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3 Introduction To Airline Management

This document discusses supply and demand in the airline industry. It defines supply and demand and explains that airline supply is cyclical while demand depends on economic factors and can be affected by events like recession, terrorism or health concerns. It also discusses how airlines struggle to cover their fully allocated costs due to high fixed costs and how overcapacity can drive prices down below cost levels. The commoditization of air travel makes it difficult for airlines to differentiate their products or significantly increase prices.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views

3 Introduction To Airline Management

This document discusses supply and demand in the airline industry. It defines supply and demand and explains that airline supply is cyclical while demand depends on economic factors and can be affected by events like recession, terrorism or health concerns. It also discusses how airlines struggle to cover their fully allocated costs due to high fixed costs and how overcapacity can drive prices down below cost levels. The commoditization of air travel makes it difficult for airlines to differentiate their products or significantly increase prices.

Uploaded by

Rania
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to Airline Operation

Faculty: Shaza Hashar


Supply and Demand for Air Transportation
Lecture # 03
What is Supply & Demand
Supply is the quantity of a commodity that producers
wish to sell at various prices.
-or-
Supply is the amount of a product businesses are
prepared to sell at different prices.

Demand is the quantity that consumers wish to buy at


different prices.
-or-
Demand is the amount of a product customers are
prepared to buy at different prices.
SUPPLY
Supply is highly cyclical, and inventory cannot be
warehoused.
Fixed costs are high, and aircraft remain aloft (up/fly)
even when operations fail to cover fully allocated costs.
 Hubbing geometrically increases city-pair product
offerings.
 Airlines create overlapping hub networks.
New aircraft must be ordered years ahead of delivery,
aircraft are ordered in good times, and delivered in
bad;
SUPPLY (contd.)
Investment is, too often, irrational.
Governments provide export.
Reducing capacity increases unit costs and decreases
product offerings.
Aircraft are not accordians, whose inventory of seats
can be reduced if demand falls.
DEMAND
Demand is highly cycle, depending on time of day, day of week,
and season.
Demand can be adversely affected with broader changes in the
economy.
Recession can erode disposable income.
GDP, and consumer confidence, which can, in turn, chill demand
for air travel.
In mature markets, air travel growth slows.
Globalization has led to a decline in domestic growth, as
production has moved off-shore.
Teleconferencing and other telecommunications technological
advances have eroded market share for air travel.
DEMAND (contd.)
The inability to cover costs has led carriers to cut costs
by reducing service, thereby reducing product
differentiation.
The commoditization of air travel has left airlines with
little opportunities for product differentiation other
than price.
Service has deteriorated industry-wide.
DEMAND (contd.)
• Air travel is a creedence good (a type of good with qualities
that cannot be observed by the consumer after purchase)
• Air travel is an intermediate good. (its a product used to
produce a final good or finished product)
• Air travel is, for many travelers, a fungible
(replaceable) commodity, particularly for short flights.
Demand can be chilled by recession, war, terrorism, or
health concerns (e.g., SARS/ corona virus).
DEMAND (contd.)
Price elasticites of demand are segmented along leisure
and business traveler lines.
Business travelers tend to be less-price sensitive than
leisure travelers.
Business travel is paid for with pre-tax dollars, and usually
results in tangible benefits, such as increased sales.
Leisure travel is paid for in post-tax dollars, results in
intangible benefits, and can be postponed if times are bad.
The market also is segmented according to distance, with
surface modes of transport competing for short-distance
trips;
Passenger Market
Segmentation

VFR
Business
Visiting Friends Leisure Travelers
Travelers
& Relatives

Large
Emergency Visit The Wealthy
Corporation

Small The not so


Leisure Visit
Corporation wealthy
Demand for Air Freight Transport
For cargo, air freight caters to high value, time-
sensitive shipments, because the cost of moving
freight by air is high, and many goods can be routed
via another mode of transport.
If it is of high-value, the goods can absorb the high
cost of air freight in its purchase price.
If it is time-sensitive (such as perishable fish or
flowers), it often must move by air or not at all.
The relationship between COST and PRICE
COSTS
Airlines are capital intensive.
Airlines are labor intensive.
Airlines are safety intensive, and therefore highly
regulated.
airlines have difficulty covering their Fully Allocated
Costs?
Airlines have difficulty covering their Fully
Allocated Costs.
Fixed Costs + Variable Costs = Fully Allocated Costs
Once aircraft are purchased, flight crews trained and
departures scheduled, costs are disproportionately
Fixed.
The marginal costs of adding an additional passenger
to a scheduled flight are nil.
The seat is a perishable commodity, and cannot be
warehoused and sold another day.
Joint costs are difficult to ascribe to individual
passengers crossing a network hub.
Cost (contd.)
Larger aircraft have lower Cost per Available Seat Miles
than small aircraft.
However, smaller aircraft have lower block-hour and
trip costs.
Aircraft enjoy a cost-taper over distance.
Network Carriers Have Higher Costs than Point-to-
Point Carriers
Cost (contd.)
Aircraft are expensive machines that only produce
Available Seat Miles only when they are aloft.
Hubbing and maintaining a frequent flight schedule
drives costs up by:
• Requiring relatively smaller aircraft;
• Creating congestion and delay during the hub
rotation, and idle ground facilities between hub
banks; • Resulting in lower equipment and facilities
utilization and higher fuel consumption.
Cost (contd.)
Fuel costs are volatile.
Carriers can hedge fuel to reduce volatility, but
hedging is gambling, expensive gambling.
A one cent increase in fuel costs US airlines an extra
$180 million annually.
Cost (contd.)
Aircraft are expensive, though they can be leased.
Airports and air navigation service providers are
natural monopolies that, absent regulation, can charge
whatever the market will bear.
Inclement weather can delay or ground aircraft.
Organized labor has the ability to threat higher wages
and lower productivity by striking or sabotaging
service.
Governments tax airlines unmercifully.
PRICE
The commoditization and perishability of seats drives
prices down.
A carrier with unsold seats has two options:
1. Meet the competitor’s price, and lose money; or
2. Keep its price firm, and lose more money.

Variable costs are relatively low; too often, carriers


charge a price which covers variable costs and makes
some contribution to fixed overhead, but fails to
achieve fully allocated costs.
Price (contd.)
Revenue arrives before product delivery.
Any sharply upward increase in costs cannot be
recaptured.
Passengers are resistant to sharp price increases.
Unlike air freight, passengers do not have to travel to
market, and can refrain from travel if prices jump
sharply.
Internet travel distributors provide instant price
transparency.
Price (contd.)
In the long run, a carrier must cover its Fully Allocated
Costs, or face bankruptcy.
In the long run, the airline industry must cover its cost
of capital, or it will be unable to meet the needs of the
traveling public.

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