Question

In: Economics

Q1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper SKY HIGH It’s been a...

Q1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper

SKY HIGH

It’s been a windfall year for the industry, but you won’t be getting any better accommodations or more affordable fares. What gives?

Updated Apr. 14, 2017 10:33AM ET / Published Jun. 22, 2015 5:21AM ET

Jim Young/Reuters

Screw the passengers.

That appears all too often to be the governing philosophy of the airline business.

Take the case of a United Airlines flight from Chicago to London last weekend. A technical problem forced the plane to abort its trans-Atlantic route and divert to Goose Bay in Canada. The 176 passengers were marooned there for more than 20 hours, sleeping in unheated military barracks at near-freezing temperatures.

“There was nobody from United Airlines to be seen anywhere,” one passenger told NBC News. “No United representative ever reached out to anybody, no phone calls, no human beings, no nothing. Nobody had any idea what was going on.”

It so happened that this came at the end of a week in which the world’s airline chiefs, junketing in Miami, celebrated their most lucrative year ever. They are projecting profits totaling $29.3 billion in 2015—almost double what they made in 2014.

And you must have noticed if you’re flying anywhere in the U.S. this summer that seat prices are not falling. Indeed, if the owners of those seats are suddenly feeling fat and happy, they are in no mood to pass on their swell feelings to you. It’s hard to imagine any other service industry being run like the airline business—but then there is no other business like the airline business.

So now we have a novel opportunity to see how airlines behave when, suddenly and much to their surprise, they find themselves with a business model that is working. If making a profit is a new experience for them, what effect will that have on their behavior?

First, let us consider why the numbers have been transformed.

There has been a steep change in the efficiency of jets. Beginning with the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, the combination of lighter but stronger composite materials in structures and a quantum leap in engine efficiency, using far less fuel, has slashed operating costs per airplane by as much as 30 percent.

In the last year, this windfall has been boosted by the large decline in oil prices.

However, these dual benefits are not being evenly spread either among airlines or continents. Airlines stuck with fleets of older airplanes are not getting these benefits. Fleet age has become far more decisive in deciding an airline’s profitability, particularly true in the U.S.

The three major U.S. legacy carriers—American, United, and Delta—failed to get in early to order the new generation of airplanes—the 787, the Airbus A350, revamped versions of the Boeing 777, the Airbus A320, and the Boeing 737—and allowed European, Middle Eastern, and Asian competitors to become first adopters and, thereby, reap the benefits of lower fuel costs.

The average age of the jets in the American fleet is 12.3 years; for United 13 years; and for Delta 17.2 years. It won’t be until at least 2020 that they can finally dump the oldest of their airplanes. (American has actually been delaying the delivery of some new jets that it ordered.)

Age doesn’t mean that an airplane is unsafe. Properly maintained 20-year-old jets are not in danger of falling apart. The frequency of flights determines retirement age more than years and the smaller single-aisle jets used on domestic routes age the fastest because they are making up to seven flights a day.

Age may not be dangerous but it sure registers with passengers when it contrasts with the comforts they encounter in the new generation of jets with their better cabin climate and quieter engines. So it’s not surprising that when airlines show up with all-new fleets as well as gracious cabin crews people start wondering, Why can’t it always be like this?

It’s also not surprising that the major American carriers are now trying to stop those airlines from coming to an airport near you.

When it comes to price and the domestic U.S. routes, not only are prices not coming down but there is persuasive evidence of price-fixing. The veteran investigative reporter James B. Stewart described this market as a classic oligopoly in a penetrating piece in The New York Times .

However, this is far from being a new phenomenon. These tactics began long before the final round of consolidation mergers when US Airways was swallowed by American Airlines in 2013. They have merely been continually refined to the point now when the airlines, suddenly enjoying profits, have responded not by lowering fares but by tightening control over the number of seats available and cutting back on flight frequency and destinations.

The reality is that the airlines don’t need to expose themselves to charges of collusion on fares and the operation of a hidden cartel that mutually governs capacity. That’s so 20th century.

These days their key tool is “yield management”—being able to precisely calculate how many seats should be available on any given route at any time of the day or night and adjusting the price hour-by-hour according to demand. This algorithm has become so refined and the market so controlled that each of the major airlines ends up looking at the same numbers on their computer screen. No human intervention is needed. In all but name it is a cartel—but one run entirely by unaccountable robots.

So?

We live in the world’s most vigorously capitalist marketplace. What’s wrong with airlines trying to make a decent profit, for once? And what is the point of them flying empty seats around the skies?

But I come back to my earlier point: How do these airline executives behave when, joy of joys, they find their balance sheets deeply in the black? Like a lot of other corporate minders they think a lot more about their shareholders than their customers. Short-termism rules. Wall Street responds to quarterly earnings, not patient long-term strategy.

A good example is Jet Blue. This airline was a rare example of a successful startup based on a maverick idea: super-chummy cabin staff and generously spaced seating. A new CEO (previously schooled by the stingy bean-counters at British Airways) is undermining that spirit by jamming more seats into the cabin and raising baggage charges, all at the behest of shareholders.

The problem is that the people running airlines in the U.S. have one part of their brain missing, the part that provides the service ethic. As well as fare-gouging they’re space gouging in the cabins. Even with the newest jets like the Dreamliner they are packing more seats into coach than the airplane designers (or nature) intended.

Q1. Read the above article and answer the questions that follow.

a. Why did the investigative reporter James B. Stewart describe US airlines as a classic Oligopoly?

b. What is the meaning of yield management as described in the above article?

c. Why did the writer accuse people running airlines of missing service ethics

Solutions

Expert Solution

ANSWER:

a) James B.Stewart who was a reporter described US airlines as a classic(typical) oligopoly,because the US airlines are acting like collective oligopolistic firms, as they come together to control the output and also the cost.They had learned very well about the world and they were not at all interested in the price wars. Airlines also is not willing to increase the capacity of seats and to collect more fare from the passengers.And also the Airfares were increased despite of decrease in the fuel costs and along with the maintenance costs, which is the main instance to be called as classic oligopoly in which there is a control of output and cost where buyer has no option to yield.

b) According to the context Yield management specifies variable pricing plan which is used generally in the Air Transport Field to increase or maximize the income from its sale of tickets. There were also several procedures or algorithms were present to analyze the situation of availability of seats with reference to time and also few algorithms help in the fare collection. For suppose if you book in a month advance you will be booked with low cost when compared with if you have booked a seat a week/ a day before.

c) The author feels that there is a lack of service ethics for some of the people who are running airlines. Maintaining a proper service ethics helps a lot for their airlines. Service ethics says or demands that each and every customer / passenger must be treated in a good way with huge respect upto his/her satisfaction. The author intention here is the Owners of Airlines are mainly concentrating on the increase of fares and gaining more and more profits instead of satisfying their customers with all the needs and respect.


Related Solutions

Q1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper SKY HIGH It’s been a...
Q1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper SKY HIGH It’s been a windfall year for the industry, but you won’t be getting any better accommodations or more affordable fares. What gives? Updated Apr. 14, 2017 10:33AM ET / Published Jun. 22, 2015 5:21AM ET Jim Young/Reuters Screw the passengers. That appears all too often to be the governing philosophy of the airline business. Take the case of a United Airlines flight from Chicago to London last...
1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper SKY HIGH It’s been a...
1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper SKY HIGH It’s been a windfall year for the industry, but you won’t be getting any better accommodations or more affordable fares. What gives? Updated Apr. 14, 2017 10:33AM ET / Published Jun. 22, 2015 5:21AM ET Jim Young/Reuters Screw the passengers. That appears all too often to be the governing philosophy of the airline business. Take the case of a United Airlines flight from Chicago to London last...
1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper SKY HIGH It’s been a...
1. The Cartel That Makes Sure Airplane Tickets Never Get Cheaper SKY HIGH It’s been a windfall year for the industry, but you won’t be getting any better accommodations or more affordable fares. What gives? Updated Apr. 14, 2017 10:33AM ET / Published Jun. 22, 2015 5:21AM ET Jim Young/Reuters Screw the passengers. That appears all too often to be the governing philosophy of the airline business. Take the case of a United Airlines flight from Chicago to London last...
What is happening that makes the sky look blue? A. Only blue light can get through...
What is happening that makes the sky look blue? A. Only blue light can get through our atmosphere B. Blue light is scattered by particles in our atmosphere C. Red light is scattered by particles in our atmosphere, so we donâ t see them D. Only blue light comes from the sun
It has been argued by economists that the depreciation of a home country's currency makes home goods cheaper for foreigners
It has been argued by economists that the depreciation of a home country's currency makes home goods cheaper for foreigners and foreign goods more expensive for domestic residents while the appreciation of a home country's currency makes home goods more expensive for foreigners and foreign goods cheaper for domestic residents. Briefly discuss three (3) determinants of imports and three (3) determinants of exports (Hint: each determinant should be a sub- heading and your discussion should be maximum 1 page)
I understand that in nature wind would never get high enough, but I am just curious...
I understand that in nature wind would never get high enough, but I am just curious as to whether physics would allow this to occur or not.
Marta has never been physically active. In high school she didn't enjoy physical education classes because...
Marta has never been physically active. In high school she didn't enjoy physical education classes because she just wasn't good at competitive sports like basketball and soccer. Now 20 years old and a sophomore in college, Marta typically drives her car to campus rather than walking the six blocks from her apartment. Her idea of a complete meal is a large pepperoni pizza delivered to her door and washed down with a large soda. To relax, she watches TV or...
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT