After The Recent US Airline Mergers, Did Domestic Airfares Increase?

Authors

  • Samuel D. Barrows Toulouse Business School

Abstract

The dynamics of the US domestic airfares are studied between 2002 and 2016.  During this time frame, there was significant airline industry consolidations resulting in additional market concentration in the top four airlines and in the industry as a whole. The potential airfare increase resulting from this higher concentration is evaluated on both real and inflation adjusted bases through two cases.  An analysis of load factors and passenger miles and their link with the airfare increases are also evaluated through two additional cases. A breakdown of all origin hubs in the US network is included which shows a vastly different airfare increase picture in the top twenty major hubs as compared to the smaller origins.  Having healthy competition usually results in lower fares and this analysis confirms that dynamic.  There are discussions on industry concentration, industry profitability, pricing power, and other items which can impact airfares.Keywords: Airline industry mergers, airfares increase, market power concentrationJEL Classifications: L93, G34, R41

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Author Biography

Samuel D. Barrows, Toulouse Business School

Mr. Barrows has over thirty years of experience in the energy industry including nineteen years with Texaco.  He worked for fifteen years in the U.S then for over fifteen years internationally including in the Former Soviet Union and the European Union. He is currently a Doctorate of Business Administration Candidate at the Toulouse Business School.

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Published

2018-01-25

How to Cite

Barrows, S. D. (2018). After The Recent US Airline Mergers, Did Domestic Airfares Increase?. International Review of Management and Marketing, 8(1), 1–8. Retrieved from https://mail.econjournals.com/index.php/irmm/article/view/5739

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