New ownership model for critical national infrastructure
Reform UK · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Reform UK’s policy “New ownership model for critical national infrastructure” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Public finances & the next generation — Hurts
major · moderate confidence
Taking 50% of each utility into public ownership would require the government to spend tens to hundreds of billions of pounds, with no stated funding mechanism — passing a large potential debt burden to future generations. The IFS has already concluded that Reform UK's broader fiscal plans don't add up by tens of billions per year.
The evidence
- The policy proposes bringing 50% of each utility into public ownership and 50% owned by UK pension funds, with no stated funding mechanism for the public acquisition. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “bringing 50% of each utility into public ownership and the other 50% owned by UK pension funds”
- At investment-based compensation, acquisition of water, energy grids, and Royal Mail could cost approximately £49.7 billion. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “compensating shareholders for their original investment, rather than market value, would cost approximately £49.7 billion for water, energy grids, and Royal Mail”
- Full renationalisation of energy supply alone has been estimated at £90.3 billion by a union-commissioned report. — unitetheunion.org (media) — “Unite Investigates estimated the full renationalisation of the energy supply could cost £90.3 billion”
- An industry-commissioned report estimated paying fair market value for water, energy networks, and Royal Mail would cost £193 billion. — water.org.uk (media) — “paying "fair market value" for water and energy networks and Royal Mail would cost taxpayers £193 billion”
- The IFS concluded that Reform UK's overall fiscal plans don't add up, with costings out by tens of billions of pounds per year. — theguardian.com (media) — “Reform UK's costings were out "by a margin of tens of billions of pounds per year" and that their proposed tax cuts and spending increases imply "large, unspecified cuts to public services that would go far beyond a crac…”
- Lower-bound advocates argue the policy could generate £7.8 billion in annual savings, paying for itself in under seven years. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “could generate annual savings of £7.8 billion for UK households, effectively paying for itself in less than seven years”
- Current UK pension fund ownership in privatised water and energy companies is small, estimated at about 5% across both sectors. — gre.ac.uk (academic) — “current UK pension fund ownership in privatised water and energy companies is relatively small, estimated at about 5% across both sectors (8.5% of water, 2% of energy grid)”
Biggest unknown: The actual acquisition cost depends heavily on the compensation method chosen, with credible estimates ranging from roughly £50 billion to over £300 billion, and it is unclear how the public 50% stake would be financed.
Our reading: The core O12 question is whether this policy improves or worsens the public debt path and intergenerational fiscal burden. The policy commits to placing 50% of every critical utility into public ownership with no stated financing mechanism — no bonds, no taxation, no asset sales are specified. This means the public acquisition cost would, absent a stated plan, fall on the Exchequer as borrowing or unfunded liability. The cost range from the evidence is enormous: from roughly £50 billion (investment-value compensation, advocacy-source estimate) to £193 billion (fair-market-value, industry-source estimate). Both ends of that range are from non-independent sources — the lower from campaigners (We Own It/Greenwich) and the upper from industry (Water UK) — so neither can be taken as authoritative. Even the lower bound represents a very large addition to public debt. The IFS, an independent institutional source, has assessed Reform UK's broader fiscal plans as being out by tens of billions per year, providing the only independent anchor point available. The optimistic case — that annual savings of £7.8 billion would repay the acquisition cost — requires the lower-cost acquisition AND realisation of projected efficiency gains, both contested. The evidence on efficiency is split between advocates (reinvestment of profits) and critics (reduced efficiency), with no independent resolution in the provided evidence. The standing charge cap adds a further modest but unquantified fiscal cost by constraining regulated revenue. On balance, the policy implies a very large upfront public expenditure with no committed funding source, placed in the context of an overall fiscal plan the IFS judges not to add up. Borrowing to acquire existing assets (rather than to build new productive capacity) does not obviously improve long-run fiscal capacity in the way infrastructure investment might. The verdict is worsens/major, with moderate confidence given the genuine uncertainty over acquisition costs.
Prosperity & living standards — Genuinely contested
n/a · low confidence
The policy could improve living standards if public ownership raises efficiency and cuts bills, but the acquisition cost alone spans a range from roughly £50bn to over £300bn depending on compensation method — a gap so large that the net effect on prosperity is genuinely unknowable without key design choices. Until the compensation approach is settled, no honest verdict is possible.
The evidence
- The policy would bring 50% of each utility into public ownership and the other 50% owned by UK pension funds, and would cap standing charges for low users and pensioners. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “bringing 50% of each utility into public ownership and the other 50% owned by UK pension funds, to ensure British taxpayer control and better management. They will also cap standing charges for low users and pensioners”
- Compensating shareholders at investment cost rather than market value is estimated to cost approximately £49.7 billion for water, energy grids and Royal Mail, potentially generating annual household savings of £7.8 billion. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “compensating shareholders for their original investment, rather than market value, would cost approximately £49.7 billion for water, energy grids, and Royal Mail, and could generate annual savings of £7.8 billion for UK …”
- Paying fair market value for water and energy networks and Royal Mail is estimated to cost taxpayers £193 billion. — water.org.uk (media) — “paying "fair market value" for water and energy networks and Royal Mail would cost taxpayers £193 billion to avoid losses to savings and pensions”
- Broader renationalisation plans have been estimated to cost at least £176 billion, equating to nearly £6,500 per household. — cps.org.uk (media) — “could cost at least £176 billion, equating to nearly £6,500 per household, with a wider renationalisation potentially reaching £306 billion”
- Proponents argue public ownership can lead to reinvestment of profits and lower costs for consumers; critics argue it could reduce efficiency. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “Proponents of public ownership argue it can lead to reinvestment of profits back into the system, improved services, and potentially lower costs for consumers”
- Critics suggest nationalisation could lead to reduced efficiency. — cps.org.uk (media) — “Critics, such as the Centre for Policy Studies, suggest that nationalisation could lead to reduced efficiency”
- The IFS concluded that Reform UK's broader fiscal plans 'don't add up,' with costings out by tens of billions of pounds per year. — theguardian.com (media) — “Reform UK's costings were out "by a margin of tens of billions of pounds per year" and that their proposed tax cuts and spending increases imply "large, unspecified cuts to public services that would go far beyond a crac…”
- Capping standing charges would shift costs to unit rates, so overall average bills may not change significantly, though low users could still benefit. — moneysavingexpert.com (media) — “This cost will be shifted to unit rates, meaning the overall average dual-fuel bill may not change significantly, but low users could still benefit from the direct reduction in the fixed charge”
- UK pension fund ownership in privatised water and energy companies is relatively small, estimated at about 5% across both sectors. — gre.ac.uk (academic) — “current UK pension fund ownership in privatised water and energy companies is relatively small, estimated at about 5% across both sectors (8.5% of water, 2% of energy grid)”
Biggest unknown: Whether shareholders are compensated at investment cost, regulated asset value, or full market value — a difference of potentially £250bn — is the single parameter that determines whether this policy is a net fiscal gain or an enormous drag on public investment capacity.
Our reading: The policy's net effect on O13 hinges almost entirely on a design parameter it does not specify: how shareholders are compensated. The evidence presents a £50–300bn range of acquisition cost estimates, all from sources with declared interests (advocacy groups, utility-commissioned reports, trade unions) — making it impossible to identify a reliable central estimate. If acquisition proceeds at investment cost (~£50bn), projected annual household savings of £7.8bn suggest the policy could pay for itself within a decade, improving living standards and potentially freeing investment capital. If acquisition occurs at market value (~£193bn+), the fiscal burden would crowd out enormous amounts of productive public investment, worsening long-run prosperity and productivity even if consumer bills fell modestly. The standing-charge cap is a minor distributional measure: evidence indicates costs shift to unit rates so aggregate bills are unlikely to fall materially, making the prosperity impact negligible at population scale. On efficiency, the evidence is split between advocacy sources on both sides — neither pro- nor anti-nationalisation projections rest on independent institutional evidence specific to this 50/50 model. The IFS assessment of Reform UK's broader fiscal plans adds further doubt about whether the acquisition costs are fundable without large cuts elsewhere. Because the compensation method is unspecified, the crux parameter spans a range no honest number resolves, and the direction of effect on real living standards, investment capacity, and productivity is genuinely indeterminate.
Inequality & fair shares — Mixed picture
minor · low confidence
Capping standing charges would reduce a cost that falls disproportionately on low-income and pensioner households, giving a targeted progressive boost. The ownership restructuring has an uncertain distributional effect — the 50/50 pension-fund model differs fundamentally from the full-nationalisation scenarios the available savings evidence was modelled on, so the inequality impact cannot be reliably projected.
The evidence
- The policy would bring 50% of each utility into public ownership and 50% owned by UK pension funds, and cap standing charges for low users and pensioners. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “bringing 50% of each utility into public ownership and the other 50% owned by UK pension funds, to ensure British taxpayer control and better management. They will also cap standing charges for low users and pensioners”
- Standing charges disproportionately affect households with low energy consumption and pensioners, as fixed costs make up a larger share of their total bill. — energy-uk.org.uk (media) — “Standing charges disproportionately affect households with low energy consumption and pensioners, as these fixed costs constitute a larger share of their overall bill”
- Capping standing charges is expected to benefit only a small minority of customers, and costs are likely shifted to unit rates. — energy-uk.org.uk (media) — “This is expected to benefit only a small minority of customers and could undermine the price cap's role as a universal safety net”
- When costs are shifted from standing charges to unit rates, low users could still benefit from the direct reduction in the fixed charge even if overall bills do not change significantly. — moneysavingexpert.com (media) — “the overall average dual-fuel bill may not change significantly, but low users could still benefit from the direct reduction in the fixed charge”
- UK pension fund ownership in privatised water and energy companies is small, estimated at about 5% across both sectors. — gre.ac.uk (academic) — “current UK pension fund ownership in privatised water and energy companies is relatively small, estimated at about 5% across both sectors (8.5% of water, 2% of energy grid)”
- Critics warn that not paying market value for utility assets could harm pension funds and business confidence. — cps.org.uk (media) — “others warn that not paying market value could harm pension funds and business confidence”
- Critics argue nationalisation could lead to reduced efficiency. — cps.org.uk (media) — “Critics, such as the Centre for Policy Studies, suggest that nationalisation could lead to reduced efficiency”
- The IFS concluded that Reform UK's broader fiscal plans do not add up, with costings out by tens of billions per year and implied large unspecified cuts to public services. — theguardian.com (media) — “Reform UK's costings were out "by a margin of tens of billions of pounds per year" and that their proposed tax cuts and spending increases imply "large, unspecified cuts to public services that would go far beyond a crac…”
Biggest unknown: Whether and how the 50/50 hybrid acquisition would be financed — and who ultimately bears that cost — is the key distributional unknown; if financed through taxation or borrowing, the burden could offset gains to lower-income groups.
Our reading: O14 asks whether the gap between the richest and the rest narrows or widens. Two channels operate here. First, the standing charge cap is explicitly targeted at low users and pensioners — groups for whom fixed daily charges represent a disproportionately large share of energy bills. This is a clear progressive distributional measure: those at the lower end of the income and consumption distribution gain proportionally more from a cap on this fixed cost. The caveat is that costs are likely shifted to unit rates, so net savings for low users are limited and the benefit reaches only a small minority — making the magnitude modest but the direction genuinely progressive. Second, the ownership restructuring. The available evidence on bill savings and pension-fund impacts (E3, E13) was modelled on full public ownership scenarios, not Reform's 50/50 hybrid where half the equity goes to UK pension funds. That structural difference matters: full-nationalisation savings estimates cannot be reliably applied to a half-ownership model, and the distributional flow of future returns under a pension-fund co-ownership structure differs from what the research captures. The direction of effect on inequality from the ownership element is therefore genuinely uncertain — the pension-fund stake could broaden the ownership of utility returns beyond concentrated foreign shareholders, which would be mildly equalising, but this is not directly supported by evidence modelled on this hybrid structure. A further risk: if acquiring 50% of each utility requires substantial public borrowing or tax rises, as suggested by the IFS's assessment of Reform UK's overall fiscal position, the distributional burden of financing could fall on working-age and lower-income taxpayers, potentially offsetting gains to the bottom of the distribution. On balance, the standing charge cap provides a small but genuine progressive signal. The ownership element is too structurally novel relative to the available evidence to call with confidence. Mixed, minor, low confidence.
Cost of living — Mixed picture
moderate · low confidence
Capping standing charges would give immediate help to low-use households and pensioners, but the cost would likely shift to unit rates so overall bills may not fall much. The bigger ownership change could cut bills in the long run, but the acquisition cost and efficiency effects are deeply disputed.
The evidence
- The policy will cap standing charges for low users and pensioners. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “They will also cap standing charges for low users and pensioners.”
- The policy proposes bringing 50% of each utility into public ownership and 50% owned by UK pension funds. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “bringing 50% of each utility into public ownership and the other 50% owned by UK pension funds”
- Standing charges are fixed daily fees that have risen in recent years and disproportionately affect low-consumption households and pensioners. — energy-uk.org.uk (media) — “Standing charges disproportionately affect households with low energy consumption and pensioners, as these fixed costs constitute a larger share of their overall bill”
- Capping standing charges is likely to shift costs to unit rates, so the overall average bill may not change significantly, though low users could still benefit from the reduced fixed charge. — moneysavingexpert.com (media) — “This cost will be shifted to unit rates, meaning the overall average dual-fuel bill may not change significantly, but low users could still benefit from the direct reduction in the fixed charge”
- Ofgem considered but rejected moving all standing charge costs to unit rates in 2024 because it could create large costs for some low-income households. — energy-uk.org.uk (media) — “Ofgem decided against moving all costs to unit rates in 2024, as it would create unequal benefits and costs, potentially leading to very large costs for some low-income households”
- Proponents argue public ownership could generate annual savings of £7.8 billion for UK households across water, energy grids, and Royal Mail. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “could generate annual savings of £7.8 billion for UK households, effectively paying for itself in less than seven years”
- For water alone, public ownership could reduce bills by £3–5 billion annually, with households £113 better off on average. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “public ownership could reduce bills by £3-5 billion annually, with households being £113 better off due to a reduction in the proportion of bills going to shareholders”
- Paying fair market value for water and energy networks could cost taxpayers £193 billion. — water.org.uk (media) — “paying "fair market value" for water and energy networks and Royal Mail would cost taxpayers £193 billion to avoid losses to savings and pensions”
- Critics such as the Centre for Policy Studies suggest nationalisation could lead to reduced efficiency. — cps.org.uk (media) — “Critics, such as the Centre for Policy Studies, suggest that nationalisation could lead to reduced efficiency”
- University of Greenwich research suggests the impact on UK pension funds of below-market compensation would be less than 0.1% of their total investments, as 95% of increased compensation would go to largely foreign investors. — gre.ac.uk (academic) — “even if compensation were below "true market value," the impact on UK pension funds would be less than 0.1% of their total investments, deemed "invisible" and having no impact on actual pensions paid, as 95% of the value…”
Biggest unknown: How much compensation is paid for the 50% public acquisition determines whether households gain savings or face a large fiscal bill that crowds out other spending.
Our reading: This policy touches O2 through two distinct channels: the standing charge cap and the structural ownership change. On standing charges: the cap targets low users and pensioners, who are genuinely hit hardest by fixed daily fees. However, the evidence is clear that capping standing charges tends to shift costs to unit rates rather than eliminate them, so the aggregate bill saving is likely small or zero for average consumers. Some low users will benefit in net terms; others — particularly high users on low incomes — could pay more. This is a real but modest and unevenly distributed gain. On ownership: the projected household savings from partial public ownership are potentially significant (£113/year on water alone per one estimate; £7.8bn system-wide per another). But these projections come from sources sympathetic to public ownership and rest on assumptions about efficiency gains and profit reinvestment. The offsetting risk is large: acquisition costs range from ~£50bn to £193bn depending on the compensation method. The policy specifies 50% public acquisition, which halves these figures but still implies a very large fiscal commitment. The IFS has flagged that Reform UK's broader fiscal plans do not add up by tens of billions per year, raising serious doubt about whether the acquisition can be funded without crowding out other spending or raising taxes — both of which would harm living standards. The efficiency debate is genuinely unresolved between credible analysts. The mixed verdict reflects real upside for targeted households (standing charges, potential bill reductions) alongside credible downside risks (fiscal strain from acquisition, cost-shifting on standing charges, efficiency uncertainty). The low confidence reflects the wide range of cost estimates and the absence of detailed costing for the 50% model specifically.
Crime, justice & national security — Little effect
minor · low confidence
This policy is primarily about utility ownership and energy bill costs, not crime, justice, or national security. While 'British taxpayer control' of critical infrastructure could in theory improve resilience to external threats, no provided evidence connects the ownership model to any O5 indicator.
The evidence
- The policy aims to bring 50% of each utility into public ownership to ensure British taxpayer control and better management. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “bringing 50% of each utility into public ownership and the other 50% owned by UK pension funds, to ensure British taxpayer control and better management”
Biggest unknown: Whether transferring 50% ownership of utilities to public hands would materially improve resilience of critical national infrastructure against external threats — no evidence unit addresses this.
Our reading: O5 covers crime rates, court backlogs, antisocial behaviour, national security posture, and resilience to external threats. The policy's stated aim of 'British taxpayer control' of critical national infrastructure has a theoretical connection to national security — foreign ownership of utilities can create strategic vulnerabilities. However, none of the 34 provided evidence units address this security dimension. All substantive evidence concerns ownership costs, efficiency, bill impacts, and fiscal implications. Without any cited evidence that the ownership model fires a security mechanism at scale, 'mechanism plausibility is not effect' applies: the direction cannot be scored as 'improves'. The standing charge cap (E20) has no plausible O5 pathway at all. The verdict is therefore negligible — there is no evidenced material effect on any O5 indicator — with low confidence because the absence of evidence in this set does not rule out a genuine (if modest) national security benefit from reduced foreign ownership of critical infrastructure.
Security in later life — Mixed picture
moderate · low confidence
Capping standing charges would give pensioners direct bill relief, which helps those on fixed incomes. However, how the utilities are acquired could affect pension fund values, and the overall fiscal credibility of the plan is disputed.
The evidence
- The policy caps standing charges for pensioners. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “They will also cap standing charges for low users and pensioners.”
- 50% of each utility would be owned by UK pension funds. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “the other 50% owned by UK pension funds”
- Standing charges disproportionately burden pensioners as fixed costs form a larger share of low-consumption households' bills. — energy-uk.org.uk (media) — “Standing charges disproportionately affect households with low energy consumption and pensioners, as these fixed costs constitute a larger share of their overall bill”
- Capping standing charges would shift costs to unit rates, so the overall bill saving for low users may be limited. — moneysavingexpert.com (media) — “This cost will be shifted to unit rates, meaning the overall average dual-fuel bill may not change significantly, but low users could still benefit from the direct reduction in the fixed charge”
- UK pension funds currently own only a small share of privatised water and energy companies — about 5% across both sectors. — gre.ac.uk (academic) — “current UK pension fund ownership in privatised water and energy companies is relatively small, estimated at about 5% across both sectors (8.5% of water, 2% of energy grid)”
- Research suggests that even below-market compensation would have less than 0.1% impact on UK pension fund total investments, because 95% of increased compensation would go to largely foreign investors. — gre.ac.uk (academic) — “even if compensation were below "true market value," the impact on UK pension funds would be less than 0.1% of their total investments, deemed "invisible" and having no impact on actual pensions paid, as 95% of the value…”
- Some warn that not paying market value could harm pension funds and business confidence. — cps.org.uk (media) — “others warn that not paying market value could harm pension funds and business confidence”
- The IFS concluded Reform UK's fiscal plans overall 'don't add up,' with costings out by tens of billions per year. — theguardian.com (media) — “Reform UK's costings were out "by a margin of tens of billions of pounds per year" and that their proposed tax cuts and spending increases imply "large, unspecified cuts to public services that would go far beyond a crac…”
Biggest unknown: The compensation method for acquiring utility stakes determines whether pension funds gain a new income-generating asset or suffer losses on their existing shareholdings — and this is unresolved in the policy text.
Our reading: This policy touches O8 in two distinct ways. First, the standing charge cap for pensioners offers a targeted, immediate bill reduction for a group — pensioners — who disproportionately suffer from fixed energy costs on low or fixed incomes. This is a genuine direct benefit. However, the evidence indicates that capping standing charges typically shifts costs to unit rates, partially diluting the saving. Still, for the lowest users (many of whom are pensioners), there is a real, if modest, net benefit. Second, the 50/50 ownership model proposes that UK pension funds own half of each utility. This could, in principle, generate stable returns for pensioners over time. However, the compensation method is entirely unspecified in the policy text, and this is the crux: if utilities are acquired at below-market value, existing pension fund shareholders could face losses. The evidence suggests those losses would be small in aggregate (under 0.1% of total pension fund investments), since most utility equity is foreign-owned. But if pension funds are to buy into the new 50% stake, the terms of that transaction are unknown. The IFS also casts doubt on the broader fiscal framework, raising the risk that unspecified public service cuts could harm other later-life support services. On balance, the direct standing charge cap is a genuine, if modest, improvement for pensioners. The ownership restructuring is too uncertain in its compensation terms to reliably score as positive or negative for pension security. The verdict is therefore mixed: a clear near-term benefit from the standing charge cap, offset by unresolved pension fund exposure and fiscal credibility concerns.