March Business Travel Falls Most Since 2003 - IATA

2008-5-29

The number of international airline passengers traveling first class and business class in March declined the most since 2003, according to a trade group for international airlines.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) said the decline reflected a sharp slowdown in financial sector activity and a weakening US economy.

The loss of these high-paying fares is a blow to airlines already battling high fuel prices.

"Airline executives get concerned when they start to see falling traffic in the front of the plane because it's the premium passengers that represent valuable revenue," said Steve Lott, spokesman for IATA.

"Whether they are flying less or flying in coach (economy), those are both worrying signs for airline managers," Lott added.

IATA said in a report that global first class and business class traffic in March fell 3.9 percent from the same month last year.

Within North America, such "premium" traffic for IATA airlines was down 8.5 percent in March from a year earlier and down 5.2 percent for the year to March from the same period last year.

Within Europe, first and business class traffic for IATA airlines was down 17.1 percent in March and down 10.7 percent for the year to March. But air travel markets in the Middle East, Far East and Africa showed much stronger premium traffic.

The decline in March business travel was exaggerated by this year's early Easter, but even after adjusting for this, global first and business class traffic in March fell by between 1 percent and 2 percent, IATA said.

"Given the importance of premium passengers for airline profitability, the absolute decline in numbers is bad news, particularly since the price of jet fuel rose 70 percent over the year to March," said the IATA report.

Sky-high fuel prices and a weakening economy have stalled the US airline industry's modest recovery from the 2001-2006 downturn.

Seven small US airlines have filed for bankruptcy or stopped operating in the past five months and, if oil prices stay at current levels or go higher, some major US carriers also face the prospect of seeking bankruptcy protection, experts say.

Oil prices have roughly doubled in the past year. Crude oil, which hit a record of USD$135.09 a barrel last week, was trading around USD$129 on Wednesday.

All of which makes first class and business class passengers, paying much higher fares than economy class, so valuable to airlines as they struggle to counter fuel costs, IATA said.

Any more declines would sound alarm bells for the airlines. "Airlines fight vigorously to attract these valuable premium passengers through product... and different amenities," said Lott.

"Every dollar of revenue is so important to offset the high fuel prices -- that's what is so concerning," Lott added.

Source: airwise.com
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