricity pretty expensive in more rural areas, where the cost is split among fewer people. Still, at least in cities the prices are fairly reasonable. The biggest monthly bill that I got in the crazy period of 2022-2023 was 50€ for a 65m2 apartment. Nowadays monthly bills are around 10€. Also, cities typically have district heating, so I don't need to pay extra just to heat my home. In the countryside the situation is worse, but definitely not unmanageable. Some people save money by burning wood for heating, and heat pumps have also become popular.
The commercial break made you say Margret thatcher twice and it was so satisfying
As a Canadian I couldn't help feeling a bit astonished that UK households only spent £450/year on utilities in 2020 (3:43). I spend $250/month in the summer, and as much as $550/month in the winter, and that's just always been normal for me. Not trying to detract from this horrible situation, it just surprised me.
Great video as always!
Me, from Scandinavia, also was wondering. However the latitude is different AND you and me I presume live in single family houses, that is different from the average when a substantial part of the population lives in blocks of flats. My children who live in BoFs pay something like €50/month for their utilities because of heating that is the by product of electricity production.
As a Brit I'm also confused by the average of "£450 per year". Either I'v overpaid or that metric is off.
Air conditioning in homes is very rare in the UK. It just isn't worthwhile - why spend all that money on something which /might/ be needed for a short time in any year? It's not like the southern US, where a typical home would be unliveable without it. Of course homes could be designed better there, but... cultural issues. Heating though is universal, and almost always gas-fuelled, except in very rural areas.
That number does not include telecom and water bills, there are 5 Canadian dollars to 3 pounds and the UK temperature is far more stable. The temperature pretty rarely goes outside of 5-25 degrees
Are Canada's utilities ran by the mafia or something? Or do you live in a very cold part of Canada, or in a particularly large household? Or are you including anything other than electricity or water in that $550 (e.g. water, internet etc.)
I do agree even as a Brit that £450 a year seems a touch on the low side, I reckon I was paying about that in a single person household. But $550 is not far off my mortgage (admittedly that too is going to skyrocket in the near future), I think the day that my electricity and gas is comparable to my mortgage will be a very bad day for my finances!
The intense wildfires in California can basically all be attributed to PG&E, the private company that runs all of our power here. There is no incentive for them to properly check, maintain, and update their infrastructure, and thus extreme conditions cause breakdowns. Part of it is also definitely that we don't do controlled burns like the native american tribes did before us, but easily broken power systems do not help.
Brilliant explanation of the whole debacle. Thank you
Because as we all know having private companies running human necessities never goes wrong....
What is a "human necessity" is always a matter of opinion, and never an absolute fact.
Why shouldn't non-governmental organisations be allowed to run energy supplies?
@@lochnessmunster1189 I'm sorry what semantic arse did you pull that out of. "Oh well you can't define human necessities can you checkmate" except I can, something that leads to death without it... Not very hard to understand
@@lonelyone69 So, is vitamin C a human necessity?
@@lochnessmunster1189 yes which we get from... Food omg... Look it's a human necessity holy shit.
@@lonelyone69 Right, so private companies producing food isn't a great idea?
I feel for you Brits. Down here in Aus we are facing similar.
Great video. I'm American so I knew it was bad, but didn't know the full scope or story. Fascinating as it is frustrating.
The one great thing about the Tories excessive push for privatisation and capitalisation of everything in the country is they've disproved their own philosophy more effectively than anyone else could have. The downside is the UK had to be destroyed in the process. Maybe the other countries can learn from this although probably not as capital and billionaires rule everything now so there's no getting the power out of their hands without probably more extensive collapses.
I built my own off grid system. It`s easy to do and you can do it in staged. It cost about £2000 when I finished but saved me a fortune whilst the batteries lasted. It`s just a canal boat type set up but bigger. Now the batteries have dead I`ve just connected the panels to the grid with mini off grid inverters. This is the way forward for poor people like me. Buy a few solar panels when you can afford it and a small mini grid tied inverter. You can use as many mini grid inverters as you like. So just add to the system when you can afford to. I just have the panels on sheds etc. You can plug them into any mains socket even ones in out buildings. I got up to 2 kilowatts which means I have lots of spare energy which I send to the hot water tank using a solar immersion diverter. So I have as much hot water in the summer as I need. I am lucky to have a wood burner that also heats the water so I don`t pay for heating or hot water. No gas bill and electric is £26 a month.
Energy policy is one of those areas where the capture of governments by capital is most egregiously on display. It has never and will never result in increased competition, it is purely a commitment to channelling wealth into the hands of rent-seekers. It is illogical, even in high school economics (because what competition could meaningfully exist in a natural monopoly) but it is an amazing tool for wealth extraction.
There is a reason why it came mainly in the late 80's and 90's when the European empires had collapsed. It was basically imperialism within your own borders. If capitalists couldn't take foreign assets they increased their hold over domestic ones.