| The UK press has spent decades telling people about "rip off Britain". There are usually plenty of choices for people willing to pay. In transport, you can choose between comfort, speed, time, flexibility, reliability, and a few other factors, and make your choice. London to Manchester options on the train have * Time -- travel by train "offpeak" and save a fortune over peak * Comfort -- travel by train "peak" and have more space. Travel in First Class and have more space. * Speed -- travel by London Midland and Northern rather than Virgin and save a fortune * Flexibility -- book a fixed train and save In addition to the plethora of options on the train there's also
* Fly -- can be faster (depends where you're going, but from west London to West Manchester it's faster), can be cheaper, can be more comfortable (you're guarenteed a seat), tends to be pricey if you want an element of flexibility, not as flexible as the train or car * Coach - slower, less comfortable, cheaper * Drive -- very flexible, slower than the train, requires effort, twice the off peak train cost * Taxi -- not that expensive, especially for a few people However people complain that "it's too expensive", despite being able to travel from Manchester right now for £20, or in a couple of hours for £12. |
There's also the fact that long-distance travel in the UK is priced significantly better than short-distance travel. There's been times where I've been able to get to London from a small town for cheaper than it'd cost to get to the nearest city. First class on East Coast used to be priced at a rate where it was cheaper to upgrade (and get food and drinks included) than to get food on the go - on local services, there's often no competition aside from a car, so prices even for standard class can be raised almost arbitrarily, especially if there's any tourist traffic on the line.
Even for long-distance journeys, pick the wrong date or need to be there for the morning, and my options become far, far more limited, and far, far pricier, since we don't have sufficient capacity for peak dates - we barely have capacity for everyday services on some modes of transport - and we have very few overnight services.
Edinburgh to Paris next month - we were stuck with the choices of taking the bus, or flying for 2-3x the price. Train was more expensive than the flight - a remarkably common occurrence, even for travel entirely within the UK. We eventually chose the bus, despite it being a 24 hour journey.