Business View Magazine | June 2019

17 BUSINESS VIEW MAGAZINE JUNE 2019 OPENING L INES A irlines for America (A4A), the industry trade organization for the leading U.S. airlines, announced recently that it expects a record 257.4 million passengers — an average of 2.8 million per day— to travel on U.S. airlines between June 1 and Aug. 31, 2019. That number is up 3.4 percent from last summer’s record 248.8 million passengers. Airlines are adding 111,000 seats per day to accommodate the additional 93,000 daily passengers expected during the summer travel period. This will be the 10th consecutive summer to see an increase in the number of U.S. airline passengers. “With airlines offering low fares and reinvesting billions of dollars in their product, there’s never been a better time to fly. This summer, U.S. airlines expect travelers to take to the skies in record numbers,” said A4A Vice President and Chief Economist John Heimlich. “Air travel is the nation’s safest form of transportation, and it is now more affordable than ever before. U.S. carriers are making airline flights more and more accessible, so it’s no surprise that more and more Americans are flying.” Inflation-adjusted air fares declined for a fourth consecutive year in 2018, with the average domestic fare dropping to $350, including government-imposed fees and taxes. That ticket price is down 15.9% from 2014 and, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, it is the lowest average inflation-adjusted fare since the agency began collecting such records in 1995. Airlines Oppose Airport Tax Hike As air fares continue to fall, some airports are pushing for a tax increase on everyone who flies. Taxes already add 20 percent or more to the cost of a flight, but many airports and others are asking Congress to double – or raise even higher – the Passenger Facility Charge (PFC), the airport tax that passengers pay every time they purchase a ticket. Annual airport revenues have reached an all- time high of $30 billion, with customers paying $6.9 billion per year in airport taxes, including a record $3.5 billion in PFCs in 2018. Additionally, U.S. airports are sitting on $14.5 billion in cash on hand, and there is a $7 billion surplus in the Airport and Airway Trust Fund. “Airports are flush with cash,” said A4A Senior Vice President for Legislative and Regulatory Policy Sharon Pinkerton. “They are reporting record revenues and airport construction is booming. Passengers don’t want a tax hike and airports don’t need one.” If the PFC is doubled, a family of four will have to pay an additional $72 – or $144 total – for a roundtrip, one-stop domestic flight. AIRLINES FOR AMERICA PROJECTS RECORD-SETTING NUMBER OF PASSENGERS FOR SUMMER 2019

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