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LIBERALISATION : Past Experience and Future Steps

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Title: LIBERALISATION : Past Experience and Future Steps


1
LIBERALISATION Past Experience and Future
Steps
Montreal 22-23 March 2003

Professor Rigas Doganis Rigas Doganis
Associates Visiting Professor, Cranfield
University
Aviation in Transition Challenges
Opportunities of Liberalisation
2
SUPPLY CONDITIONS IN TRADITIONAL BILATERALISM
Exhibit 1
3
The two phases of post-1978 liberalisation
Exhibit 2
  • OPEN MARKETS PHASE
  • 1978-1991
  • TOWARDS OPEN SKIES
  • After 1991

4
Exhibit 3
1 Open Markets Phase, 1978-1991
  • New liberal US bilaterals (after 1977)
  • Liberalised intra-European bilaterals (from
    1984)
  • Two European liberalisation packages (1987 and
    1990)
  • In Asia national regulations relaxed ANA,
    Asiana, Eva Air fly internationally

5
TRADITIONAL AND POST-1978 OPEN MARKET
BILATERALS COMPARED
Exhibit 4
While US bilaterals gave US airlines rights from
any point in USA, foreign airlines restricted to
a handful of US points
6
TRADITIONAL AND POST-1978 OPEN MARKET
BILATERALS COMPARED
Exhibit 4 (contd)
Source Rigas Doganis, Flying Off Course the
Economics of International Airlines, Third
Edition, Routledge 2002
7
UK SINGAPORE BILATERAL July 1989 (example of
Open Market ASA)
Exhibit 5
  • Multiple designation
  • Double disapproval on fares
  • Capacity controlled to
  • two daily to London (for each country)
  • three/week to Manchester (for each country)
  • i.e. 17 per week by 1993-94
  • then to 21 week as traffic increases
  • Singapore full 5th freedom to London but not
    beyond
  • UK may hub in Singapore
  • up to 20 x 747 weekly
  • or 50 smaller aircraft
  • Increase frequencies Singapore Hong Kong

8
2 Towards Open Skies, 1991-2003
Exhibit 6
  • ?US Open Skies Bilaterals (after 1991)
  • European Third Package (Jan 1993)
  • ? Regional Initiatives
  • e.g. Yamoussoukro II (1999)
  • APEC (2000)
  • ECOSUR

9
NEW US OPEN SKIES BILATERALS AFTER 1991(almost
60 signed by end 2002)
  • Exhibit 7
  • Free pricing for passengers and cargo
  • No capacity or routing restrictions
  • Access to any point in each country
  • Unlimited fifth Freedom rights
  • Open code-sharing opportunities with third
    countries having similar rights
  • But only 19 involve competitive markets
  • e.g. Netherlands-USA (1992) or Singapore-US
    (1997) but not with UK or Japan

10
EUROPEAN UNIONS THIRD AVIATION PACKAGEfrom 1st
January 1993 completed April 1997
Exhibit 8
  • Free pricing regime for tariffs
  • only ex-post double disapproval for fully
    flexible fare
  • Open market access
  • i.e. all EU airlines have rights to fly between
    any two EU points
  • Criteria for operators licences harmonized
  • owners can be from any EU state, I.e.
    nationality rule abandoned (e.g. Virgin Express
    in Belgium is UK owned)
  • Changes apply equally to scheduled and charter

11
US Open Market and post-1991 Open Skies Air
Services Agreements
Exhibit 9
Source Rigas Doganis The Airline Business in
the 21st Century, Routledge 2001
12
What Open Skies does not do
Exhibit 10
  • Traffic rights
  • No 7th freedom
  • No domestic cabotage
  • Nationality/Ownership
  • Still substantial ownership and effective
    control
  • Some states do not allow over 25 of foreign
    ownership (e.g. US, Canada)
  • Anti-competitive behaviour
  • No provision for dealing with this uniformly
  • Protectionist measures continue
  • State subsidies, Chapter II (US)
  • Government traffic limited to national carrier
    (e.g. USA)
  • US does not permit US carriers to wet lease
    from non-US

13
Liberalisation has been spreading
Exhibit 11
  • BUT
  • Most states have mix of air services agreements
  • Traditional (most widespread)
  • Open Market
  • Open Skies (least common)
  • New Regulations spreading and becoming
    extra-territorial
  • Competition rules
  • Merger controls (In EU and US)
  • Passenger rights (e.g. denied boarding
    compensation)
  • Safety oversight (ICAO,KAO, FAA, EU)
  • Environmental rules
  • AND HAS NOT IMPROVED PROFITABILITY

14
Liberalisation has not improved profitability
Exhibit 12
ICAO Worlds Airlines Profit as a of Total
Revenue
15
To Improve International Airline
ProfitabilityNeed to
Exhibit 13
  • Facilitate access to world-wide capital markets
  • Reduce debt finance use more equity capital
  • Limit over-capacity by
  • Encouraging cross-border consolidation
  • Allowing airlines to fail
  • Control of capacity in thin markets
  • First step is to relax nationality rule

16
DRAWBACKS OF NATIONALITY RULE
Exhibit 14
  • Denies airlines full access to capital markets
  • yet most airlines grossly undercapitalised
  • Limits cross-border mergers/airline consolidation
  • Prevents lower costs, integrated networks
  • Alliances are poor substitute and not
    sustainable
  • ? Distorts airline markets
  • Limits market access of more dynamic airlines
  • Encourages state subsidies/bailouts
  • Discourages designation by smaller states of
    foreign-owned carriers
  • Encourages smaller flag carriers to overextend
    network,
  • i.e. self-destruct (the Sabena syndrome)
  • Result
  • Airline industry uniquely national not global
    unlike all other sectors

17
Previous action through ICAO
Exhibit 15
  • ICAO Assembly (resolution A24 12) has accepted
    Community of Interest concept.
  • 1994 Air Transport Conference recommended
  • designate any airline substantially
    owned and effectively controlled by
    nationals of any States parties to
    an agreement
  • 1997 Air Transport Regulation Panel (ATRP/9-4)
    recommended
  • principle place of business and permanent
    residence plus strong link with designating
    state

18
NATIONALITY/OWNERSHIP RULE BY-PASSED
Exhibit 16
  • Airlines with multi-national ownership (e.g. SAS,
    Gulf Airways, Air Afrique)
  • ?Community of Interest concept urges states to
    accept designation by one developing state of an
    airline owned by another within same economic
    grouping (e.g. BWIA)
  • ?Charter carriers Monarch (Swiss-owned) and
    Britannia (Canadian then German owned)
  • ?Principal place of business concept (used by
    Hong Kong in its ASAs)
  • Abandoned for intra-EU services (3rd Package
    1993)
  • i.e. Nationality rule not sacrosanct

19
Governments may choose to ignore ownership issue
Exhibit 17
  • Examples include
  • Aerolineas Argentinas (91 Spanish owned in
    1991)
  • Sabena (49 owned but effectively controlled by
    Swissair)
  • Sri Lankan (40 owned but effectively controlled
    by Emirates)
  • Maldives has given its 3rd/4th freedom
    rights to Sri Lankan
  • i.e. Nationality articles are permissive

20
Nationality rule could be progressively abandoned
Exhibit 18
  • ? Replaced with principle place of business
    or by any Community carrier (in Europe)
  • ? Action through
  • European Union European Court Decision
  • - Enlargement (17
    to 27 states)
  • ICAO 2003 Conference
  • Bilaterally or regionally
  • e.g. APEC or Yamoussoukro
  • or even TCAA

21
OUTSTANDING REGULATORY ISSUES
Exhibit 19
  • Relaxing ownership rules
  • Allowing domestic cabotage in major markets
  • Harmonising competition rules as alliances expand
    and/or airlines merge/consolidate

22
Exhibit 20
Relaxing nationality rule will help but will not
ensure long-term profitability if Real
yields continue to decline Real costs do not
decline fast enough Load factors too low Need
to Tackle inherent over-capacity Rethink the
full service business model
23
Exhibit 21
For more discussion of the airline industrys
problems and prospects see The Airline Business
in the 21st Century by Rigas Doganis Publisher
Routledge Available from Amazon.com or
amazon.co.uk
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