Distinction in travel journalism
Is independent travel journalism important to you?
Click here to keep it independent

22 May, 2015

Second Etihad-funded study dissects U.S. airlines’ open-sky subsidies gibberish

Abu Dhabi, (Etihad Media release) – 22 May 2015 — Despite claims by the Big Three U.S. airlines, the market for air travel from the U.S. to the Indian Sub-Continent has expanded significantly from 2009 to 2014 with U.S. airlines and their European partners actually flying 223,000 more passengers during that period.  This is only one of a series of U.S. airline claims challenged and debunked in a new report released today by Etihad Airways.

Quotes from the report

Click here to download the report

(+) The Compass Lexecon Report’s claims that “U.S. carriers have suffered [traffic losses] as a result of Gulf carriers’ subsidized U.S. expansion.” This is a critical assumption, as it predicates the entirety of the claims in the Compass Lexecon Report. That is, the implication is that the results of their analyses—which look solely at changes in traffic volumes between various points—are caused entirely by the alleged subsidies. This “causal link” lacks any supporting evidence. For example, the Compass Lexecon Report fails to explain how the alleged presence of subsidies has caused U.S. carriers to “suffer traffic losses.” Rather, it simply points to the alleged “proliferation of subsidized Gulf carrier capacity to the United States” without explaining why the proliferation in and of itself would lead to U.S. carriers losing business.

(+) The Compass Lexecon Report fails to point to any economic or legal doctrine which indicates that an incumbent is entitled to the customers it serves and the only way for new entrants to compete “fairly” is to sell their products to customers who would not otherwise purchase from the incumbent. The nature of economic competition, as well as U.S. antitrust law, does not guarantee any such entitlement to maintaining a firm’s business forever; rather firms may try to not only grow the size of the markets in which they operate, but also try to attract their competitors’ customers through lower pricing and higher quality products.

(+) (The Compass Lexecon Report) fails to paint a complete picture of competition on routes served by Etihad and other Gulf carriers, as it only looks at a selected sampling of capacity and traffic flow measures, while ignoring all other information. In this report, we have conducted analyses of Etihad’s and U.S. carriers’ load factors, as well as an initial analysis of published fares on key U.S.-ISC (Indian Sub-continent) routes. We have also found that in many instances, while competition may have reduced U.S. carriers’ shares of total traffic, the same U.S. carriers still served more passengers because the overall volume of travel expanded. However, the Compass Lexecon Report—by design—ignores all of these contradictory data and facts.

 

The research, undertaken by the leading U.S.-based consultancy Edgeworth Economics, found that on routes where Etihad Airways competes with the three largest U.S. carriers and their global alliance partners, these airlines actually carried more passengers, despite having lost market share on certain routes.

Specific examples include:

(+) Passenger numbers for the Big Three and their global alliances actually increased by 18 per cent, or an additional 223,000 passengers, despite losing 4.4 percentage points in market share for economy passengers between the U.S. and the Indian Sub-Continent (I.S.C.) between 2009 and 2014.

(+) Similarly, for premium passengers between the U.S. and the I.S.C. for the same period, the actual passengers carried by the carriers and their alliance partners increased by 27 per cent, or over 33,000 although their market share decreased by 12.5 percentage points.

The report also analyses Etihad Airways’ pricing on the routes on which the airline competes with the three U.S. carriers and their global alliance partners. It found that Etihad Airways’ prices are competitive, therefore contradicting their claims that Etihad Airways is anti-competitive.

The Edgeworth Report, commissioned by Etihad Airways, also disproves their claims that Gulf carriers have put “excessive capacity” into the market. The Edgeworth Report found that these simplistic claims do not stand up to economic scrutiny, as the markets in which Etihad Airways operates have much higher average rates of economic growth than the global average, which in turn, drove a higher demand for air services. The Edgeworth Report also identified other considerations such as pent-up demand due to underservicing by U.S. carriers.

Finally, in addition to assessing the claims in the Open Skies Report, Edgeworth also analysed claims made in a recent economic report published by Compass Lexecon on behalf of these carriers.

Edgeworth found that the Compass Lexecon Report is “fundamentally flawed” and “ignores key evidence” as it contains two unsupported assumptions:  (i) the report treats as an accepted fact that Etihad Airways and other Gulf carriers have received subsidies, a point which has merely been asserted by the U.S. carriers but is the subject of the ongoing Government docket process; and (ii) that the Big Three essentially “own” traffic on existing routes and Gulf carriers are only entitled to compete for traffic if they can prove they have “stimulated” this traffic. The Compass Lexecon report also establishes no “causal link” between any alleged subsidies and any claimed harm to the U.S. airlines

Certain statements in the Compass Lexecon report are also directly contradictory to previous statements and testimony that Compass Lexecon has presented on behalf of these same three U.S. carriers.

The Compass Lexecon Report fails to establish any actual harm caused by the Gulf carriers to U.S. carriers, whereas the Edgeworth Report demonstrates that competition has led to overall market growth and increased consumer choice.

Commenting on the Edgeworth Economics findings, Etihad Airways’ Chief Strategy and Planning Officer, Kevin Knight, said: “The claims made by the three U. S. carriers that Etihad Airways and other Gulf carriers are damaging their business and taking ’their’ passengers, are not only false, but also arrogant. They do not ‘own’ these passengers, nor do they do have a right to them. At Etihad Airways, we believe we must earn the business of our guests by offering the best value and product for their money, along with the most convenient service.”

Mr. Knight also noted that in 2014 Etihad Airways fed 182,000 passengers onto U.S. carriers, including American Airlines. Delta Air Lines and United Airlines, with the number forecast to grow by 65 per cent to approximately 300,000 passengers in 2015.

“We work with 48 airlines around the globe who take advantage of our strategic position in the Gulf to connect their passengers to the emerging markets of the Middle East, I.S.C., and Asia.  We also feed our passengers onto the networks of our partner airlines, including the U.S. carriers, thus increasing the reach of our respective networks and increasing choice to consumers.”

“The U.S. Open Skies policy has been hugely successful for American carriers and has also allowed airlines like Etihad Airways to connect passengers to the U.S. who otherwise would not be able to travel. It has forced the Big Three carriers and their global alliance partners, which between them control over 50 per cent of global passenger traffic, to be more competitive. It is therefore disturbing that these same carriers are now seeking to roll back Open Skies and the huge benefits it brings for competition and consumers.”

Etihad Airways also confirmed that it will file its full response with the U.S. Government by the end of May.

The report can be downloaded at: http://we.tl/z4ZAQu2KaY

For more information about Etihad Airways’ campaign to keep the skies open, please visit:  www.KeepTheSkiesOpen.com