#1
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Money grounds Qantas flights, analyst says
From news.com.au
Gee the boys and girls in the QF Public Relations department must be wondering if their career path choice was wise! Certainly gaining some good experience.
__________________
Things ain't what they used to be! |
#2
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I think you will find that CASA had a lot to do with it as well...
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#3
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Not so sure CASA did have anything to do with it as most international flights flew (surely CASA would have stopped them if safety was a big issue, similar to what happened in Europe) and i know REX was going to fly out of Sydney but the icing conditions on Tuesday afternoon/evening halted that idea. They couldn't go below or above the ash cloud.
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#4
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load of ***** - and that is being nice.
planes sitting on the ground not flying actually cost more to and airline than flying them with revenue passengers! Consider the lost yield all airlines that cancelled hundreds of flights must have experienced! its aviation economics 101. |
#5
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Aviation economics 101. In which country, Radi? Last time I looked, we don't do "101" in Australia.
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#6
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So Hugh are you suggesting that Qantas would be better off just shutting up shop? If not then what Radi is saying is true. It would have cost Qantas more to be grounded than it would have to keep flying.
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#7
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Quote:
Certain costs such as depreciation etc get incurred whether the flight operates or not. cheers Dave |
#8
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Your labour costs also get charged if a flight is cancelled and you need to consider the flow on effects of canceling a flight as this too may have a fiscal implication.
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#9
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Hi Ash
Labour is thus a sunk cost - and can't be used as an argument to fly - you incur it whether you do or don't. I accept that there are other implications arising from flow-on effects and I'm sure that QF along with other major carriers model this. Bottom line is though if you're not making a marginal contribution to your sunk costs, you have to very carefully assess whether you go ahead. I am not questioning QF's decision to go or not go in this circumstance, more replying to the earlier post regarding yield. cheers Dave |
#10
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Dave I disagree to an extent.
If lets say it costs $10,000 in fixed (sunk) costs (including labour fee's etc) to not fly clearly with $0 in income for that flight and it cost $20,000 to fly with an income of $25,000. How can it be cheaper to stay on the ground? Even flying at a loss with say an income of $15,000 is still $5000 cheaper than staying on the ground. Bottom line is so long as the income exceeds the costs inccoured by actually flying it is cheaper to fly than stay on the ground. |
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