Despite the recent fall in oil prices, high air fares may stay in place for some time to come, say airline industry professionals and experts.
The gradual return of demand for
travel last year following the lifting of Covid-19-related travel restrictions,
had already given the signal for higher fares.
But this year, just as the airlines
are expecting to see passenger numbers almost back to pre-crisis levels, prices
have really taken off.
In France in April, the average cost
of an air ticket was 32.6 percent higher than four years earlier, according to
the French Civil Aviation Authority.
That increase was as much as 51
percent for flights to the Asia-Pacific region.
In the United States, the air ticket
price index published by the St Louis Federal Reserve showed an 11-percent
increase in air ticket prices between April 2019 and April 2023.
This is despite the fact that oil
prices have eased since peaking in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in
early 2022.
The International Air Transport
Association (IATA) estimates that they will fall to an average of $98.5 a
barrel this year, compared with $135.6 last year.
Representing between 25 percent and
30 percent of airline costs, fuel normally has a significant effect on ticket
prices.
However “labour costs and other costs
associated with the supply chain… seem to be higher or rising,” Marie Owens
Thomsen, IATA’s chief economist said earlier this week in Istanbul.
“Airlines will have to find a way to
cover those costs or they will start making losses again,” at a time when they
are barely back in the black and have to pay off the colossal debts incurred
due to Covid-19, she added at the general meeting of her association, which
brings together 300 airlines from around the world.
‘Too Few Seats’
For Vik Krishnan, a specialist in the
airline sector at strategy consultancy McKinsey, the main issue is now “less
about oil prices and more about the fact that there are too few seats chasing
too many people who want to be in them”.
Despite order books that are
sometimes full right up to the end of the decade, aircraft manufacturers are
struggling to meet their delivery targets because of shortages of parts or
materials from their suppliers.
There is also the thorny issue of
labour costs.
“Many airlines had to recut their
deals with their flight and cabin crews… but also all of the supply, the ground
handlers, the maintenance shops, they all had to pay considerably higher wages
coming out of Covid,” said Geoffrey Weston, from the consultancy firm Bain
& Company.
“There aren’t many factors that are
going to bring ticket prices down,” echoed Pascal Fabre, aviation sector
specialist at AlixPartners.
And given that the airline industry
will have to invest hundreds, if not thousands, of billions of dollars in new
aircraft and renewable fuels if it hopes to meet its 2050 decarbonisation
target, IATA’s Owens Thomsen sees no respite for consumers any time soon.
“Costs are likely to increase until
such a point when all of these solutions have become commercially viable and
produced at scale.
“When we reach that lucky moment, we
can start thinking that these costs can decline again. I cannot pinpoint
necessarily when that’s going to happen but I’m tempted to say 2040”.
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