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Airline deregulation

Airline deregulation is the process of removing government-imposed entry and price restrictions on airlines affecting, in particular, the carriers permitted to serve specific routes. In the United States, the term usually applies to the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978. A new form of regulation has been developed to some extent to deal with problems such as the allocation of the limited number of slots available at airports.

Introduction

As jets were integrated into the market in the late 1950s and early 1960s, the industry experienced dramatic growth. By the mid-1960s, airlines were carrying roughly 100 million passengers and by the mid-1970s, over 200 million Americans had traveled by air. This steady increase in air travel began placing serious strains on the ability of federal regulators to cope with the increasingly complex nature of air travel.[citation needed]The onset of high inflation, low economic growth, falling productivity, rising labor costs and higher fuel costs proved problematic to the airlines.[1]

Although it is generally recognized that the purpose behind government regulation is to create a stable industry,[2][3] in the decades leading up to deregulation many airline market analysts expressed concerns with the structure of the United States' passenger air transport system. Concerns included high barriers to entry for fledgling airlines, slow government response to existing airlines entering to compete in city-pairings, and monopolistic practices by legacy airlines artificially inflating passenger ticket prices.[citation needed]

In order to address these growing concerns airline deregulation began in the US in 1978. It was, and still is, a part of a sweeping experiment to ultimately reduce ticket prices and entry controls holding sway over new airline hopefuls. Airline deregulation had begun with initiatives by economist Alfred E. Kahn in the Nixon administration, carried through the Ford administration and finally, at the behest of Ted Kennedy, signed into law by President Jimmy Carter in 1978 as the Airline Deregulation Act.[citation needed]

Globally, state supported airlines are still relatively common, maintaining control over ticket prices and route entry, but many countries have since deregulated their own domestic airline markets. A similar but less laissez-faire approach has been taken by the European Union, Australia, United Kingdom, Scandinavia, Ireland and select South and Central American nations.[4]

In the United States

In the early days of interstate air travel, the prevalent thought at the time was that government regulation was necessary to protect and promote the fledgling industry. For example, the then dominant rail industry was forbidden from a financial interest in airlines to prevent them from smothering competition in the industry.[5] Congress created the Civil Aeronautics Authority, which became the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), and gave the CAB the power to regulate airline routes, control entry to and exit from the market, and mandate service rates, to investigate accidents, certify aircraft and pilots, to create rules for air traffic control (ATC) and to recommend new rules to prevent repetition of previous accidents.[6] Additional airline safety regulation came later with the passage of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958,[6] which created the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) [6] as a separate regulatory body.

Civil Aeronautics Board

In 1938 the U.S. government, through the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), regulated many areas of commercial aviation such as routes, fares and schedules. The CAB had three main functions: to award routes to airlines, to limit the entry of air carriers into new markets, and to regulate fares for passengers.[7]

Much of the established practices of commercial passenger travel within the US, went back even farther, to the policies of Walter Folger Brown, the US postmaster general from 1929 to 1933 in the administration of President Herbert Hoover. After passage of the Air Mail Act of 1930, also known as the McNary-Watres act, Brown had changed the mail payments system to encourage the manufacture of passenger aircraft instead of mail carrying aircraft.[8] His influence was crucial in awarding contracts so as to create four major domestic airlines: United, American, Eastern, and Transcontinental and Western Air (TWA). Contracts for each of three transcontinental air mail routes were awarded to United Aircraft and Transport Corporation (later United), Robertson Aircraft Corporation (later American), and Transcontinental Air Transport (later TWA).[9][10] The contract for the New York to Washington route was awarded to Eastern Air Transport,[8] which would later become Eastern Air Lines. By 1933, United, American, TWA, and Eastern accounted for about 94% of air mail revenue.[citation needed] Similarly, Brown had also helped give Pan American a monopoly on international routes. (See also the US Centennial of Flight Commission [11])

Typical regulatory thinking from the 1940s onward is evident in a Civil Aeronautics Board report. In the absence of particular circumstances presenting an affirmative reason for a new carrier, there appears to be no inherent desirability of increasing the present number of carriers merely for the purpose of numerically enlarging the industry.[12]

Airline Deregulation Act

The Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 removed many of the previously mentioned controls. Prior to deregulation, it was required that airlines first seek regulatory approval to serve any given route.[13] Thus incumbent airline operators could raise barriers to the challenge of new competition. This system was dismantled as a result of the Airline Deregulation Act. (See also the Centennial of Flight Commission[11]) It also dismantled the notion of a flag carrier.

Post-deregulation

In the wake of deregulation, airlines have adopted new strategies and consumers are experiencing a new market. Below are the marquee effects of deregulation.

Hub and spoke

Airlines quickly moved to a hub-and-spoke system, whereby an airline selected an airport, the hub, as the destination point for flights from a number of origination cities, the spokes. Because the size of the planes used varied according to the travel on that spoke, and since hubs allowed passenger travel to be consolidated in "transfer stations", capacity utilization increased. The hub-and-spoke model survives among the legacy carriers, but the low-cost carriers (LCCs), now 30 percent of the market, typically fly point to point. The network hubs model offers consumers more convenience for routes, but point-to-point routes have proven less costly for airlines to implement. Over time, the legacy carriers and the LCCs will likely use some combination of point to point and network hubs to capture both economies of scale and pricing advantages.[14]

Price

Base ticket prices have declined steadily since deregulation.[15] The inflation-adjusted 1982 constant dollar yield for airlines has fallen from 12.3 cents in 1978 to 7.9 cents in 1997.[16] and the inflation adjusted real price of flying fell 44.9% from 1978 to 2011.[17] Along with a rising US population[18] and the increasing demand of workforce mobility, these trends were some of the catalysts for dramatic expansion in passenger miles flown, increasing from 250 million passenger miles in 1978 to 750 million passenger miles in 2005.[19] As such, some think tanks and the US airline trade organization, Airlines for America,[20] argue that deregulation has provided benefits to the average air traveler.

Service quality

The quality of airline service can be measured in many different ways, including the number of aircraft departures, the total number of miles flown, seating comfort, punctuality of service, other programs and services, and various frills or amenities.[citation needed]

Over the past several years the public's view of airline service quality has shown a significant drop.[21] According to the 2008 American Customer Satisfaction Index, a University of Michigan study of 80,000 consumers' expectations and preferences, the major US airlines ranked last among all the industries surveyed. In 2009, the airlines have moved up to being one point ahead of Cable & Satellite TV and the newspaper industry (though results for all industries were not available at the time of this writing).[22]

In 2011 Congress finally responded to repeated calls for the United States government to pass an "Air Passenger Bill of Rights" to provide specific requirements about what must happen to air passengers in certain conditions.[23] The push for the bill stemmed from several high-profile passenger strandings over the last several years. On April 25, 2011, the Enhancing Airline Passenger Protections rule, 76 Fed. Reg. 32,110, was enacted.[24] Amongst other items, the rule includes raising the minimum "denied boarding compensation" to customers with valid tickets yet still not allowed to board the aircraft. The legislation further penalizes airlines up to $27,500 a passenger if left stranded aboard an aircraft, on a tarmac for more than three hours.[25] In 2010, the largest trade associations representing airline management interests before Capitol Hill, Airlines for America and the Regional Airline Association, opposed this legislation stating that they could self-regulate themselves and they already had begun implementing systems by which to mitigate any tarmac delays.[26][27] Later American Eagle, an RAA airline member, was the first airline to be fined under the new legislation. A total settlement including fines and compensation paid to passengers totaled $800,000 for tarmac delays incurred in Chicago in May 2011.[25]

Deregulation advocate Alfred Kahn noted a deterioration in the quality of airline service following deregulation, including the "turmoil" of massive restructuring of airline routes, price wars, conflicts with airline employee unions, airline bankruptcies, and industry consolidation.[28] He also noted unexpected congestion and delays "that have plagued air travelers in recent years".[28] However, he also argued that such congestion and delays was also a sign of deregulation success (because it indicated a large increase in passenger volume due to decreases in the price of airfares).[28] Kahn considered the turmoil, congestion, and delays to be unforeseen "surprises" from deregulation and continued to support deregulation in spite of these events.[28]

Competition among carriers

 
Competing carriers at Tokyo Narita Airport, Japan

A major goal of airline deregulation was to increase competition between airline carriers, leading to price decreases. As a result of deregulation, barriers to entry into the airlines industry for a potential new airline decreased significantly, resulting in many new airlines entering the market, thus increasing competition.[15]

Industry consolidation and reduction in competition between carriers

After airline deregulation, many airlines in the United States were purchased by other airlines and merged into fewer airlines "after thirty five years and hundreds of new startup airlines, hundreds of bankruptcies, liquidations, reorganizations, and mergers", wrote Richard Finger, equities trader and finance business analyst at Forbes.com.[29] This has resulted in just 4 major US airlines (United Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, and Southwest Airlines) controlling a near-monopoly (up to 90%) of both the domestic market and the gates at some regional airports in the United States.[29] For example, United Airlines (with its merger/purchase of Continental Airlines in 2012)[30] now controls over 90 percent of domestic travel in and out of Houston Intercontinental Airport; "many flights have been consolidated so travelers have fewer choices", resulting in increased fares.[dubious ] It is now under 80%.[31]

As such, the current situation in the airline industry benefits the airlines, by decreasing competition among airlines, increasing fares for airline passengers,[dubious ] decreasing airline employee pay and benefits (especially pensions), and creating an oligopoly of only four major airlines that was never intended (unintended consequences) by the framers of airline deregulation act.[29]

Effects on airline staff

A key indicator of the volatility of deregulation[2][3] from 1976 to 1986 in the US revolves around employee affairs. Airlines saw a 39% increase in employees (according to Alfred Kahn),[28] and saw continued yet less rapid growth throughout the 1990s.[15] Subsequently, between 2000 and 2008, 100,000 jobs were shed - approximately 20% - and formerly busy hub airports (such as Pittsburgh and St. Louis) reduced staffing due to a significantly decreased number of flights.[15]

Immediately following the September 11th attacks, the Air Transportation Safety and System Stabilization Act provided the US airlines with $15 billion in loans and an additional $5 billion in grants by the US government. Despite these loans and grants, nearly every major carrier fired 20% of its staff, with United and American both cutting 20,000 jobs.[32] It is difficult to determine the precise job losses due to the effects of deregulation, given such layoffs. Then-retired former CEO of American Airlines Robert Crandall stated, "I'm not sure 9/11 by itself had any particular profound impact [on the industry], but it exacerbated the problems they had before 9/11."[33]

Although regular pay-cuts had become commonplace in the years following deregulation, of the employees remaining after September 11, 2001, the average pay cut has been 18%,[2] with many of the highest earners seeing as much as 40% reductions. Further, virtually every regularly scheduled airline has shifted its pension obligations to its employees.[34]

According to a study by economist David Card, deregulation resulted in the shift of approximately 5,000 to 7,000 airline mechanic jobs from the major trunk airlines to smaller carriers between 1978 and 1984.[35] Because such smaller carriers typically pay less than the major airlines, the average hourly wage of airline mechanics decreased by up to 5 percent; however, this decrease is said to be relatively small.[36]

Open Skies

Beyond the domestic liberalization of the airlines in the US, Open Skies agreements are bilateral agreements between the US and other countries to open the aviation market to foreign access and remove barriers to competition. These agreements give airlines the right to operate air services from any point in the US to any point in the other country, as well as to and from third countries.[citation needed] The first major Open Skies agreements were entered into in 1979.

The US has Open Skies agreements with more than 60 countries, including 15 of the 28 EU nations. Open Skies agreements have been successful at removing many of the government-implemented barriers to competition and allowing airlines to have foreign partners,[citation needed] access to international routes to and from their home countries, and freedom from many traditional forms of economic regulation.[citation needed]

Criticisms

With long standing companies like Braniff, TWA, and Pan Am disappearing through bankruptcy since 1978, the years since 2000 have seen every remaining legacy carrier file for bankruptcy at least once. US Airways filed twice in the same number of years. During the same time period, Southwest Airlines continued to expand its route structure, buy new airplanes, and hire more employees, while remaining profitable.[37] JetBlue, a new airline that started up in 1999, "was one of only a few U.S. airlines that made a profit during the sharp downturn in airline travel following the September 11, 2001 attacks. For many years, analysts had predicted that JetBlue's growth rate would become unsustainable. Despite this, the airline continued to add planes and routes to the fleet at a brisk pace. JetBlue is one of the largest airlines in the Northeast United States."[38]

Various proposals have been made by labor unions, former management and industry analysts, including federal price controls and mandated routes served by major airlines[39] with the intent of increasing both prices and competition.[19][39]

In June 2008 former CEO of American Airlines, Robert Crandall stated,

The consequences of deregulation have been very adverse. Our airlines, once world leaders, are now laggards in every category, including fleet age, service quality and international reputation. Fewer and fewer flights are on time. Airport congestion has become a staple of late-night comedy shows. An even higher percentage of bags are lost or misplaced. Last-minute seats are harder and harder to find. Passenger complaints have skyrocketed. Airline service, by any standard, has become unacceptable.[40]

Crandall has also criticized deregulation for causing airlines to cut service to smaller airports, resulting in a "relatively unsatisfactory transportation network;" he argues that this "has accelerated the movement of people towards the big cities and has discouraged the creation of medium-sized cities."[41]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Thierer, A. D. 1998, 20th Anniversary of Airline Deregulation:Cause for Celebration, Not Re-Regulation, The Heritage Foundation, . Archived from the original on 2009-10-19. Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  2. ^ a b c Bamber; Gittell; Kochan; Nordanflycht (2011). Up in the Air: How Airlines Can Improve Performance by Engaging Their Employees. ILR Cornell University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0801447471.
  3. ^ a b Kaps, Robert W. (1997). Air Transport Labor Relations. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-80-93-1776-1.
  4. ^ Bamber; Gittell; Kochan; Nordanflycht (2011). Up in the Air: How Airlines Can Improve Performance by Engaging Their Employees. ILR Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801447471.
  5. ^ "What Prompted Airline Deregulation 20 Years Ago? What Were the Objectives of That Deregulation and How Were They Achieved?". Findlaw.
  6. ^ a b c Millbrooke, Anne (2006). Aviation History. Jeppesen. ISBN 0884872351.
  7. ^ "Air Transportation: Deregulation and Its Consequences". www.centennialofflight.net.
  8. ^ a b "The Air Mail Fiasco". Air Force Magazine. Retrieved 2021-09-25.
  9. ^ Baltazar, Lyndon. "Airmail Comes of Age" (PDF). FAA History. (PDF) from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  10. ^ "Spoils and Scandals | National Postal Museum". postalmuseum.si.edu. Retrieved 2021-09-25.
  11. ^ a b "Air Transportation: Deregulation and Its Consequences". Centennialofflight.net. Retrieved 2021-12-11.
  12. ^ 1941 CAB reported quoted on Page 32 of "Contrived Competition: Regulation and Deregulation in America" by Richard H. K. Vietor.
  13. ^ "A Law That Changed The Airline Industry Beyond Recognition (1978)". Aviation Week Network. 4 Jun 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  14. ^ Smith Jr F. L., Cox B., Airline Deregulation, The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics, Liberty Fund Inc., 2. Edition, 2007
  15. ^ a b c d Maynard, Micheline (17 April 2008). "Did Ending Regulation Help Fliers?". The New York Times.
  16. ^ "The Heritage Foundation Mission Statement". Retrieved 27 July 2013.
  17. ^ "Airline Deregulation". Econlib.
  18. ^ . Census.gov. Archived from the original on 2013-10-19. Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  19. ^ a b Bamber, G.J.; Gittell, J.H.; Kochan, T.A. & von Nordenflytch, A. (2009). "5". Up in the Air: How Airlines Can Improve Performance by Engaging their Employees. Cornell University Press, Ithaca.
  20. ^ docstoc preview[dead link]
  21. ^ Johnsson, Julie, Airline industry the worst in customer ratings, Chicago Tribune, May 20, 2008, [1]
  22. ^ American Customer Satisfaction Index, Scores by Industry, Sep 14, 2009
  23. ^ Martin, Hugo, Support is growing for a fliers' bill of rights, Sep 12, 2009, [2]
  24. ^ "Sweeping Customer Protection Regulations". Jones Day Publications. May 2011. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  25. ^ a b Cameron, Doug (Nov 15, 2011). "American Eagle Incurs First Fine". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 22 May 2012.
  26. ^ (PDF). RAA.org. Sep 23, 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2012.
  27. ^ Berg, David A. (PDF). Airlines for America. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  28. ^ a b c d e Kahn, Alfred E. "Surprises of Deregulation." The American Economic Review. 78 (2): 316–322. JSTOR 1818143
  29. ^ a b c Finger, Richard. "Why American Airlines Employees Loathe Management" April 29, 2013. Accessed at: "Why American Airlines Employees Loathe Management". Forbes.
  30. ^ Carey, Susan; Nicas, Jack (8 July 2015). "United Continental Is Still Shaky Five Years After Merger". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  31. ^ "Rules & Policies | Newsroom | Houston Airport System". Fly2houston.com. Retrieved 2021-12-11.
  32. ^ Thomas, Andrew R. (2011). Soft Landings: Airline Industry, Strategy, Service and Safety. Apress. pp. 32, 34. ISBN 978-1-4302-3677-1.
  33. ^ Thomas, Andrew R. (2011). Soft Landings: Airline Industry, Strategy, Service and Safety. Apress. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-4302-3677-1.
  34. ^ "Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger To Congress: My Pay Has Been Cut 40 Percent In Recent Years, Pension Terminated". Huffington Post. 2009-03-27. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  35. ^ Card, David. "The Impact of Deregulation on the Employment and Wages of Airline Mechanics." Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 39 (4): 527-538 (July 1986). http://davidcard.berkeley.edu/papers/dereg-emp-wage.pdf
  36. ^ Card, David. "The Impact of Deregulation on the Employment and Wages of Airline Mechanics." Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 39 (4): 527-538 (July 1986).
  37. ^ "Epidemic of Bankruptcy". Associated Press. Nov 29, 2011. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  38. ^ "jetBlue Files - airlinefiles". airlinefiles.com. Retrieved 2019-11-22.
  39. ^ a b Poole, R. W. Jr., Butler V., Airline Deregulation: The Unfinished Revolution, December 1998. [3]
  40. ^ Bill McGee, March 2008. [4], USA Today.
  41. ^ Schaal, Dennis (2018-07-24). "American Airlines Legend Bob Crandall on How Mergers Led to Increased Inequality". Skift. Retrieved 2018-07-31.

Source 1 needs updating to Table 1-37: U.S. Air Carrier Aircraft Departures, Enplaned Revenue Passengers, and Enplaned Revenue Tons | Bureau of Transportation Statistics. (n.d.). Retrieved December 11, 2015, from https://www.bts.gov/content/us-air-carrier-aircraft-departures-enplaned-revenue-passengers-and-enplaned-revenue-tons

References and further reading

  • Avent-Holt, Dustin. (2012) "The political dynamics of market organization: Cultural framing, neoliberalism, and the case of airline deregulation." Sociological Theory 30.4 (2012): 283–302.
  • Brown, John Howard. (2014) "Jimmy Carter, Alfred Kahn, and airline deregulation: Anatomy of a policy success." Independent Review 19.1 (2014): 85-99 online.
  • Button, Kenneth, ed. (2017) Airline deregulation: international experiences (Routledge, 2017).
  • Button, Kenneth. (2015) "A Book, the Application, and the Outcomes: How Right Was Alfred Kahn in the Economics of Regulation about the Effects of the Deregulation of the US Domestic Airline Market?." History of Political Economy 47.1 (2015): 1-39.
  • Goetz, Andrew R., and Timothy M. Vowles. (2009) "The good, the bad, and the ugly: 30 years of US airline deregulation." Journal of Transport Geography 17.4 (2009): 251–263. online
  • Goetz, A. R., Sutton, J. C., (1997), "The Geography of Deregulation in the U.S. Airline Industry," Annals of the Association of American Geographers 87#2 (Jun., 1997), pp. 238–262, [5]
  • Kahn, A. E. (1988), "Surprises of Airline Deregulation", American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings 78, no. 2: 316–22.
  • McDonnell, Gary. (2015) "What Caused Airline Deregulation: Economists or Economics?." Independent Review 19.3 (2015): 379-395 online.
  • Morrison, Steven, and Clifford Winston. (2010) The economic effects of airline deregulation (Brookings Institution Press, 2010).
  • Poole, R. W. Jr., Butler V., (1999), "Airline Deregulation: The Unfinished Revolution," Regulation, vol. 22, no. 1, Spring 1999, pp. 8.,
  • Rose, Nancy L. (2012) "After airline deregulation and Alfred E. Kahn." American Economic Review 102.3 (2012): 376-80 online.
  • Sinha, Dipendra. (2018) Deregulation and liberalisation of the airline industry: Asia, Europe, North America and Oceania (Routledge, 2019).
  • Thierer, A. D. (1998), 20th Anniversary of Airline Deregulation: Cause for Celebration, Not Re-Regulation, (The Heritage Foundation)
  • Williams, George. (2017) The airline industry and the impact of deregulation (Routledge, 2017).

External links

airline, deregulation, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, october, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, process, removing, . The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Airline deregulation is the process of removing government imposed entry and price restrictions on airlines affecting in particular the carriers permitted to serve specific routes In the United States the term usually applies to the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 A new form of regulation has been developed to some extent to deal with problems such as the allocation of the limited number of slots available at airports Contents 1 Introduction 2 In the United States 2 1 Civil Aeronautics Board 2 2 Airline Deregulation Act 3 Post deregulation 3 1 Hub and spoke 3 2 Price 3 3 Service quality 3 4 Competition among carriers 3 5 Industry consolidation and reduction in competition between carriers 3 6 Effects on airline staff 3 7 Open Skies 4 Criticisms 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References and further reading 8 External linksIntroduction EditAs jets were integrated into the market in the late 1950s and early 1960s the industry experienced dramatic growth By the mid 1960s airlines were carrying roughly 100 million passengers and by the mid 1970s over 200 million Americans had traveled by air This steady increase in air travel began placing serious strains on the ability of federal regulators to cope with the increasingly complex nature of air travel citation needed The onset of high inflation low economic growth falling productivity rising labor costs and higher fuel costs proved problematic to the airlines 1 Although it is generally recognized that the purpose behind government regulation is to create a stable industry 2 3 in the decades leading up to deregulation many airline market analysts expressed concerns with the structure of the United States passenger air transport system Concerns included high barriers to entry for fledgling airlines slow government response to existing airlines entering to compete in city pairings and monopolistic practices by legacy airlines artificially inflating passenger ticket prices citation needed In order to address these growing concerns airline deregulation began in the US in 1978 It was and still is a part of a sweeping experiment to ultimately reduce ticket prices and entry controls holding sway over new airline hopefuls Airline deregulation had begun with initiatives by economist Alfred E Kahn in the Nixon administration carried through the Ford administration and finally at the behest of Ted Kennedy signed into law by President Jimmy Carter in 1978 as the Airline Deregulation Act citation needed Globally state supported airlines are still relatively common maintaining control over ticket prices and route entry but many countries have since deregulated their own domestic airline markets A similar but less laissez faire approach has been taken by the European Union Australia United Kingdom Scandinavia Ireland and select South and Central American nations 4 In the United States EditIn the early days of interstate air travel the prevalent thought at the time was that government regulation was necessary to protect and promote the fledgling industry For example the then dominant rail industry was forbidden from a financial interest in airlines to prevent them from smothering competition in the industry 5 Congress created the Civil Aeronautics Authority which became the Civil Aeronautics Board CAB and gave the CAB the power to regulate airline routes control entry to and exit from the market and mandate service rates to investigate accidents certify aircraft and pilots to create rules for air traffic control ATC and to recommend new rules to prevent repetition of previous accidents 6 Additional airline safety regulation came later with the passage of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 6 which created the Federal Aviation Administration FAA 6 as a separate regulatory body Civil Aeronautics Board Edit Main article Civil Aeronautics Board In 1938 the U S government through the Civil Aeronautics Board CAB regulated many areas of commercial aviation such as routes fares and schedules The CAB had three main functions to award routes to airlines to limit the entry of air carriers into new markets and to regulate fares for passengers 7 Much of the established practices of commercial passenger travel within the US went back even farther to the policies of Walter Folger Brown the US postmaster general from 1929 to 1933 in the administration of President Herbert Hoover After passage of the Air Mail Act of 1930 also known as the McNary Watres act Brown had changed the mail payments system to encourage the manufacture of passenger aircraft instead of mail carrying aircraft 8 His influence was crucial in awarding contracts so as to create four major domestic airlines United American Eastern and Transcontinental and Western Air TWA Contracts for each of three transcontinental air mail routes were awarded to United Aircraft and Transport Corporation later United Robertson Aircraft Corporation later American and Transcontinental Air Transport later TWA 9 10 The contract for the New York to Washington route was awarded to Eastern Air Transport 8 which would later become Eastern Air Lines By 1933 United American TWA and Eastern accounted for about 94 of air mail revenue citation needed Similarly Brown had also helped give Pan American a monopoly on international routes See also the US Centennial of Flight Commission 11 Typical regulatory thinking from the 1940s onward is evident in a Civil Aeronautics Board report In the absence of particular circumstances presenting an affirmative reason for a new carrier there appears to be no inherent desirability of increasing the present number of carriers merely for the purpose of numerically enlarging the industry 12 Airline Deregulation Act Edit Main article Airline Deregulation Act The Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 removed many of the previously mentioned controls Prior to deregulation it was required that airlines first seek regulatory approval to serve any given route 13 Thus incumbent airline operators could raise barriers to the challenge of new competition This system was dismantled as a result of the Airline Deregulation Act See also the Centennial of Flight Commission 11 It also dismantled the notion of a flag carrier Post deregulation EditIn the wake of deregulation airlines have adopted new strategies and consumers are experiencing a new market Below are the marquee effects of deregulation Hub and spoke Edit Airlines quickly moved to a hub and spoke system whereby an airline selected an airport the hub as the destination point for flights from a number of origination cities the spokes Because the size of the planes used varied according to the travel on that spoke and since hubs allowed passenger travel to be consolidated in transfer stations capacity utilization increased The hub and spoke model survives among the legacy carriers but the low cost carriers LCCs now 30 percent of the market typically fly point to point The network hubs model offers consumers more convenience for routes but point to point routes have proven less costly for airlines to implement Over time the legacy carriers and the LCCs will likely use some combination of point to point and network hubs to capture both economies of scale and pricing advantages 14 Price Edit Base ticket prices have declined steadily since deregulation 15 The inflation adjusted 1982 constant dollar yield for airlines has fallen from 12 3 cents in 1978 to 7 9 cents in 1997 16 and the inflation adjusted real price of flying fell 44 9 from 1978 to 2011 17 Along with a rising US population 18 and the increasing demand of workforce mobility these trends were some of the catalysts for dramatic expansion in passenger miles flown increasing from 250 million passenger miles in 1978 to 750 million passenger miles in 2005 19 As such some think tanks and the US airline trade organization Airlines for America 20 argue that deregulation has provided benefits to the average air traveler Service quality Edit The quality of airline service can be measured in many different ways including the number of aircraft departures the total number of miles flown seating comfort punctuality of service other programs and services and various frills or amenities citation needed Over the past several years the public s view of airline service quality has shown a significant drop 21 According to the 2008 American Customer Satisfaction Index a University of Michigan study of 80 000 consumers expectations and preferences the major US airlines ranked last among all the industries surveyed In 2009 the airlines have moved up to being one point ahead of Cable amp Satellite TV and the newspaper industry though results for all industries were not available at the time of this writing 22 In 2011 Congress finally responded to repeated calls for the United States government to pass an Air Passenger Bill of Rights to provide specific requirements about what must happen to air passengers in certain conditions 23 The push for the bill stemmed from several high profile passenger strandings over the last several years On April 25 2011 the Enhancing Airline Passenger Protections rule 76 Fed Reg 32 110 was enacted 24 Amongst other items the rule includes raising the minimum denied boarding compensation to customers with valid tickets yet still not allowed to board the aircraft The legislation further penalizes airlines up to 27 500 a passenger if left stranded aboard an aircraft on a tarmac for more than three hours 25 In 2010 the largest trade associations representing airline management interests before Capitol Hill Airlines for America and the Regional Airline Association opposed this legislation stating that they could self regulate themselves and they already had begun implementing systems by which to mitigate any tarmac delays 26 27 Later American Eagle an RAA airline member was the first airline to be fined under the new legislation A total settlement including fines and compensation paid to passengers totaled 800 000 for tarmac delays incurred in Chicago in May 2011 25 Deregulation advocate Alfred Kahn noted a deterioration in the quality of airline service following deregulation including the turmoil of massive restructuring of airline routes price wars conflicts with airline employee unions airline bankruptcies and industry consolidation 28 He also noted unexpected congestion and delays that have plagued air travelers in recent years 28 However he also argued that such congestion and delays was also a sign of deregulation success because it indicated a large increase in passenger volume due to decreases in the price of airfares 28 Kahn considered the turmoil congestion and delays to be unforeseen surprises from deregulation and continued to support deregulation in spite of these events 28 Competition among carriers Edit Competing carriers at Tokyo Narita Airport Japan A major goal of airline deregulation was to increase competition between airline carriers leading to price decreases As a result of deregulation barriers to entry into the airlines industry for a potential new airline decreased significantly resulting in many new airlines entering the market thus increasing competition 15 Industry consolidation and reduction in competition between carriers Edit After airline deregulation many airlines in the United States were purchased by other airlines and merged into fewer airlines after thirty five years and hundreds of new startup airlines hundreds of bankruptcies liquidations reorganizations and mergers wrote Richard Finger equities trader and finance business analyst at Forbes com 29 This has resulted in just 4 major US airlines United Airlines American Airlines Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines controlling a near monopoly up to 90 of both the domestic market and the gates at some regional airports in the United States 29 For example United Airlines with its merger purchase of Continental Airlines in 2012 30 now controls over 90 percent of domestic travel in and out of Houston Intercontinental Airport many flights have been consolidated so travelers have fewer choices resulting in increased fares dubious discuss It is now under 80 31 As such the current situation in the airline industry benefits the airlines by decreasing competition among airlines increasing fares for airline passengers dubious discuss decreasing airline employee pay and benefits especially pensions and creating an oligopoly of only four major airlines that was never intended unintended consequences by the framers of airline deregulation act 29 Effects on airline staff Edit A key indicator of the volatility of deregulation 2 3 from 1976 to 1986 in the US revolves around employee affairs Airlines saw a 39 increase in employees according to Alfred Kahn 28 and saw continued yet less rapid growth throughout the 1990s 15 Subsequently between 2000 and 2008 100 000 jobs were shed approximately 20 and formerly busy hub airports such as Pittsburgh and St Louis reduced staffing due to a significantly decreased number of flights 15 Immediately following the September 11th attacks the Air Transportation Safety and System Stabilization Act provided the US airlines with 15 billion in loans and an additional 5 billion in grants by the US government Despite these loans and grants nearly every major carrier fired 20 of its staff with United and American both cutting 20 000 jobs 32 It is difficult to determine the precise job losses due to the effects of deregulation given such layoffs Then retired former CEO of American Airlines Robert Crandall stated I m not sure 9 11 by itself had any particular profound impact on the industry but it exacerbated the problems they had before 9 11 33 Although regular pay cuts had become commonplace in the years following deregulation of the employees remaining after September 11 2001 the average pay cut has been 18 2 with many of the highest earners seeing as much as 40 reductions Further virtually every regularly scheduled airline has shifted its pension obligations to its employees 34 According to a study by economist David Card deregulation resulted in the shift of approximately 5 000 to 7 000 airline mechanic jobs from the major trunk airlines to smaller carriers between 1978 and 1984 35 Because such smaller carriers typically pay less than the major airlines the average hourly wage of airline mechanics decreased by up to 5 percent however this decrease is said to be relatively small 36 Open Skies Edit Main article Open skies Beyond the domestic liberalization of the airlines in the US Open Skies agreements are bilateral agreements between the US and other countries to open the aviation market to foreign access and remove barriers to competition These agreements give airlines the right to operate air services from any point in the US to any point in the other country as well as to and from third countries citation needed The first major Open Skies agreements were entered into in 1979 The US has Open Skies agreements with more than 60 countries including 15 of the 28 EU nations Open Skies agreements have been successful at removing many of the government implemented barriers to competition and allowing airlines to have foreign partners citation needed access to international routes to and from their home countries and freedom from many traditional forms of economic regulation citation needed Criticisms EditWith long standing companies like Braniff TWA and Pan Am disappearing through bankruptcy since 1978 the years since 2000 have seen every remaining legacy carrier file for bankruptcy at least once US Airways filed twice in the same number of years During the same time period Southwest Airlines continued to expand its route structure buy new airplanes and hire more employees while remaining profitable 37 JetBlue a new airline that started up in 1999 was one of only a few U S airlines that made a profit during the sharp downturn in airline travel following the September 11 2001 attacks For many years analysts had predicted that JetBlue s growth rate would become unsustainable Despite this the airline continued to add planes and routes to the fleet at a brisk pace JetBlue is one of the largest airlines in the Northeast United States 38 Various proposals have been made by labor unions former management and industry analysts including federal price controls and mandated routes served by major airlines 39 with the intent of increasing both prices and competition 19 39 In June 2008 former CEO of American Airlines Robert Crandall stated The consequences of deregulation have been very adverse Our airlines once world leaders are now laggards in every category including fleet age service quality and international reputation Fewer and fewer flights are on time Airport congestion has become a staple of late night comedy shows An even higher percentage of bags are lost or misplaced Last minute seats are harder and harder to find Passenger complaints have skyrocketed Airline service by any standard has become unacceptable 40 Crandall has also criticized deregulation for causing airlines to cut service to smaller airports resulting in a relatively unsatisfactory transportation network he argues that this has accelerated the movement of people towards the big cities and has discouraged the creation of medium sized cities 41 See also EditWright Amendment a US Federal law to protect one Texas airport Dallas Fort Worth International Airport from competition only months after the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 was signed into law Notes Edit Thierer A D 1998 20th Anniversary of Airline Deregulation Cause for Celebration Not Re Regulation The Heritage Foundation 20th Anniversary of Airline Deregulation Cause for Celebration Not Re regulation Archived from the original on 2009 10 19 Retrieved 2013 10 26 a b c Bamber Gittell Kochan Nordanflycht 2011 Up in the Air How Airlines Can Improve Performance by Engaging Their Employees ILR Cornell University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0801447471 a b Kaps Robert W 1997 Air Transport Labor Relations Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 0 80 93 1776 1 Bamber Gittell Kochan Nordanflycht 2011 Up in the Air How Airlines Can Improve Performance by Engaging Their Employees ILR Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801447471 What Prompted Airline Deregulation 20 Years Ago What Were the Objectives of That Deregulation and How Were They Achieved Findlaw a b c Millbrooke Anne 2006 Aviation History Jeppesen ISBN 0884872351 Air Transportation Deregulation and Its Consequences www centennialofflight net a b The Air Mail Fiasco Air Force Magazine Retrieved 2021 09 25 Baltazar Lyndon Airmail Comes of Age PDF FAA History Archived PDF from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 25 September 2021 Spoils and Scandals National Postal Museum postalmuseum si edu Retrieved 2021 09 25 a b Air Transportation Deregulation and Its Consequences Centennialofflight net Retrieved 2021 12 11 1941 CAB reported quoted on Page 32 of Contrived Competition Regulation and Deregulation in America by Richard H K Vietor A Law That Changed The Airline Industry Beyond Recognition 1978 Aviation Week Network 4 Jun 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2019 Smith Jr F L Cox B Airline Deregulation The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics Liberty Fund Inc 2 Edition 2007 a b c d Maynard Micheline 17 April 2008 Did Ending Regulation Help Fliers The New York Times The Heritage Foundation Mission Statement Retrieved 27 July 2013 Airline Deregulation Econlib US Census Bureau Census gov Archived from the original on 2013 10 19 Retrieved 2013 10 26 a b Bamber G J Gittell J H Kochan T A amp von Nordenflytch A 2009 5 Up in the Air How Airlines Can Improve Performance by Engaging their Employees Cornell University Press Ithaca docstoc preview dead link Johnsson Julie Airline industry the worst in customer ratings Chicago Tribune May 20 2008 1 American Customer Satisfaction Index Scores by Industry Sep 14 2009 Martin Hugo Support is growing for a fliers bill of rights Sep 12 2009 2 Sweeping Customer Protection Regulations Jones Day Publications May 2011 Retrieved 23 May 2012 a b Cameron Doug Nov 15 2011 American Eagle Incurs First Fine The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 22 May 2012 RAA Objects to EAPR PDF RAA org Sep 23 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2012 Berg David A A4A Fights New Passenger Protection Rules PDF Airlines for America Archived from the original PDF on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 23 May 2012 a b c d e Kahn Alfred E Surprises of Deregulation The American Economic Review 78 2 316 322 JSTOR 1818143 a b c Finger Richard Why American Airlines Employees Loathe Management April 29 2013 Accessed at Why American Airlines Employees Loathe Management Forbes Carey Susan Nicas Jack 8 July 2015 United Continental Is Still Shaky Five Years After Merger The Wall Street Journal Dow Jones amp Company Inc Retrieved 22 August 2018 Rules amp Policies Newsroom Houston Airport System Fly2houston com Retrieved 2021 12 11 Thomas Andrew R 2011 Soft Landings Airline Industry Strategy Service and Safety Apress pp 32 34 ISBN 978 1 4302 3677 1 Thomas Andrew R 2011 Soft Landings Airline Industry Strategy Service and Safety Apress p 33 ISBN 978 1 4302 3677 1 Chesley Sully Sullenberger To Congress My Pay Has Been Cut 40 Percent In Recent Years Pension Terminated Huffington Post 2009 03 27 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Card David The Impact of Deregulation on the Employment and Wages of Airline Mechanics Industrial and Labor Relations Review 39 4 527 538 July 1986 http davidcard berkeley edu papers dereg emp wage pdf Card David The Impact of Deregulation on the Employment and Wages of Airline Mechanics Industrial and Labor Relations Review 39 4 527 538 July 1986 Epidemic of Bankruptcy Associated Press Nov 29 2011 Retrieved 23 May 2012 jetBlue Files airlinefiles airlinefiles com Retrieved 2019 11 22 a b Poole R W Jr Butler V Airline Deregulation The Unfinished Revolution December 1998 3 Bill McGee March 2008 4 USA Today Schaal Dennis 2018 07 24 American Airlines Legend Bob Crandall on How Mergers Led to Increased Inequality Skift Retrieved 2018 07 31 Source 1 needs updating to Table 1 37 U S Air Carrier Aircraft Departures Enplaned Revenue Passengers and Enplaned Revenue Tons Bureau of Transportation Statistics n d Retrieved December 11 2015 from https www bts gov content us air carrier aircraft departures enplaned revenue passengers and enplaned revenue tonsReferences and further reading EditAvent Holt Dustin 2012 The political dynamics of market organization Cultural framing neoliberalism and the case of airline deregulation Sociological Theory 30 4 2012 283 302 Brown John Howard 2014 Jimmy Carter Alfred Kahn and airline deregulation Anatomy of a policy success Independent Review 19 1 2014 85 99 online Button Kenneth ed 2017 Airline deregulation international experiences Routledge 2017 Button Kenneth 2015 A Book the Application and the Outcomes How Right Was Alfred Kahn in the Economics of Regulation about the Effects of the Deregulation of the US Domestic Airline Market History of Political Economy 47 1 2015 1 39 Goetz Andrew R and Timothy M Vowles 2009 The good the bad and the ugly 30 years of US airline deregulation Journal of Transport Geography 17 4 2009 251 263 online Goetz A R Sutton J C 1997 The Geography of Deregulation in the U S Airline Industry Annals of the Association of American Geographers 87 2 Jun 1997 pp 238 262 5 Kahn A E 1988 Surprises of Airline Deregulation American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 78 no 2 316 22 McDonnell Gary 2015 What Caused Airline Deregulation Economists or Economics Independent Review 19 3 2015 379 395 online Morrison Steven and Clifford Winston 2010 The economic effects of airline deregulation Brookings Institution Press 2010 Poole R W Jr Butler V 1999 Airline Deregulation The Unfinished Revolution Regulation vol 22 no 1 Spring 1999 pp 8 6 Rose Nancy L 2012 After airline deregulation and Alfred E Kahn American Economic Review 102 3 2012 376 80 online Sinha Dipendra 2018 Deregulation and liberalisation of the airline industry Asia Europe North America and Oceania Routledge 2019 Thierer A D 1998 20th Anniversary of Airline Deregulation Cause for Celebration Not Re Regulation The Heritage Foundation 7 Williams George 2017 The airline industry and the impact of deregulation Routledge 2017 External links Edithttp www dot gov Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airline deregulation amp oldid 1157096340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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