Virgin Australia is another matter, and these are (very!) different times
A government bailout for one airline competitor in the system is not a desirable situation. Nor for that matter is
coronavirus.
When we emerge from this social, medical and economic disaster, with perhaps 15-20% unemployment, do we really want a single monopoly airline?
To suggest another airline – or several airlines – will want to enter comprehensively in those conditions defies belief.
Picking winners after Virgin’s failure is no different from a bailout
And, if new investors did want to establish a new airline, how would the government then go about picking winners?
Would a full service airline, much more susceptible to blanket competition by
Qantas, be preferred over an LCC? Because, with the scarcity of slots at
Sydney, there is no way two airlines could get sufficient access to make them competitive. They’d be sitting targets.
And, in the months-long period it takes for a new airline to be authorised to fly, there would be a hiatus, as
Qantas consolidated its position.
Meanwhile a functioning airline with 10,000 direct employees and many more reliant on its activity would have disappeared.
Hopefully, in its deliberations, the government is planning for these obstacles.