Braniff signed up for DFW. SWA did not. When the time came to go to DFW, Braniff was therefore obligated, because it signed up. SWA was not obligated. At that point, Braniff wished it hadn't signed up for DFW. But it had, so Braniff had to move.
What's so complicated about that?
As for SWA not supporting various types of flying, only one type of aircraft let me ask you a simple question: so what? What you're saying is that Southwest is somehow reducing/eliminating the subsidization of one type of flying by another. The implication is somehow that Southwest makes the development of new aircraft types less likely and makes flights into small cities more expensive.
Even if that's true, so what? Even if true (and you haven't proven a thing) what's happening is a natural development of a free market. This country, allegedly, believes in the free market. Why should people who fly on 737s subsidize the development of 787s, A380s or whatnot? Why should people who want to fly from Baltimore to Orlando subsidize those who want to fly from New York to Elmira?
And the good people of Alaska, or wherever, can take care of themselves. Their senator, Don Young, has two bridges, for a total cost of over $400mm, in the latest transportation bill. The bridges will serve a total of less than 100 people. I wish I was making this up. I'm sure those people would far rather just get an equal share of the cash.
What's so complicated about that?
As for SWA not supporting various types of flying, only one type of aircraft let me ask you a simple question: so what? What you're saying is that Southwest is somehow reducing/eliminating the subsidization of one type of flying by another. The implication is somehow that Southwest makes the development of new aircraft types less likely and makes flights into small cities more expensive.
Even if that's true, so what? Even if true (and you haven't proven a thing) what's happening is a natural development of a free market. This country, allegedly, believes in the free market. Why should people who fly on 737s subsidize the development of 787s, A380s or whatnot? Why should people who want to fly from Baltimore to Orlando subsidize those who want to fly from New York to Elmira?
And the good people of Alaska, or wherever, can take care of themselves. Their senator, Don Young, has two bridges, for a total cost of over $400mm, in the latest transportation bill. The bridges will serve a total of less than 100 people. I wish I was making this up. I'm sure those people would far rather just get an equal share of the cash.
Flopgut said:Here is a great website: www.braniffpages.com
Braniff CEO Harding Lawrence thought de-regulation would fail. He believed that Braniff needed to agressively grow when de-regulation started because it would quickly fail and that any new route launched during that time would be allowed to remain part of the airlines' system. Braniff launched [gambled] over 100 new routes around the world when de-regulation started. Braniff failed, but Harding Lawrence may still be right, just off by 20+ years.
Here is where I'm coming from:
Continuing with Braniff: Braniff didn't want to go to DFW. They considered Love their home no less than SWA does now. Moving to DFW disturded their operations and was expensive. In doing so they relented market share to SWA, but not without a fight. Braniff matched each route SWA flew out of Love in a very expensive fight. SWA did not run Braniff out of Love, far from it. Braniff was forced to cease Love Field operations by a court order! So in a new "de-regulated" environment, Braniff was very much "regulated" out of Love Field. SWA was very much "regulated" into a durable advantage in a strategic market. De-regulation did not account for the SWA special interest. Free market? My a$$!
I wonder if Alfred Kahn's research accounted for this possibility:
The SWA "phenomenon" makes money, but does not throw off a lot of money. They only fly one model of airplane, and if they are the future then I guess we won't need to engineer/design any new airplanes. They aren't going to support any new airports or terminals that cost them any money, so forget about that. And they aren't going to do any complicated flying that perserves our air transportation system. For instance: If SWA is able to erode Alaska's route system/profit base to the point that they can no longer do the important flying in the Alaskan wilderness that service will be lost forever. SWA is not going to do it. Project that example onto the whole country and you can see the long term effect of de-regulation.
Is this business de-regulated? Not truly. DOJ has to intervene in anything majors do.
Is what we call de-regulation going to advance our standard of living, build up the middle class in earnest? Perhaps, it seems so at this moment. Long term? Maybe not. Look over the website at the top of the page, and then try to find anything similiar about SWA. Try to use that sort of reasoning and see where you think the US air transportation system is headed. In 20 years we might end up with the most primitive and limited transportation system in the world.