Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- PART I THEORETICAL ISSUES
- PART II HOW TO VALUE THINGS
- PART III CASE STUDIES
- 12 Regulation and deregulation: Enhancing the performance of the deregulated air transportation system
- 13 Pricing: Pricing and congestion: economic principles relevant to pricing roads
- 14 Public transport: The allocation of urban public transport subsidy
- 15 Health care: QALYs and the equity–efficiency tradeoff
- 16 Infrastructure: Water vending activities in developing countries
- 17 The environment: Assessing the social rate of return from investment in temperate zone forestry
- Index
12 - Regulation and deregulation: Enhancing the performance of the deregulated air transportation system
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- PART I THEORETICAL ISSUES
- PART II HOW TO VALUE THINGS
- PART III CASE STUDIES
- 12 Regulation and deregulation: Enhancing the performance of the deregulated air transportation system
- 13 Pricing: Pricing and congestion: economic principles relevant to pricing roads
- 14 Public transport: The allocation of urban public transport subsidy
- 15 Health care: QALYs and the equity–efficiency tradeoff
- 16 Infrastructure: Water vending activities in developing countries
- 17 The environment: Assessing the social rate of return from investment in temperate zone forestry
- Index
Summary
In a dramatic break with past policy, the US commercial air transportation system was deregulated in 1978. Although deregulation was initially popular, primarily because it led to lower fares, public uneasiness has recently set in. Airport congestion and flight delays, increased concerns with safety, and rising fares in less competitive markets have all been attributed to the change in the regulatory environment. But, deregulation is only one among many influences on the air transportation system. Equally influential are technological change, macroeconomic performance and public policies besides those having to do with economic regulation. Because all these influences are inter-dependent, each must operate in accord with the others or the system can become disrupted.
This paper focuses on improving the air system by aligning public policy regarding mergers, airport pricing and investment, and safety with the traffic volumes and patterns that exist under deregulation. We argue that the failure to bring these policies into line with the air system as it has evolved over the past ten years has generated the current dissatisfaction with the system and hampered the long-run performance of deregulation. Using an empirical model of air travellers' preferences, we analyse the economic effects of recent airline mergers. Sections on the effects of efficient pricing, optimal runway investment at airports and evaluating air safety management in the deregulated environment are omitted from this edition. We conclude that the mismanagement of the regulatory transition in air transportation should motivate architects of deregulation in other industries to establish transitional advisory bodies.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Cost-Benefit Analysis , pp. 375 - 395Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994