Private capital limits speed of American trains
Despite the opening of a line connecting Miami with Orlando, both in Florida, on Sept 22, it's debatable whether one can say the United States has its first high-speed railway line, given that its speed is only 200 kilometers per hour, lower than the standard of 250 km/h set by the International Union of Railways.
The new line is even slower than the Acela Express that links Washington with Boston. More importantly, the so-called high-speed train takes three hours to go from Miami to Orlando, a journey that a car can cover in three and a half hours. For the half hour that is gained, a passenger has to pay $189 for a first-class seat. It took 13 years — a period that saw the US presidency moving from the Democrats to the Republicans and then back to the Democrats again — to build this line that saves neither time nor money.
The main reason why this project took so long is because it did not get enough funding. It was not until they introduced a private railway company, Brightline, in 2018 that the project gained steam. However, private capital primarily pursues profit, so they could not have made the trains run too fast by keeping the costs low.