>The government would screw it upIt's a moot point.
My understanding that since January 1, 1995, our government, as well as other WTO members, are now largely prohibited from entering fields except where services are
"supplied in the exercise of governmental authority" "'a
service supplied in the exercise of governmental authority' means any service which is supplied
"neither on a commercial basis, nor in competition with one or more service suppliers."
Basically,
competition policy makes it FTA-illegal for governments to enter fields where they would be competing with any commercial entity, unless they already had done so in 1995. (Especially in financial services, regulatory changes subsequent to a freeze enacted in 1998 must now be rolled back)
The ideology of
progressive liberalization, (One way irreversible privatization) part of international economic governance now, gradually expands the sphere of corporate entitlement to include all service sectors and modes of supply, as well as captures all legislation in a one way manner if its deregulation. Thats called the "ratchet". CalTrain is a commercial entity and tickets are certainly not free
- Like healthcare and higher education, railways are now commercial in the United States and cannot be
expropriated. A few countries that make some services completely free, like healthcare in Canada, are exempted as long as they don't allow any commercial competition in (for example, private for profit healthcare, like in England, has caused the gradual privatization of the NHS, due to GATS and its progeny,
TiSA.)
(See also here)
Australia has seen much privatization of roads.
Also, the agreements gradually force international tending process and procurement, i.e. outsourcing of public service jobs or quasi publc services (whenever tax money is spent)