toots wrote:
Dusty Bin wrote:
Perhaps if the Competition Commission had been conducting the investigation - as I'd hoped would happen via an OFT reference in 2003 - then that sort of thing might have been more under consideration
Perhaps that's why the Competition Commission weren't asked to conduct the investigation
I think the normal route for a Competition Commission investigation is a reference following an OFT market study. But as I said recently the OFT taxi study back in the early 1990s seemed to avoid many of the more awkward questions and anything that would require major legislation, so to that extent they certainly wouldn't have been interested in referring it upstairs to the CC.
Thus to that extent it would not now have been a choice between the CC and the LC - the latter was the only real option.
On the other hand, it says on the CC's website that a reference could be made to it directly by the Sectetary of State (Vince Cable, I assume), thus missing out the OFT, but I suspect that's not a route that's followed often.
And it would have looked a bit ridiculous now either to have another OFT study that decided now that new legislation was required, or to go straight to the CC when the OFT had ignored that option a few years ago, but who knows?
If the trade wasn't a cinderalla subject then such things might have been discussed in the public domain, but of course no one apart from ourselves is really interested.
However, a CC reference via Vince Cable might have been preferable for us because since he's apparently a closet socialist he might have been more amenable to the social justice agenda rather than the economic efficiency one that appears to be the LC's remit.
On the other hand the SoS for Transport is Tory Justine Greening, so presumably when the LC reports to her social justice won't be uppermost in her thoughts.
On the other hand, the minister responsible for taxis is Norman Baker, and he's a Lib Dem, and it was of course him who got caught up in that Liverpool incident a couple of years ago.
Interestingly, he was also leader of Lewes Council a few years ago, and there's an effective one-tier system there (just worked out what Sussex was on about the other day regarding where he's now an MP).
On the other hand, I recall him at the TransComm meeting and he was asked about a single-tier system, and he poo-pooed that idea, and then reeled off the reasons why two tiers were required, which I thought betrayed a lack of understanding.
Anyway, that's perhaps getting away from the point a bit, and in any case the normal rules of politics don't seem to apply to the trades, so who knows what they're all thinking? And they never seem to demonstrate much of an understanding of the trade either, so probably no point in even discussing all this
