One benefit of the flat pricing is that it saves a lot of overhead on having to check eligibility. I'm not arguing whether that's good or fair, but it does simplify the system.
Conductor still needs to check the ticket itself. You would have to show your student/pensioner ID in addition to the ticket. Overhead of eligibility check is negligible in my opinion
Why not? You (as the seller) don't care if someone buys a ticket they're not eligible to use and has to come back for another one, or never uses it, or whatever. You'd be checking eligibility at point of use anyway.
* It’s inefficient. Eligibility must only be confirmed once while ticket control happens often. Ticket control needs to be fast.
* Training all inspectors to verify student IDs is much more effort compared to training people at point of sale only.
* Many places also accept tickets with student badge instead of student IDs for verification.
This is probably also the reason we don’t get discounted 49€-tickets yet. They’re sold digitally so they can’t check the student ID at point of sale.
A digital student ID could improve this but implementing this internationally is hard.
This seems to hint at a more fundamental difference in approach.
The grandparent comment is saying that the conductors should check for student IDs to validate that the passenger is travelling with correct authorisation.
Your comment indicates that because they have the ticket they are automatically authorised to travel.
In the U.K. as an example, if you’re travelling with a student (or other form of discount) ticket but cannot produce the corresponding ID card proving this, in effect you are not authorised to use the ticket and thus subject to a penalty fare, or a fine. This makes it so that eligibility must be validated simultaneously with inspection.
Not verifying eligibility at the same time as inspection means that an ineligible user may be inclined to obtain a ticket from an eligible user.
Different systems, different attitudes.
(Of course in the U.K. a flat reduction in ticket prices across the board would ameliorate the likelihood of this occurring in the first place, but that’s secondary)