Collab:Bai Empire/Railways

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The following is the documentation of the national network in the Bai Empire.

Overview

Rail transport in the Bai Empire operates under a hybrid privatization-nationalization model in which the Bai government owns the rail operating assets while private operators maintain them. BaiRail is the brand name for most rail lines in the Empire, with services sharing a ticketing structure for seamless long-distance passenger rail service in the Bai Empire. All rail companies in the Bai Empire are heavily regulated by the Bai government, which sets fares and determines which routes the companies operate through licenses. The government also provides subsidies to the private companies to help maintain and improve the rail network.

History

As development and industralisation boomed in the rural areas of the Empire during the 1850s, wagons and carriages were considered "impractical and inefficient" to transport goods across the Empire. The Gaoxi Emperor in 1855 commissioned studies for a regional railroad network in the Empire, following a visit to the Federal States during which he witnessed the construction of the future transcontinental Great Western and Asperic Railroad. However, the conservative faction of the government opposed the railway project, considering steam engines to be "clever but useless" contraptions and "interfering" with feng shui. Upon the Emperor's death in 1861, plans for the railway network halted.

It was only in the 1870s that plans were revised with advocation by many private industries operating in the countryside. Not wanting to pay out of pocket, the Bai royal government permitted these companies to build and operate their own railroads. The central government also called for provincial governments to form their own railway building companies and raised funds by selling shares to citizens and levying taxes. This resulted in the rapid development of a rail network in the Empire.

By the early 20th century, the Bai rail network was dominated by three major companies: The Northern Bai Coastal Rail Company, the Central Bai Electric Railroad Corporation and the Eastern Electric Railway Company. The Middle Bai Government attempted to nationalise rail assets following labour strikes; it was met with strong backlash. The rail network of the Bai Empire remained privatised during the Fascist Era and the Warlord Era. Under Yu's authoritarian rule in the 1960s to 1980s, the rail network was largely nationalised and redeveloped from the political chaos that fractured the rail network.