LuvOrlando
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2006
- Messages
- 21,468
So seriously, are they kidding? I read a report the other day how the losses are a surprise because prices remained static. It's as if they think the average American family doesn't notice that getting their luggage from point A to B is an added cost that often equals another seat. Either the execs are dopey or they think we are idiots.
I know the rates forced me to rethink travel quite a few times, and judging by their numbers I am not alone. My price point for airfare is $200 pp, including taxes, fees luggage and anything else they want to throw in there. Call it what they want but once the grand total reads over $800 for my family of 4 I cancel and think local. What does everyone else think about it, I'm curious?
From Beritbart
Airlines suffered record drop in traffic in 2009: IATA
Jan 27 05:19 AM US/Eastern
International airlines suffered their biggest decline in traffic since 1945 last year as passenger demand fell 3.5 percent, the International Air Transport Association said Wednesday.
Freight also fell, by 10.1 percent, as "full-year 2009 demand statistics for international scheduled air traffic that showed the industry ending 2009 with the largest ever post-war decline," IATA said in a statement.
"In terms of demand, 2009 goes into the history books as the worst year the industry has ever seen," said Giovanni Bisignani, director general of the world's biggest airlines' association.
"We have permanently lost 2.5 years of growth in passenger markets and 3.5 years of growth in the freight business," he added.
I know the rates forced me to rethink travel quite a few times, and judging by their numbers I am not alone. My price point for airfare is $200 pp, including taxes, fees luggage and anything else they want to throw in there. Call it what they want but once the grand total reads over $800 for my family of 4 I cancel and think local. What does everyone else think about it, I'm curious?
From Beritbart
Airlines suffered record drop in traffic in 2009: IATA
Jan 27 05:19 AM US/Eastern
International airlines suffered their biggest decline in traffic since 1945 last year as passenger demand fell 3.5 percent, the International Air Transport Association said Wednesday.
Freight also fell, by 10.1 percent, as "full-year 2009 demand statistics for international scheduled air traffic that showed the industry ending 2009 with the largest ever post-war decline," IATA said in a statement.
"In terms of demand, 2009 goes into the history books as the worst year the industry has ever seen," said Giovanni Bisignani, director general of the world's biggest airlines' association.
"We have permanently lost 2.5 years of growth in passenger markets and 3.5 years of growth in the freight business," he added.