Re: SFGate: Is United a subsidized dinosaur?

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This entire "old dinosaurs must die" approach towards the UAL, AMR, COA etc.
actually is a result of United States being a non social country. All the
"profitable" airlines, the new comers do not have retirement benefits to
pay. In a "social" country like many western European countries and Canada,
the retirement funds of working class are taken care of by the government.

The UALs, AMRs, USs of the 21st century is crushing under health care and
retirement payments that they have to make to their workers and retirees.
AirTran, AmericaWest, JetBlue doesn't have to pay these huge figures because
they are underpaying their employees with not significant benefits to speak
of. (Ask Doug Parker about your retirement funds of their employees.. They
have none)

This is another line of attack on American middle class where the hard
working people are being denied their benefits by the corporations, and the
government is busy "freeing" other people in expense of the American
taxpayer..

BAHA
Fan of working hard and getting your money's worth..

-----Original Message-----
From: The Airline List [mailto:AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bill
Hough
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 6:11 AM
To: AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: SFGate: Is United a subsidized dinosaur?

=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/chronicle/archive/2004/06=
/04/EDGPU6VOEE1.DTL
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Friday, June 4, 2004 (SF Chronicle)
Is United a subsidized dinosaur?
George F. Will, Washington Post Writers Group


   Phoenix -- DOUGLAS PARKER seems normal. But he runs an airline, America
West, and is cheerful, so what does he not understand? Preternaturally
optimistic, he thinks government policy will become more sensible, other
events will cooperate and the airline industry, which has been in the red
since flight began at Kitty Hawk, will make money.
   But not soon. Parker is optimistic, but not delusional.
   The industry lost $15 billion in the last two years and probably will lo=
se
$5 billion in 2004. Jet fuel, now at a 13-year high, is more than 40 cents
more than the historic norm. Every penny increase costs the industry $180
million.
   Yet antitrust worries caused the government to disapprove a merger of
United and US Airways. How do you get a dangerous monopoly in such an
industry? How would the public suffer from the merger of two of the
nation's 13 major airlines -- those with at least $1 billion in annual
revenues -- when both of them have 50 percent higher costs than Parker's
airline?
   Just 21 years old, America West is the only airline founded after
deregulation that has made it to the status of a major carrier. Under the
old regulatory regime, fare competition was minimal and labor costs were
essentially the same industrywide. Those costs were passed on to
consumers, who had few choices -- and no Internet to bring the choices to
their fingertips. America West has market-based labor costs.
   The Internet creates real market-driven fares. It allows airline seats to
be treated as what they are, a perishable inventory: When a flight takes
off, its empty seats are lost. The Internet makes possible the sale of
some seats at declining prices as flight time approaches.
   America West, based in this booming city, is thriving -- more or less;
relative to most other carriers -- because most of its passengers' trips
either originate or terminate in Phoenix or the only other American city
booming as much, Las Vegas. America West, which depends less than other
carriers on business travelers, is more insulated from business cycles.
With just 150 planes and annual revenues of $2.5 billion (American
Airlines, the largest carrier, has 730 planes and revenues of $17.4
billion), America West is the eighth largest.
   It has just one gate at Chicago's O'Hare airport. United, which is based
in Chicago, has many gates and huge financial problems, but is not selling
any gates. There should be continuous auctions of gates. However,
airports, to ensure their revenue streams, like to lease gates for 20
years.
   The industry could benefit from a reduction of 20 percent of capacity,
which is United's share of the industry. If this were not an election
year, and if many of United's employees were not constituents of House
Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., and if the government's response to Sept.
11 had not included establishment of the subsidy-dispensing Air
Transportation Stabilization Board, United might be endangered.
   Insecurity permeates the industry. American has cut annual costs by $4
billion -- some employees' pay is down almost 25 percent and its fleet has
been reduced from almost 900 planes before Sept. 11 to 730 -- but it still
has $25 billion of debt to service, its pension plans are $2.7 billion
underfunded and its first quarter loss was $166 million.
   Delta -- first quarter loss: $387 million -- had an $85-million pilots'
pay raise come due last month and now experiences ruinous success: As
passenger volume reaches pre-Sept. 11 levels, it must rehire 1,060 pilots
furloughed after Sept. 11. This will increase annual labor costs by about
$115 million -- not counting benefits.
   This is, however, a sensational time for air travelers, thanks to the lo=
w-
cost carriers that have sprung up in emulation of the original of that
breed, Southwest, which has 393 737s and almost 400 more on order. Last
May was the first month in history when a discount airline, Southwest,
carried more passengers than any other airline. Why do these low-cost
airlines now carry 25 percent of air travelers, heading toward 40 percent
next year? Consider:
   US Airways, the seventh-largest carrier, spends 10 cents to fly a seat a
mile, not counting fuel, while Southwest and America West spend roughly 6
cents. Philadelphia, the nation's fifth-largest city, is US Airways'
biggest hub. But now Southwest has entered that market, so US Airways'
unrestricted round-trip fare to Providence has fallen from $938 to $177.
   Parker says, reasonably, that there are "far too many" airlines. He will
be pleased by the inevitable coming casualties -- assuming, of course,
that America West is not among them. But that is among the industry's
multiplying and unsustainable uncertainties.
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2004 SF Chronicle

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