UP4014
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2008
- Posts
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Dangerous, slippery slope
What capping the number of flights a foreign govt owned airline can fly here?
I don’t really think so in the real world.
Dangerous, slippery slope
Well you should be very unhappy with this decision.
I ran an Australian business supplying export services, which required me to travel a lot to where I supplied the services. My biggest single cost by far was airfares, which went through the roof during covid and are still around the ceiling. Not the biggest factor in my calling it quits, but I’m now happily retired.
In my game, the approach of the government has the effect of boosting competitors from abroad by increasing costs significantly and reducing the competitiveness of Australian bids for service export work relative to those of foreigners.
Cheers skip
The competition watchdog’s investigation into Qantas flights has revealed that 15,000 Qantas and QantasLink flights were cancelled between May and July 2022 – more than treble the 4149 cancellations publicly reported by the government over the same period.
The monthly reports on domestic airline performance released by the Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics (BITRE) are closely watched by many flyers, who use them to figure out which airline is most reliable.
However, BITRE uses a relatively short timeframe to measure cancellations for domestic flights, and doesn’t track cancellations for international flights at all. It only considers a flight “cancelled” if it is axed within seven days of a scheduled departure.
BITRE reported 1770 domestic Qantas cancellations (excluding Jetstar) and 2379 QantasLink cancellations between May and July 2022.
The ACCC says about 15,000 of Qantas’ 66,000 scheduled domestic and international flights (excluding Jetstar) were cancelled over the same period. Some 84.5 per cent of cancellations were domestic flights, with the remainder international flights.
BITRE says the examples of cancellations given by the ACCC on Thursday were not picked up by its own reporting because they were either cancelled with customers notified more than seven days before the scheduled flight time, or they were international flights. It said it had no “imminent” plans to extend the cancellation definition beyond seven days.
Yes that's the uncomfortable truth. And Qatar never abandoned Adelaide like Qantas did.Just want to throw in my personal views on this. Which airline brought us home from the UK in the midst of the pandemic lockdowns? Was it QF? No, it was QR. If it had not been for QR, we and many others would have no way of getting home.
When I read his comments made on Monday, I fired off an email straight away asking him how was it in the national interests and a reply explaining what his statement meant would be appreciated. There were a few other questions I wanted answering as well but so far the response ............................From another article in AFR 31 Aug:
"Meanwhile, Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones sought to roll back his remarks from Monday that the “national interest” in blocking more Qatar Airways flights was to protect Qantas’ profits."
So that makes it six different reasons now. None of them remotely acceptable but clearly showing the fingerprints of AJ's active lobbying.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
If the motivation is purely protectionist, yes it isWhat capping the number of flights a foreign govt owned airline can fly here?
I don’t really think so in the real world.
Just want to throw in my personal views on this. Which airline brought us home from the UK in the midst of the pandemic lockdowns? Was it QF? No, it was QR. If it had not been for QR, we and many others would have no way of getting home.
What the Australian government did was essentially break the airline industry, amongst others, in Australia
And that article is also in the guardian. The Minister doesn't have too many friends left.Another new article in the Conversation, from an academic who teaches airline strategy in the context of bilateral air services agreements, makes that very point.
What will putting the interests of Qantas ahead of Qatar Airways cost? $1bn per year and a new wave of protectionism of legacy carriers
I’m sure the Chinese Government has noted this decision in the broader context of Australia’s efforts at reversing China’s anti Australian export decisions. The decision undercuts those efforts.
Well you should be very unhappy with this decision.
I ran an Australian business supplying export services, which required me to travel a lot to where I supplied the services. My biggest single cost by far was airfares, which went through the roof during covid and are still around the ceiling. Not the biggest factor in my calling it quits, but I’m now happily retired.
In my game, the approach of the government has the effect of boosting competitors from abroad by increasing costs significantly and reducing the competitiveness of Australian bids for service export work relative to those of foreigners.
Cheers skip
Can't argue with the sentiment, but Qantas did fly - when the federal government paid them to.
Qatar never cancelled flights to SA. Multiple flights a week. And they released Award fares too and which we grabbed. Even in the depths of Covid.For which pax could book an economy seat for a reasonable amount and once booked be relatively confident the flight would operate.
As opposed to the foreign airlines who were cancelling flights and pax left right and centre and often forcing people to buy extremely expensive F tickets.
Hunt warns against gouging as airfares soar ahead of new arrival caps
With London-Sydney ticket prices spiking as high as $38,000, airlines have been warned against profiteering from people trying to get home before passenger arrival caps are cut.amp.smh.com.au
I don’t blame the airlines in either case, both were consequences of the closed borders and mandatory quarantine.
As an Australian, I'm happy for the Govt to protect Australian business against foreign competition. Especially foreign competition owned by foreign govts where the rule of law is somewhat grey.
Qatar never cancelled flights to SA. Multiple flights a week. And they released Award fares too and which we grabbed. Even in the depths of Covid.
I can just account for my own personal experience.Why weren't they flooded with the tens of thousands of Aussies stuck overseas forced to pay 10K+ for a flight home, even if they won the lottery of being able to get a seat? There was an SA cap for inbound pax, that was very low at some points (fewer than 300 weekly)
Sounds like recollections may vary on this.
Qantas does not protect its own workforce against foreign competition....Australian business against foreign competition