不要让华盛顿对航空公司做像对美国铁路公司所做的那样
Don't Let Washington Do To Airlines What It Did To Amtrak

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/dont-let-washington-do-airlines-what-it-did-amtrak

一位研究人员表示,当前的旅行趋势表明,今年乘坐飞机的乘客数量不断增加,但由于对机票、航线和座位尺寸的监管加强,导致价格可能上涨的呼声令人担忧。 他强调了历史上的例子,在国会于 1978 年通过《航空公司放松管制法案》(该法案允许航空公司决定自己的航线和定价)之前,严格的航空公司监管导致了高价格、低效率和有限的乘客参与。 这带来了激烈的竞争、较低的票价和扩大的可达性,在调整通货膨胀后,门票成本降低了近一半。 目前,超过一半的美国公民表示曾乘坐过飞机,而放松管制前这一比例仅为四分之一。 尽管航空公司放松管制取得了成功,但一些立法者主张对行李、费用和座位尺寸制定更严格的规定,而另一些立法者则提出对航空公司退款的限制性政策。 这些提议可能会提高航班价格、取消无利可图的航线以及给乘客带来不便。 然而,对飞机安全的担忧与这些提议无关,因为在过去十五年里美国没有发生重大商用飞机事故。 额外的规定不但不能解决空中交通管制员人员短缺和设施陈旧等问题,反而会导致成本上升、航线可用性减少和旅客不满。

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原文

Submitted by Merrill Matthews, a resident scholar with the Institute for Policy Innovation in Dallas, Texas. Follow him on X @MerrillMatthews.

A record number of travelers are taking to the skies this year. In an era of expensive groceries, gas, food and rent, the last thing anyone wants is a massive increase in airfares.

But that's precisely what travelers could experience if lawmakers push through new restrictions on prices, routes and even seat sizes.

More airline regulation might sound appealing. But red tape always comes with a cost, often in higher prices but also in reduced access and convenience.

Air travel used to be heavily regulated. Until the late 1970s, government officials set fares, routes and schedules for all interstate air travel. Prices were sky high, the industry operated inefficiently and relatively few people flew.

Lawmakers decided they had to do something. Congress passed the Airline Deregulation Act in 1978. The law allowed airlines to determine their own routes and prices.

The change unleashed competition and allowed low-cost operators to enter the market. Choices skyrocketed and prices fell. On an inflation-adjusted basis, the cost of flying is half of what it was before Congress deregulated the industry.

Deregulation led to more options. The number of cities connected via nonstop service, and the number of carriers providing that service, increased markedly.

More affordable tickets and an explosion of routes made flying accessible to millions of Americans. In 1977, a quarter of Americans reported flying in the past year. Today, it's close to half. Nearly 90 percent of Americans have flown in their lifetime.

Considering these outcomes, why do policymakers seem intent on bringing back onerous airline regulations? Especially considering the government has a less-than-stellar public-transportation "track record" -- that is, Amtrak.

Amtrak is a government-subsidized public train system that receives billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies. Government created the system because passenger trains were losing money. The Washington Times notes, "Even with all that money, there are still widespread complaints about the train service. Signal problems, mechanical snafus and computer breakdowns are seen across the country."

In Congress, members have proposed legislation that would pave the way for more federal control of airline baggage policies, fees, and seat sizes. A recent Department of Transportation rule imposes complex restrictions on airline refund policies that even the seasoned traveler may be hard-pressed to understand.

Together, the changes amount to an oversized regulatory regime that would be expensive and time consuming to comply with. Some airlines could be forced to raise prices or cut unprofitable routes altogether.

Proposals to re-regulate the airlines have nothing to do with passenger safety. It's been 15 years since the last fatal U.S. commercial airline crash.

To be sure, there's room to improve America's air travel system. Shortages among air traffic controllers contribute to frustrating flight delays and cancellations. Outdated facilities and infrastructure pose challenges in many parts of the country. But remember, these broken parts of the system are largely under government control already.

Subjecting airlines to burdensome regulations wouldn't make air travel better. It'd lead to higher costs, fewer routes, and less-satisfied travelers. Don't let Washington do to the airline industry what it did to train travel.

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