#11
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I, for one, didn't support the widespread idea of the Fed Govt propping up Ansett when it was going under in 2001, and I'm glad they didn't sink public money into a rotting corpse. Nick, can you give a few examples of the 'lacklustre history' of the KRudd government when it comes to protecting inefficient businesses? If the Australian marketplace is under foreign attack, then perhaps certain sectors need to look at ways of doing business smarter, rather than relying on government protection. The Australian taxpayer deserves for their money to be spent wisely. |
#12
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Sorry mods if we're headed off on a tangent here, but I think it's important for Nick to qualify his statements...
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#13
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Is there a need to further de-regulate the market? I believe the answer is no.
More interestingly perhaps Air New Zealand could try operating domestic sectors - afterall Australia and New Zealand are under the Single Aviation Market agreement? And what about those airlines from city-states like Singapore and Hong Kong? What could our airlines possibly ever gain in return for giving them access to the domestic Australian market? Look at the major carriers in the US at the moment. All are struggling due to over-competition - who really is benefiting out of all these? Not airline employees, not airlines, not shareholders, and to some extent not the travelling public. Yes, after de-regulation airfares sharply declined, but there is a point when airfares can't go lower because airlines can't sustain profit on routes anymore, which forces them to pull out of the route etc. (This is exactly what would happen if foreign airlines were allowed to fly domestic). Then have a look at the domestic Chinese market - a few years ago the Chinese government did something unthinkable - consolidating the smaller carriers under the 'big 3' - Air China, China Eastern, China Southern. This mightve been considered 'stupid' back then but this decision actually makes a heck of a lot of sense in the current climate. Controlled growth is better than uncontrolled growth that results in undesired outcomes. And what about the long-held notion that the Australian airspace could only sustain 2 majors? At the moment you've got Virgin Blue and the Qantas Group (incl Jetstar and QFlink). Virgin Blue isn't in a particularly good shape at the moment (just look at its abysmal share price as an indicator). I would expect Qantas's profits to fall as well. Now is simply not the time to let foreign airlines fly domestic. |
#14
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I don't think a wholesale "fly anywhere and as much as you want" approach is palateable, but a limited opening such as allowing Domestic pax on those triangulated routes (a la UA MEL-SYD and the old TG/NG/MS/SA/MH style connections) isn't going to be much of an issue given it's probably one or two flights a day.
Some routes are crying out for extra capacity/competition - I don't think anyone would decry an International carrier offering domestic seats/fares on a ADL-DRW leg en-route to Asia or CNS-DRW enroute to Asia as examples. Good for the locals and helps fill empty seats for the carrier, which in turn could spur more direct services opening up outside of the golden triangle. |
#15
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I the mean time then, the Australian customers can pay through the nose through lack of competition? |
#16
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Compare fares (in real terms) uder the two-airline policy to those we see today.
I hardly think Australian customers are "paying through the nose" for airfares. |
#17
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I personally am happy with the way it is at the moment - fares are not ridiculously high, service is pretty good, and so is the quality of service. Paying $220 for perth to melbourne seems perfectly reasonable to me.
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#18
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D Chan, Adam P and Rhys have all made exceptionally good points.
We don't need foreign airlines here. Things are definately fine the way they are. Airfares here are cheap and as mentioned the service is fine. If it aint broke don't fix it. |
#19
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Why is that Nick? Because they all more or less agreed with what you were trying to say?
Hardly exceptional... |
#20
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So, you're not going to qualify your previous comments then?
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