You're looking at a single example and drawing huge conclusions from it. Ridiculous. The data is out there, corrected for inflation, if you want to go look for it. Fares have not come down that much. The consumer has been screwed.
OK... someone stole your FI login, because this is contrary to several conversations you and I have had.
The consumer hasn't been screwed; they've been given a free pass not to have to pay for inflation the last 30 years.
The ticket price has remained fairly constant for 30 years, maybe even dropped just a little, but that's only the FACE VALUE OF THE TICKET, not the adjusted actual price in today's dollars.
That's pretty much the same argument as saying we're better-compensated NOW than pilots were 30 years ago. Sure, the actual salary may look higher, but it spends a HELL of a lot LESS than it did 30 years ago (when a month's salary for a widebody Captain could buy a nice NEW car).
I agree that we need to be re-regulated in some form or fashion, but you're smart enough to know better than to make the argument based on ticket prices being close to the same.
Personally, I just want a requirement for airlines to have to price a ticket AT LEAST what it costs to produce that seat on that SPECIFIC leg.
NO MORE dropping the price on a ticket from East Bumfu*k, MT to MSP below the cost to operate the segment, just to jack it up on the MSP-NRT leg. It costs you $425 per seat per leg to fly the CRJ-200 on that leg, you charge AT LEAST $425. Period.
Watch how fast the unprofitable dregs get dropped and how quickly the price of flying goes up.
ANY fix to this industry is going to be painful. You either fix the cost to produce the good or you raise the price to cover its production. Simple Business 101. You raise the price high enough, and people can't afford to travel. Travel falls off on particular routes, they get downsized to smaller aircraft or frequency gets eliminated.
Reduced frequency means less pilots required = layoffs until normal attrition through retirements take place.
There's no other way to fix it, except for the government to artificially keep airline employees employed during the transition period and the government pays the tab. Our deficit is so bad that getting THAT passed would be very unlikely.
Like everything else in aviation, you tweak one part of the argument, it has an unintended consequence somewhere else. It's not as black-and-white as it looks on here.