Yeah sorry if I wasn't clear. The second situation in general (freight is profitable but passenger isn't) does exist pretty much everywhere. The subsets are really on a locaiton by location basis. Depending upon the current level of passenger service and the level of government investment.Stas Bush wrote:Wait, I thought the 2"B" situation is more common, where freight profits cover any losses from passengers and even generate a sizeable net profit? No?
Situations like the Cardinal were cases where the losses from the passenger line were much higher than any freight profits over the same line because: A) Freight rates were fixed and couldn't be adjusted to allow for greater profits over that segment and B) The operating losses were offset against essentially zero government investment which means the railroad absorbed 100% of the passenger losses but by law had to continue service.
If you have too many line segments like that with almost no ability to increase freight revenue or reduce passenger costs then you are going to bankrupt railroads.
So going back a bit the 2nd overall situation (freight profitable passenger not) is the case hwoever the subsections (A,B, and C) are really dependent upon which individual line you are talking about and where they operate. I can't speak to which is or was the most common.