The Indian Railways' public services obligation are currently almost Rs 30,000-35,000 crore.
Asked whether in the long-run the railways will no longer be a low-cost common man's mode of transport and will be more on the line of privatised, Prabhu said, "This cannot be done in India. The railways will have to continue to be the only... I think the railways is a mode of last resort for common people for transportation and we will have to bear that burden as well as the responsibility."
He also said which private company will be interested to do this. "Do you think the private airlines will do kissan special airline. We are concerned about the people travelling on train."
Highlighting the issue of the public service obligation, Prabhu gave examples of the worldwide practice and said, "Somebody must pay for that as it happens globally. When you are doing this public service, it is a public service. So somebody must bear the public service obligation. And this happens globally."
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Japan, when they privatised railways, they undertook the responsibility to pay for the public service obligation.
Each country has a different system of accounting public service.
"I am very sure about it, we cannot ignore the common man's interest, we have to do that. But the burden of that we providing that facility to the common people, if it is low cost, somebody must bear that public service obligation, that's the philosophy,".
Indian Railways has asked the NITI Aayog to look into the public service obligation aspect.
Today it is almost Rs 30,000-35,000 crore public services obligation.
Passenger service in railways is cross-subsidised from the freight earning. The Railways spend Rs 30,000-35,000 crore on an average in a year to run passenger trains but its profit is cross-subsidised from freight services.
"So, if you look at it, about Rs 2,000 crore, I will just generalise, will amount to one point of operating ratio. If the Rs 36,000 crore was paid to the Railways, it will be 18 per cent lower operating ratio than what it is today," he said.
Describing the fiscal 2016-17 as an "unprecedented" year, he said, "It was a very difficult year for the Railways. Probabely one of the most challenging years."
"In one year we have to take Rs 35,000 crore burden. And at the same time, first nine months were very bad because coal movement, steel, were down, imports were down, exports were down. Because most of the cargo that we collect, either takes to the port or off-loaded from the port. Despite that, we have been able to manage that."