Last week, hundreds of thousands of Londoners and commuters in the rest of the South East battled strikes and main line signal failures to get to work. With considerable grit and determination many of them succeeded. It's fair to say that George Osborne's Christmas gift to restrict regulated fare rises is already no more than a distant memory...

Last week, hundreds of thousands of Londoners and commuters in the rest of the South East battled strikes and main line signal failures to get to work. With considerable grit and determination many of them succeeded. It's fair to say that George Osborne's Christmas gift to restrict regulated fare rises is already no more than a distant memory. But on a day when the Mayor could be seen to be standing up for Londoners, it is worth reflecting how limited his powers really are. Take the Chancellor's announcement as an example. TfL bosses were understandably caught off-side by the Treasury's surprise decision to limit fare rises to RPI. This forced the Mayor to rework his fares to balance the books. The late announcement, combined with the labyrinthine system of revenue settlement, meant that new prices were delayed by weeks. This gave some season ticket holders a rare windfall but may have cost millions at the farebox.

The stifling complexity and lack of flexibility in the system goes back to regulations put in place at the time of rail privatisation. This included a requirement in law to have a fare structure shackled to many separate train companies taking revenue risk. For certain ticket types, such as the ever-popular Travelcard, this means that TfL and private rail operators in the South East are financially tied at the ankle - by the Chancellor of the Exchequer no less.

There is nothing wrong in regulating fares where users have limited choice. Many suburban passengers will have welcomed George Osborne's announcement with open arms and wish that he'd in fact gone further. But surely it would make more sense and be far better if Londoners and their Home County neighbours determined how commuter rail services are provided and what they cost to use.

The present system is a reflection of over-centralised control of London's public services and undoubtedly those of England's other city regions. As the independent London Finance Commission pointed out last year, the present Mayor for London (and his predecessor Ken Livingstone) has just a fraction of the revenue raising powers that his opposite numbers in other world cities enjoy. Remarkably, only seven percent of London's tax base is determined by the representatives elected to spend it. New York's figure is about seven times higher than this. Other world cities enjoy much greater fiscal freedom than London, which in turn leads to greater accountability and creates a real incentive for growth and public investment.

The success London has seen regarding London Overground, DLR extensions and getting Crossrail underway is testament to the effectiveness of city politicians. Across the political spectrum, the Mayor and boroughs have demonstrated consistently that they are capable of delivering tangible improvements to our urban infrastructure. A natural next step is handing over greater fiscal power and control for large chunks of the commuter railway. Doing so would boost city government. It would allow the Mayor to champion properly the interests of hard-pressed commuters and be held accountable for delivery. Even on a no-strike day.

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