Passagem aérea da área de Londres para Washington DC em julho - por que o aumento maciço? [fechadas]

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Sou da área de DC e notei que nos últimos dois anos as passagens aéreas no verão passaram de £ 600 para mais de £ 1000.

O que está acontecendo?

Eu pensei que com os preços do petróleo em queda nós teríamos visto alguma diminuição, mas isso é ridículo para assentos de economia!

    
por user34853 07.09.2015 / 23:21

1 resposta

Poderia bem ser ilegal fixação de preços - em outras palavras, um cartel.

US airlines face a price-fixing probe amid allegations that they colluded to keep fares high.

The US Justice Department confirmed that it is investigating some carriers over "possible unlawful coordination".

The Business Travel Coalition welcomed the move by the Department if Justice which could prove “illegal co-ordination” to restrict capacity in domestic US, transatlantic and other international markets.

Companhias aéreas dos EUA em competição investigam suposta fixação de preços , em viagem de viagem, 2 de julho de 2015

"We are investigating possible unlawful coordination by some airlines," Justice Department spokeswoman Emily Pierce confirmed to USA TODAY

Companhia aérea ' Disciplina de capacidade 'em destaque após a investigação da Justiça , USA Today, 1º de julho de 2015

Now, the surviving quartet of US airline giants – American, Delta, United and the discounter Southwest – are coming under increased scrutiny for “unlawful coordination” on price-gouging. But airline insiders and legal analysts say the government’s case against the industry will be near-impossible to prove – indeed, that the feds have known about potential ticket schemes for years and have not been able to fight back against lobbyists fighting to bring the transportation business back from the post-9/11 brink.

“It’s de facto collusion,” said Charles Leocha, president of Travelers United, a consumer advocacy group. “Flights are full, and the airlines have become very good at signaling their strategy” to their not-so-arch rivals, he added.

Conluio da companhia aérea: não é nada novo e será difícil de provar, dizem os analistas , The Guardian, 3 de julho de 2015

“When airline industry leaders say they’re going to be ‘disciplined,’ they mean they don’t want anyone to expand capacity,” said Fiona Scott Morton, professor of economics at Yale and a former deputy attorney general in the antitrust division of the Justice Department. “And when there aren’t enough seats, airlines raise prices. That’s what we’ve been seeing.”

Christopher L. Sagers, an antitrust professor at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law and an airline industry specialist who opposed the American-US Airways merger in testimony before Congress, said that sort of talk at a conference of direct competitors in a concentrated oligopoly is a huge legal risk.

“I don’t see a smoking gun,” Mr. Sagers said. “But they’re all but saying you need to limit output to keep up prices.”

... Professor Scott Morton recently co-wrote a study of airline industry competition that concluded the major airlines were stifling competition by restricting the ability of consumers to use the Internet to compare airfares.

'Disciplina' for Airlines, Pain for Fliers , New York Times, 11 de junho de 2015

Há um histórico bastante strong de fixação de preços no setor de companhias aéreas e, especificamente, nas rotas dos EUA, se bem me lembro. Então, se isso é fixação de preços, então não seria de todo inédito.

Está bem claro que as companhias aéreas estão trabalhando juntas para manter a capacidade baixa (e, portanto, manter os preços e a lucratividade em alta), seja ou não realmente uma fixação de preços de acordo à definição legal.

    
08.09.2015 / 00:35