Moopere, I agree. My fear is simply that in the search for the almighty lowest price, which internet comparisons provide, we will annihilate the higher cost carriers.
Sure. In the overall sense of driving for minimum cost and along with that minimum value and quality, I can't disagree.
The challenge to the high priced carriers though is surely not to simply be a high cost LCC. To survive, even against each other, they must add actual value. The LCC's coming from whichever region, are simply taking the price based fight right up to the incumbents. Some airlines are countering this with almost ridiculous opulence at the high end of the cost scale, others are pretending.
Given a quote I got recently of J PER-CDG with QF for $14.8K, I'm going to take a punt that QF are pretending. I'd go F, with another carrier that isn't an LCC before paying that.
But what really sticks in peoples eyes is what seems to be apparent discrimination. How can a QF flight, on QF metal cost $4800 PER-SIN-PER, when the same flight, with the same flight numbers on the same QF metal cost $2600 SIN-PER-SIN??? Why is the Grange for sale in the UK $100 when here its $200. It tastes the same, it comes from the same manufacturer, its in the same bottle ... its the same.
As for "Buy Australian" (or buy USA or buy UK), its my view that any form of protectionism just perpetuates bad business practises. Eventually you have to pay the piper (as a country) when your products and processes are so far behind world best that its laughable and your industry collapses completely. The buy-here-first idea, if successful, just buys some time.
I'll buy the best quality I can find for the job at hand.... note, not the most expensive (necessarily). If thats Australian made, great.
I see the marketplace dividing, and rapidly, between cheap and cough and quality but expensive. The middle ground seems to be evaporating. I wouldn't want to be in a business that makes fairly decent and moderately priced goods or services right now.