by Peepers » Tue 20 Sep 2005, 14:28:39
Yes, too many airlines are run by buffoons these days. Yes, the majors have inflated cost structures that prevent them from competing with the low-fare carriers. But there's one factor people often miss out on, though it's usually because we look for one transportation mode to solve its problems without the help of a different mode....
The airlines' switch to hub-and-spoke networks post-deregulation is a big factor. Airlines like Southwest don't do hub and spokes, instead focusing on a mainline route structure (similar to how airlines did things before dereg). Either way, it's the short-hop flights that are helping to kill the airline industry, especially in a high fuel-cost scenario. Few flights are more fuel-inefficient than those on routes of 300 miles or less. Yet, in the U.S., these flights are absolutely necessary to feed traffic into the hub-and-spoke system. They were loss leaders for the airlines before fuel prices began going up two years ago. Today, they are bleeding the industry.
It's not luck or irony that in Europe airlines are doing considerably better than their U.S. counterparts. Indeed, as an industry, European airlines are breaking even. Admittedly, there are numerous factors for this. But I contend an often-overlooked reason is that European airlines don't have to operate as many short-haul flights as are required in the U.S. The reason?
Europe has extensive high-speed rail networks. Not only do train services stop at stations in the basements of major airports, they offer through ticketing and checked baggage with a number of airlines. There, trains are considered connecting flights. While airplanes are least efficient in markets of 300 mile or less, that's where fast trains are most efficient.
There is no reason why airlines should be flying planes between Cleveland-Columbus or Cincinnati, Pittsburgh-Altoona or Harrisburg, Chicago-Detroit, Seattle-Portland (Ore.), or Los Angeles-Las Vegas (the busiest travel market in the U.S.). Well, actually there is a reason -- our federal government has no policy for building high-speed rail, and thus, no funding.
Aviation and high-speed rail should be working together for achieving such a policy, so they can cooperate as part of an interconnected, successful, transportation system that no longer bleeds taxpayer funding. Instead, both systems are fighting for their very lives. What did Thomas Jefferson say about hanging together or we'll surely hang apart?