PanJet
Well-Known Member
However if things really got bad I could see the Govt stepping in somewhat to keep things afloat...
Haven't they already tried that post 9/11?
However if things really got bad I could see the Govt stepping in somewhat to keep things afloat...
Something IS being done--businesses that don't know how to run their business go out of business! That's the way that capitalism works--do a good job, or you're gone.
As it should be....
Something IS being done--businesses that don't know how to run their business go out of business! That's the way that capitalism works--do a good job, or you're gone.
As it should be....
I give it a big thumbs down.
This bumpy road we are on now will smooth out eventually.

Something IS being done--businesses that don't know how to run their business go out of business! That's the way that capitalism works--do a good job, or you're gone.
As it should be....
...Prices are only marginally lower...
Doesn't work in this business. The hit to the economy would be astronomical if a company like United went tango uniform.
The government is not going to allow legacy carriers to cease to exist. They're too big nowadays and too essential to the economy. If it comes right down to it, the government will just approve massive multi-billion-dollar bailouts. That just exacerbates the problem rather than fixing it, but without regulation, that's really the only choice they have.
ss. The hit to the economy would be astronomical if a company like United went tango uniform. The government is not going to allow legacy carriers to cease to exist. They're too big nowadays and too essential to the economy. If it comes right down to it, the government will just approve massive multi-billion-dollar bailouts. That just exacerbates the problem rather than fixing it, but without regulation, that's really the only choice they have.
I always assumed that prices have been substantially lowered since deregulation, thus the lack of ability to make a profit. In a later post you say "... airlines started massive fare wars...". In a 60 second google search I didn't turn up any usable data to support either your initial claim that prices are only "marginally lower", or my assumption that they are much cheaper, especially when taking inflation into account. Do you have anything to back up your statement that I could look at?
I don't think it would be as big an impact as you seem to think. Other airlines will pick up the slack and the total economy will see little overall change. The UA employees would take a massive hit, while other employees will see a benefit. Ying / Yang...balances out in the end.
The governement might step in, but it will be for political reasons not economic ones.
The same thing was said about Pan Am, Eastern and Braniff. Look where they are.
PCL please tell me how exactly you plan on this regulation going? Status quo for all carriers? Who gets regional routes?
That would all be determined by a new CAB. It would likely be current routes for all existing carriers with new routes requiring approval from the CAB. New carriers would find it very difficult to enter the market, as it should be.
I don't see any way in which that would work. Regional feed is too "big" now for that issue to be handled in any sort of "reasonable" manner.
And why are you so opposed to "new" carriers. You work for one, don't you?![]()
What does the size of regional carriers have to do with anything? Those regional routes would continue to be served under a regulated system. The demand is still there.
Not new anymore,
but it was shortly after the fall of EAL. And how did that affect the stability of DAL, or the new carrier for that matter? Not good. Again, a massive fare war broke out on all of the routes that ValuJet served out of Atlanta. Still goes on to this day. AirTran opens a route to a new city at a fare slightly below Delta's, and Delta adjusts their fare down to $10 under ours. We respond by cutting the fare $10 under theirs. And so on, and so on, until neither of us are making much money on the rock-bottom fare that results. We've actually eliminated routes because Delta undercut us to the point where we couldn't make any money, and we knew Delta was taking a massive loss, but they were willing to take the loss to capture market share. It's insane, but that's how it goes. We pull out of those routes if they aren't at least slightly profitable, but the legacies need to retain market share to feed their international business. What happens if SWA snags some gates here in ATL? More fare wars. It only gets worse for everybody. There's no end in sight. The system is broken.
But does that mean that IAH-SHV will belong to XJT or CAL? Will ORD-DSM belong to UAL or SKW? Can XJT or SKW do that same route for another carrier instead?
So if re-regulation meant you would've been stuck at Gulfstream for 8 more years, would you be for it?
There's a reason pilots aren't management and methinks shortsightedness is it.
Why don't we worry about crewpass instead of re-regulating an industry that's working fine as it is.
Proof?Most managements opposed deregulation.
Is that a joke? This industry is far from "fine as it is." We're in a tailspin.
Proof?
Proof?
New carriers would find it very difficult to enter the market, as it should be.
Haven't they already tried that post 9/11?