Again, the primary problem with the industry right now is 25% too much capacity. It's a simple supply and demand problem . . . which has driven a paradigm shift among the biz and leisure traveller. The excess of seats has driven the price down to unsustainable levels, and now that is low price is considered the "real" price, and the prices of a few years ago, gouges.
It doesn't have much to do with labor costs or service, but it does have to do with "who are our customers and why are they gone?"
And the answer to that is the collapse of the economy with a 9/11 knock-out punch.
Even if ALL the carriers were LCCs years ago, we'd still have the same problems now, because the demand a few years ago forced a huge expansion in capacity. After 9/11 that demand imploded and now the airlines were stuck with huge amounts of overcapacity.
Like I said, even if we were all SW and JBs, we ALL be losing money right now, because there's simply too many seats and not enough customer . . . and that means low low ticket prices.
It doesn't have much to do with labor costs or service, but it does have to do with "who are our customers and why are they gone?"
And the answer to that is the collapse of the economy with a 9/11 knock-out punch.
Even if ALL the carriers were LCCs years ago, we'd still have the same problems now, because the demand a few years ago forced a huge expansion in capacity. After 9/11 that demand imploded and now the airlines were stuck with huge amounts of overcapacity.
Like I said, even if we were all SW and JBs, we ALL be losing money right now, because there's simply too many seats and not enough customer . . . and that means low low ticket prices.